Forum Discussion
Cable and TiVo still exist. As do cable DVRs, and satellite and satellite DVRs. The Dish Hopper 3 can record 16 shows at once and skip ads on anything. Of course, there are ad-free things on Roku too, from Netflix, Paramount+, Prime, Max, etc. Roku gets most of their money from ads and distribution deals, so I think it’s unlikely that they will bite the hand that feeds them.
I prefer the Hopper 3 for watching commercial TV channels (without the commercials.) Costs more than Roku but: getting what you pay for seems to apply. I stopped watching commercials with my first TiVo in 1999 and I’m too used to that to go back.
Johnc9491 Depending on the streaming service you are watching, you are likely not paying to watch commercials. You bought the hardware, in this case a Roku device. That purchase did not include any streaming service. It does provide a platform that hundreds, if not thousands, use to provide content. Many of these services are free, but they insert advertisements to pay the cost of streaming the content. Many providers require a subscription, and even then there could be ads based on the subscription level you pay for.
For channels like The Roku Channel, you pay nothing for the content, but must tolerate ads throughout the playback. Amazon has started adding ads at the beginning of some of their content, which you can remove by paying a higher subscription rate. I believe Netflix now has (or will soon add) a price tier that includes ads.
So, in most cases you are not paying anything to watch content that might contain ads. If they are so objectionable, then you must pay the fees necessary to be provided content without ads. Depending on the service, that simply isn't possible, as the provider doesn't offer an ad-free subscription level.