(Reuters) -
Cablevision System Corp said on Monday it would launch in February a
wireless Internet phone service to give users an alternative to pricier
data plans from cellular companies such as AT&T and Verizon.
The "Freewheel" phone service,
which runs on any WiFi connection, is an attempt by Cablevision to
retain and potentially add subscribers at a time when cable companies
are losing out to lower-priced, bundled TV and Internet services from
telecom firms.
Cablevision said the
phone service was the first of its kind to be launched by a cable
company and aims to tap users seeking to download unlimited amounts of
data on their mobile phones using WiFi, which is less expensive than a
cellular connection.
Such services
could pose a challenge to traditional telecom carriers. Currently,
carrier Republic Wireless and Massachusetts-based startup Scratch
Wireless offer users similar services that use WiFi to control data
costs.
"There has been a dramatic
shift in how consumers use their mobile devices: today, it's all about
data, and WiFi is now preferred and clearly superior to cellular,"
Kristin Dolan, chief operating officer of Cablevision, said in the
statement.
Cablevision, controlled
by New York's Dolan family, has been investing in its "Optimum" WiFi
network since 2007, setting up over 1.1 million WiFi hotspots or access
points in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
Cablevision's
WiFi phone service will be offered at $29.95 per month and $9.95 per
month for subscribers of its "Optimum Online" service. It will be
available exclusively on the Motorola Moto G smartphone that users will
have to purchase, the company said.
The $180 Android phone will be sold to "Freewheel" users without a contract at a discounted price of $99.95, it added.
(Reporting by Malathi Nayak)
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