Roku has blocked access to the cable op's Spectrum TV app after the two sides failed to cut a new deal. They are also arguing at the FCC as Charter tries to end a ban on data caps and paid peering deals.

Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor

December 14, 2020

4 Min Read
Roku, Charter in streaming skirmish

Roku is again at the center of a high-profile streaming battle.

Roku has blocked access to Charter Communications' Spectrum TV app after the two sides were unable to strike a new agreement, Charter explained in this blog post.

Figure 1: A search for 'Spectrum TV' currently comes up empty on Roku's web-based Channel Store. It's the same story when one tries to search for Charter's pay-TV app directly on a Roku device. A search for 'Spectrum TV' currently comes up empty on Roku's web-based Channel Store. It's the same story when one tries to search for Charter's pay-TV app directly on a Roku device.

"Despite our best efforts to reach an agreement, Roku has not accepted Spectrum's offer to continue our contract, which allowed customers to access the Spectrum TV app from Roku devices," Charter said.

According to Charter, customers who have previously installed the Spectrum TV app on their Roku devices should not be affected. As a result, Charter is urging customers not to remove the Spectrum TV app from their Roku devices, adding that those customers can still add Roku devices to their account. For now, other Charter customers can't download the Spectrum TV app from the Roku Channel Store.

Charter said it is still trying to work out a new deal.

"Roku is an important partner and we are hopeful we will reach an agreement soon," a Charter official told The TV Answerman website, which noted that Roku first added Charter's app in 2015.

Charter, Roku bickering at the FCC

Charter did not elaborate on why Roku has declined the cable operator's latest offer.

However, the two have been squabbling at the FCC over Charter's request to sunset the Commission's ban on Charter's use of data caps and usage-based broadband data policies on May 18, 2021. In comments filed in August, Roku refuted Charter's contention that the data cap and paid peering conditions imposed through Charter's merger with Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks are no longer necessary. Charter, which promotes the Apple TV 4K as a set-top box alternative, has argued that the flourishing OTT video market presents "compelling evidence" that the conditions attached to the 2016 merger are no longer in the public interest.

Charter and Roku have been asked for further comment.

Update: Roku, which removed the Spectrum TV app from its channel store until a new deal is reached, confirmed that it is working with Charter on a renewal and that current Spectrum TV users still have access to the app on Roku devices.

"As America's #1 streaming platform we are committed to providing access to amazing streaming content at an exceptional value for our users," a Roku spokesperson said in a statement. "Our contract with Charter for the distribution of the SpectrumTV (v)MVPD channel on the Roku platform expired and we are working together to reach a positive and mutually beneficial distribution agreement. All existing customers can continue to use the Charter app while we work together on a renewal."

Charter's Spectrum TV app, which provides customers with streaming access to the operator's live TV lineup, VoD library and a cloud DVR, is currently available on several other streaming platforms, including Apple TV devices, Samsung smart TVs, Xbox consoles and iOS and Android smartphones and tablets.

One of several skirmishes involving Roku

The Charter-Roku row is the latest in a recent string of impasses involving Roku and a major programmer or pay-TV service provider.

Roku, which ended Q3 2020 with 46 million active accounts, and WarnerMedia have so far been unable to come to an agreement for HBO Max reportedly due to WarnerMedia's reluctance to sell HBO Max through The Roku Channel, Roku's aggregation service for both free, ad-supported and subscription-based streaming services. However, Roku and WarnerMedia are in discussions as Warner Bros prepares to release Wonder Woman 1984 simultaneously on HBO Max and in theaters on Christmas Day, and do the same for Warner Bros' full 2021 movie slate.

Prior to this impasse, another scuffle between AT&T and Roku prevented the new AT&T TV streaming service from being available via Roku for a period. Access to the AT&T TV app via Roku was restored in May.

In February, Roku also had a temporary run-in with Fox that threatened access to Fox's free, live streaming feeds of Super Bowl LIV. More recently, Roku and NBCUniversal clashed over terms for Peacock, NBCU's new streaming service, but eventually got it ironed out, more than two months after Peacock's national launch on July 15.

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— Jeff Baumgartner, Senior Editor, Light Reading

About the Author(s)

Jeff Baumgartner

Senior Editor, Light Reading

Jeff Baumgartner is a Senior Editor for Light Reading and is responsible for the day-to-day news coverage and analysis of the cable and video sectors. Follow him on X and LinkedIn.

Baumgartner also served as Site Editor for Light Reading Cable from 2007-2013. In between his two stints at Light Reading, he led tech coverage for Multichannel News and was a regular contributor to Broadcasting + Cable. Baumgartner was named to the 2018 class of the Cable TV Pioneers.

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