I see that Bill H. says that TV service isn't an issue for him, but it is one. 
In fact, TV service is the root of how broadband is deployed in Massachusetts.

Back in the 1970s, when cable TV was new around here, the MA legislature 
decided to leave service carrier choice up to individual cities and towns.  
Most towns then proceeded to pick one exclusive provider, granting the chosen 
providers a limited monopoly.  The primary reason for this is so that all 
residents have comparable TV service, particularly in the community access TV 
channels.  Two different cable companies wouldn't necessarily share community 
access facilities, after all, thus most towns picked one provider.  My town 
happened to pick Continental Cablevision.

Then Cablevision's assets in MA were acquired by MediaOne.  These assets were 
acquired in turn by Southwestern Bell along with several other cable companies 
back in 1999 or thenabouts.  The collected assets were branded "AT&T 
Broadband".  This marked the end of cable TV competition in MA.  Comcast 
acquired all of AT&T Broadband when SBC divested itself of the TV/broadband 
services.

This is what many of us are stuck with.  Comcast lobbies the various local 
governments where it operates with this tactic, "demonstrating" how competing 
cable TV providers would be detrimental to their communities.  Mayor Tom in 
particular is very, very "convinced" by Comcast's lobbying efforts.

--Rich P.
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