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Comparing Channels and Pricing in 2026

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Live TV streaming services have officially overtaken traditional cable in subscriber count, with more than 18 million Americans now paying for a streaming alternative to a cable or satellite bundle, according to research firm Leichtman Research Group. As of this month, the field has grown crowded, with YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, Fubo, DirecTV Stream and Philo all competing for cord-cutters seeking access to live news, sports and entertainment channels without a traditional pay-TV contract.

YouTube TV remains the market leader by subscriber count, with more than 8 million subscribers as of earlier this year, according to Cord Cutters News. The service’s base plan now costs $82.99 per month for more than 100 channels, including local ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox affiliates in nearly all U.S. markets, along with full ESPN coverage spanning ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, the ACC Network, SEC Network and Big Ten Network. YouTube TV pairs that broad lineup with what several reviewers describe as the best-in-class DVR setup currently on the market: unlimited cloud storage with recordings kept for up to nine months, plus support for three simultaneous streams away from home and unlimited streaming on the home network. Regional sports networks remain available depending on market, with the strongest coverage in areas served by Bally Sports and MSG Networks.

Hulu + Live TV sits close behind YouTube TV on both price and channel count, also priced at $82.99 per month when bundled with Disney+ and ESPN+, for a lineup of more than 90 channels that closely mirrors YouTube TV’s core offering while adding access to Hulu’s on-demand streaming library. Hulu’s DVR matches YouTube TV’s nine-month retention window but caps simultaneous streams at two rather than three, requiring an additional $9.99 monthly upgrade to unlock unlimited screens for larger households. Reviewers generally describe YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV as near-identical premium cable replacements, with the deciding factor for most households coming down to whether they place additional value on Hulu’s on-demand catalog and Disney-ESPN bundle.

Sling TV occupies the budget end of the market, undercutting its larger rivals by a wide margin. The service’s Orange plan runs $45.99 per month for roughly 30-plus sports, news and entertainment channels built primarily around ESPN, while the Blue plan, also $45.99, offers a broader roughly 40-channel lineup with some local coverage depending on market. Combining both tiers into the Orange & Blue plan costs $60.99 monthly for more than 50 channels, still the cheapest full-featured option among the major services. Sling’s biggest tradeoff is local channel coverage: NBC and Fox affiliates are available in only about 30 markets, while ABC and CBS require either an over-the-air antenna or a separate service entirely. Sling’s base DVR is also considerably more limited, offering just 50 hours of storage, expandable to 200 hours for an additional $5 to $9.99 per month depending on the current promotional pricing.

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Fubo has carved out a distinct niche as the sports-focused option among the major streaming bundles, particularly for soccer and international programming, with a base plan priced around $79.99 to $82.99 per month for more than 100 channels. Fubo and DirecTV Stream remain the only two major streaming services that continue to carry regional sports networks, since both YouTube TV and Hulu dropped all RSN coverage between 2020 and 2021 due to high carriage fees, though some individual teams have since moved their broadcasts to over-the-air television or their own standalone streaming platforms. Fubo has also faced its own carriage disputes in recent periods, including a stretch earlier this year in which NBC-owned channels, including local NBC affiliates, were dropped from the service, complicating access to events including the Olympics and Super Bowl for Fubo subscribers during that window.

DirecTV Stream sits at the higher end of the pricing spectrum, with an Entertainment plan starting around $89.99 to $94.99 per month for roughly 90 to 95 channels, scaling up to a Choice plan priced near $114.99 to $124.99 monthly that adds regional sports networks and additional specialty channels. Reviewers note that DirecTV Stream’s advertised pricing often understates the real monthly cost once regional sports and broadcast fees are factored in, with the base Entertainment plan effectively running closer to $95 to $100 after those additional charges, and the Choice plan closer to $125 to $130. DirecTV Stream also offers the strongest local channel coverage among the major services in rural markets, according to PCWorld’s testing, followed by YouTube TV, with Sling TV described as largely unusable for local programming without a supplemental antenna.

For viewers seeking an even lighter, lower-cost option, Philo offers a stripped-down entertainment-focused package priced around $33 per month for more than 70 channels spanning entertainment, lifestyle and documentary programming, including access to HBO Max, Discovery+ and AMC+. Philo deliberately omits local channels, sports programming and major cable news networks, a tradeoff that keeps its price significantly below the other major services but limits its appeal for viewers who prioritize live news or sports.

Across all six major services, cross-platform compatibility remains broadly consistent, with each supporting Apple TV, Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Chromecast, Android TV, Samsung and LG smart TVs, along with iOS, Android and web browser access. Reviewers generally point to YouTube TV as offering the smoothest overall interface and the tightest integration with Google’s own hardware ecosystem, including Chromecast and Google Nest devices.

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Ultimately, industry analysts covering the live TV streaming space say the right choice depends heavily on individual viewing priorities. Households that rely on live local news and network programming, along with a full DVR feature set, are generally steered toward YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV despite their higher price points. Budget-conscious viewers willing to pair a service with a one-time antenna purchase for local coverage are more often pointed toward Sling TV. Sports fans specifically seeking regional team coverage are typically directed toward Fubo or DirecTV Stream, the only two remaining major streaming services carrying regional sports networks. And viewers whose habits skew toward general entertainment and documentary programming, with minimal need for live news or sports, may find Philo’s lower price point the most cost-effective option among the current field of live TV streaming alternatives.

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You can’t spell chai latte without AI. That will hurt India

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You can’t spell chai latte without AI. That will hurt India
Starbucks Corp. is brewing a tempest in a chai latte cup.

The coffee chain is tapping artificial intelligence to develop in-house alternatives to systems by Microsoft and IBM that track inventory and manage equipment, Bloomberg News reported last week, after reviewing an internal presentation. According to the article, the Seattle-based company has been working for several years to replace Oracle’s point-of-sale system.

This will be disturbing news in Bengaluru and Hyderabad: Maintaining these very technologies for large multinationals like Starbucks is the bread and butter for the 6 million coders employed by India’s outsourcing industry.

The AI adoption craze is looming over what’s promising to be another lackluster earnings season for IT services exporters. Last week, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., the biggest among them, reported 0.4% growth in revenue over the previous three months after stripping out currency fluctuations, the slowest expansion in a year. While the company has shed 3% of its workforce in the past year to about 594,000, the spending on third-party specialist contractors to bridge the firm’s own skills gaps ate into revenue. Net profit margin shrank.

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At smaller rival HCL Technologies Ltd., sales in the three months to June slipped 0.5% quarter-on-quarter after holding exchange rates constant. The management kept its annual revenue growth guidance of 1% to 4% unchanged, but it still ended up shrinking its employee base by nearly 3,300 people — the sharpest contraction in close to two years. For HCL Tech, too, a rise in subcontractor costs mitigated the wage savings.

460585934 (1)Bloomberg

For 25 years, India’s software services firms have locked global corporate clients into lucrative contracts to implement and maintain packaged software. Before the arrival of AI tools, it wouldn’t have been cost-effective for a firm like Starbucks, whose business is beverage, to take an IBM system out of its shrink wrap and map it to every piece of kitchen equipment, maintenance schedules, and local technicians across a labyrinthine network of 40,000-plus stores globally. That’s the kind of stuff around which Indian IT vendors have built a $250 billion exports powerhouse.
Similarly, making sure that a multinational can safely add a new local payment method — or correctly reflect a discount or tax change — has been a lucrative annuity for Indian programmers. They specialize in testing for various scenarios that could make the cash registers go down even for a minute. Largely hidden from public view, they keep global supply chains working 24×7 by managing the data pipelines that sync third-party inventory tools with an enterprise’s own resource planning software.To be sure, these long-term, multimillion-dollar orders haven’t completely dried up. TCS shares jumped Monday after the company disclosed that it would be expanding the role it has played in managing the infrastructure and applications for ABB. The new mandate is to design and run the Zurich-based engineering giant’s network as a modern, AI-driven service. HCL Technologies recently won a 5.5-year, $1.14 billion contract to build an AI-driven operating model for a large European engineering and manufacturing conglomerate it didn’t name.

Still, the pricing of large outsourcing deals in the age of AI remains under a question mark. After all, clients will fully expect their suppliers to use fewer humans — and more AI — to keep their tech infrastructure running smoothly. Accordingly, they will pay them less than before.

As for customers embedding artificial intelligence in their own workflows, they’ll probably pay the upfront cost of gathering the unstructured data scattered around their firms and labeling everything correctly. But after a quarter or two, AI agents will use the cleaned-up data to write their own code. The annuity business will have a slow fade, with lumpy AI-related work helping to mask the decline for some time.

460527414 (1)Bloomberg

Worse, as clients like Starbucks open their own direct engineering hubs in places like Bengaluru and Nashville — using AI to let small, in-house teams do the work of large code-writing armies — the middleman’s markup becomes an obvious target for cost-cutters.

While the stock market is still giving a thumbs up to any order wins, the NSE IT Index finished June 10% lower than five years ago. Even during the worst of the Global Financial Crisis, pessimism didn’t run this deep. Maybe the gloom is overdone, and US clients will eventually curb their enthusiasm for AI. They may come to realize that even as their token budgets go through the roof, their corporate data and workflows are slipping out of their control and going to frontier AI labs.

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However, it’s also possible that investors have read the tea leaves right, and it’s the outsourcing firms that are yet to wake up and smell the coffee.

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AI chip startups FuriosaAI, Nuvacore, d-Matrix pursue major funding rounds at higher valuations- The Information

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AI chip startups FuriosaAI, Nuvacore, d-Matrix pursue major funding rounds at higher valuations- The Information

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Rio Tinto reports Pilbara record, monitors Strait of Hormuz

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Rio Tinto reports Pilbara record, monitors Strait of Hormuz

Higher diesel prices lifted unit costs across Rio Tinto’s expansive Pilbara operations, although the miner reported no material disruption to production across its core commodities.

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Alcoa and Japanese partners approve gallium project

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Alcoa and Japanese partners approve gallium project

Alcoa and its Japanese industry partners have approved development of a gallium production facility in WA’s South West after gaining support from the Australian and US governments.

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China economic growth falls sharply, missing target

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China’s economic growth slowed sharply between the start of April and end of June as weak demand domestically and the impact of the Iran war on oil prices overshadowed the country’s strong exports.

Official gross domestic product (GDP) figures showed that the world’s second largest economy grew in the second quarter of the year by 4.3%, below Beijing’s annual target.

The announcement comes a day after government data showed that China’s exports jumped by 27% in June compared to a year earlier.

In March, China cut the target to a range of 4.5%-5%, its lowest economic expansion goal since 1991 – a move some analysts say gives officials more flexibility in managing the economy.

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The figures mark the first full quarter of GDP data since the start of the Iran war on 28 February and comes after a rise of 5% in the first quarter.

Separate data released on Wednesday highlighted the economic challenges Beijing is facing at home – including a long-running property market slump and weak consumer spending.

New home prices contracted again, although the 0.1% fall in June was at a slightly slower pace than the previous month.

But retail sales rose by 1% in June, improving from a 0.6% decrease in May.

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Customs data for June, which was released on Tuesday, showed that China’s tech exports were boosted by soaring global demand for semiconductors to power artificial intelligence (AI) data centres.

Surging demand for Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) also gave a major boost to China’s exports – with monthly car exports topping one million for the first time.

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Meta sued over AI use in layoffs targeting workers on medical, parental leave

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Meta to lay off about 200 workers in San Francisco Bay Area in May

A group of 26 Meta employees sued the tech giant over accusations that it used AI-powered software to choose people for mass layoffs, disproportionately targeting workers with disabilities or those who took medical, parental or family leave.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Oakland, California, on Monday, alleges that the company relied on factors such as internal AI systems, keystroke and activity-monitoring data, AI token-usage dashboards and algorithmically assisted performance rankings when making job cuts earlier this year.

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Many of these factors “by design, cannot be accumulated by an employee who is on protected medical or family leave, or whose output is reduced by a disability,” the lawsuit reads, adding that the company did not factor in protected leave when taking employees’ scores into account and “did not pause the system for the individualized, leave- and accommodation-neutral review that the law requires.”

The plaintiffs are among the 8,000 employees, or about 10% of its workforce, who Meta said in May would be impacted by layoffs, and they were told their jobs would be eliminated starting July 22.

FOUR STATES SEEKING $1.4 TRILLION IN PENALTIES IN CHILD SOCIAL MEDIA ADDICTION TRIAL, META SAYS

Signage outside Meta headquarters

A group of 26 Meta employees sued the tech giant alleging it used AI-powered software to choose people for mass layoffs. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

They claim that Meta violated state and federal laws — including the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act and the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act — that prohibit discrimination or retaliation against workers who take medical leave, have disabilities or are pregnant.

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The workers also say the company failed to test its AI systems for bias, which they allege violated newly adopted laws in California and New York City.

The plaintiffs, who come from six states, including California and New York, as well as Washington, D.C., are seeking a preliminary ruling from the court to block Meta from completing the layoffs while they pursue their claims in private arbitration.

The employees argue that Meta’s agreements require employees to arbitrate workplace disputes individually, but do not apply to requests for temporary relief.

Meta's app icons on a smartphone

The plaintiffs are among the 8,000 employees, or about 10% of its workforce, that Meta said in May would be impacted by layoffs. (Photo Illustration by Onur Dogman/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

They said the lawsuit asks just to preserve the status quo and keep them employed pending arbitration.

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“Once these terminations are finalized, the harm to Plaintiffs cannot be undone by money damages alone,” the lawsuit reads, citing the loss of employer-subsidized health coverage during pregnancy, postpartum recovery and active medical treatment.

Meta has pushed back on the allegations outlined in the lawsuit, saying that it does not use AI when determining who to cut from its workforce.

“These claims lack merit and are not based on facts. Workforce management and organizational decisions were and are made by people, not AI,” a Meta spokesperson told Fox Business.

META SHUTS DOWN AI TOOL AFTER BACKLASH OVER PUBLIC INSTAGRAM ACCOUNTS

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A smartphone showing Mark Zuckerberg’s image is held in front of a computer screen with the Meta logo.

Meta said that it does not use AI when determining who to cut from its workforce. (Arda Kucukkaya/Anadolu via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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About half of the plaintiffs had taken leave for caregiving or pregnancy-related reasons.

Eight employees are women who had taken maternity or pregnancy-related leave, four are men who had taken parental leave and one is a woman who had taken leave to take care of a family member and later bereavement leave.

The plaintiffs argued that Meta’s “algorithmically assisted selection process, by systematically recording such absences as reduced performance, falls more heavily on women than on men” because women disproportionately take pregnancy and caregiving leave.

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China new home prices decline at slower pace in June

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China new home prices decline at slower pace in June

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Loop Industries earnings missed by $0.02, revenue fell short of estimates

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Loop Industries earnings missed by $0.02, revenue fell short of estimates

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Taiwan’s premium mangoes wing their way to Europe for the first time

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Taiwan’s premium mangoes wing their way to Europe for the first time

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China Q2 GDP disappoints as sluggish domestic demand offsets exports boost

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China Q2 GDP disappoints as sluggish domestic demand offsets exports boost

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