On Sunday, anyone trying to stream NFL Sunday Ticket on DirecTV had a nightmare of a time for about an hour.
Outages significantly popped up in around the third quarter of the early games, and viewers missed much of the second half of those early games.
On Monday, DirecTV announced that the company planned “to reach out to those affected to automatically reimburse them for week two.”
If the credit is prorated based on the 18 week NFL season, that’s at least $16 per subscriber, depending on the plan chosen.
With several streaming companies bidding billions of dollars for the Sunday Ticket rights, you’d hope whichever one wins the right has a strong infrastructure in place to avoid these types of outages. Lengthy widespread issues like we saw in Week 2 reflect poorly on everyone.
About Joe Lucia
I hate your favorite team. I also sort of hate most of my favorite teams.
Recent Posts
Jason Benetti stunned by umpire call overturned by ABS: ‘Yikes’
"It is the reason for the challenge system."
Kendrick Perkins closes Nikola Jokić championship window: ‘We were so ready to crown this man’
"We’re not in Serbia. We’re in America. And he got punked yesterday"
Jim Palmer finally eats first chicken wing after Orioles bet
Baltimore Orioles legend Jim Palmer finally ate his first chicken wing thanks to the team hitting a grand slam with him at the mic.
Russell Wilson reportedly negotiating with CBS over ‘The NFL Today’ role
Free agent quarterback Russell Wilson appears as if he is ready to embark on a new chapter in...
NFL Network goes dark on Comcast as ESPN takes ownership
NFL Network has disappeared from Comcast subscribers as new owner ESPN looks to settle a new agreement with the distributor.
Local NHL viewership up big thanks to streaming gains, over-the-air shift
Local NHL streaming saw a 51% increase versus last season.