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BusinessJune 29, 2015

NEW YORK -- Charter is trying to convince the government consumers will benefit if it is allowed to create a cable giant through its proposed $67.1 billion acquisition of Time Warner Cable and Bright House. It is seeking government approval after regulators' concerns led Comcast to scrap its $45 billion bid for Time Warner Cable in April...

By TALI ARBEL ~ Associated Press
A Charter sign is shown at an entrance to its headquarters in Town and Country, Missouri. (Jeff Roberson ~ Associated Press)
A Charter sign is shown at an entrance to its headquarters in Town and Country, Missouri. (Jeff Roberson ~ Associated Press)

NEW YORK -- Charter is trying to convince the government consumers will benefit if it is allowed to create a cable giant through its proposed $67.1 billion acquisition of Time Warner Cable and Bright House.

It is seeking government approval after regulators' concerns led Comcast to scrap its $45 billion bid for Time Warner Cable in April.

Charter said Tuesday, in a filing with the Federal Communications Commission, it will roll out faster Internet with no data caps for Time Warner Cable and Bright House customers, for less money than a comparable service. It is also pledging to continue its policy of not blocking or slowing traffic or establishing paid fast lanes for some content.

The government's new "net neutrality" rules prohibit those practices, though Internet providers have sued to throw out the rules.

"It seems like they're taking a more customer-friendly tone here" than Comcast did, said Matt Wood, policy director at public-interest group Free Press.

Federal Communications Commission chairman Tom Wheeler has said the Stamford, Connecticut, company needs to show how a more powerful Charter would benefit consumers.

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With Time Warner Cable, Comcast would have served more than half the country's high-speed Internet customers. Regulators feared that would give it the power to undermine online video rivals.

Charter has pointed out its share of that high-speed Internet market would be smaller than that, at 30 percent. It would have 19.4 million Internet customers, fewer than the industry leader, Comcast, has, and 17.3 million cable customers, fewer than both Comcast and the combination of AT&T and DirecTV, if regulators approve that pending deal.

In another bid to assuage the FCC, Charter Communications Inc. also says it will submit disputes over commercial Internet traffic deals, called "interconnection," to the agency. The net neutrality rules give the FCC the power to hear disputes over these arrangements, which the industry doesn't like. Fights between companies and Internet providers over these deals can disrupt service for Internet users, such as slowing streaming speeds for Netflix.

Charter proposed its net-neutrality commitments last for three years and stay in effect even if a court overturned the government's new rules.

But Wood questioned why some of these benefits for consumers had to be tied to a merger, such as why Time Warner Cable couldn't improve its customer service and Internet speeds without being bought, or why Charter couldn't submit interconnection disputes to the FCC without buying Time Warner Cable and Bright House.

Charter said in late May it would buy Time Warner Cable for $56.7 billion, including stock options, and Bright House for $10.4 billion.

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