It has been a busy week for cord cutters, with major changes hitting home internet, free streaming, and video news consumption all at once. From a significant policy shift at T-Mobile to a remarkable free content milestone at Roku and a brand-new viewing experience from YouTube, here is everything you need to know.
T-Mobile Quietly Introduces a Speed Cap on Its Budget Home Internet Plan
The biggest news for cord cutters who rely on wireless broadband came from T-Mobile, which made a notable adjustment to its 5G Home Internet service. T-Mobile has quietly altered its 5G home internet offerings by placing a hard cap on download speeds for its most affordable plan, marking a notable shift in the carrier’s approach to fixed wireless service. The change affects only new subscribers signing up for the Rely Home Internet plan, which now enforces a maximum download speed of 354 Mbps.
For years, T-Mobile positioned its home internet service as providing consistent high-speed access across customer tiers when network conditions allowed. Unlike some competitors that have long differentiated access levels by plan, T-Mobile generally avoided strict artificial limits, relying instead on network priority differences and congestion management. That approach has now changed for new customers on the entry-level tier.
Under the updated structure, new customers will experience speeds capped at 354 Mbps, while the higher-tier Amplified and All-In plans continue to offer uncapped performance. Existing Rely customers remain on the previous uncapped version of the plan, at least for the time being.
For most streaming households, the practical impact of the cap is likely minimal. A 354 Mbps connection can comfortably support multiple simultaneous 4K streams, with plenty of bandwidth left over for gaming, browsing, and smart home devices. This adjustment came alongside modest price modifications across all three home internet tiers, with each plan seeing a $5 monthly increase offset by a corresponding $5 boost to the autopay discount, meaning qualifying customers who maintain autopay and link a postpaid mobile line will likely see no net change in their effective monthly rate.
Roku Surpasses 79 Free Channels Added in 2026
While T-Mobile’s news carried a cautionary note, Roku delivered a story that cord cutters will celebrate. Roku has been on a relentless free content push throughout 2026, steadily expanding The Roku Channel’s free ad-supported lineup month after month. The Roku Channel already boasted over 350 free ad-supported television options heading into the new year, but the platform wasted no time growing that number.
The pace has been remarkable. February brought 17 additional free channels covering genres spanning classic sitcoms, animated series, sports, action films, comedy, news, and lifestyle content. March arrived with another wave of additions introducing over 15 new channels, including National Geographic History, National Geographic Animals, National Geographic Travel, MotoGP, and Property Brothers.
April added 22 channels, and May followed with 15 more, delivering fresh entertainment options across reality programming, creative arts, family-friendly content, sports highlights, breaking news, science education, and travel. Then, just ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Roku added four sports-focused channels including FIFA Plus Women and FIFA Plus Español.
At a time when streaming companies have been raising the price of entertainment, Roku has done something unusual by adding more free channels to its service. Roku reported record revenue while expecting to surpass 100 million streaming households in 2026. All of these channels are accessible through The Roku Channel app with no account setup or subscription required beyond initial device activation, supported instead by periodic advertisements.
YouTube Launches a Dedicated News Experience on Mobile
Rounding out the week’s top stories, YouTube rolled out a meaningful upgrade to how viewers consume news on the platform. YouTube has introduced a significant enhancement to how users engage with news content on its platform, particularly on mobile devices. The video streaming service is expanding a dedicated News Watch experience that transforms the standard viewing interface on mobile devices for videos from verified news organizations.
When a user plays a video from an accredited source, the interface shifts to highlight two primary components. The first presents the latest updates, pulling together the most recent video coverage from multiple angles on the same developing story. The second section offers explanations and commentary, providing additional background, historical context, and analysis to help users better grasp complex issues.
The rollout has expanded to include local television stations under the Nexstar Media Group umbrella, which operates one of the largest portfolios of local TV properties in the United States. Their inclusion means viewers watching reports from hometown anchors can dive deeper instantly, connecting local angles to wider national or global developments.
The mobile-first design acknowledges that many people consume news on the go, and by embedding these resources below the video, YouTube reduces friction and encourages longer, more informed sessions. Future versions of the feature may extend to desktop and connected TV environments.
Taken together, this week’s news paints a clear picture of where the cord-cutting landscape is headed: free content is expanding rapidly, platform features are growing more sophisticated, and even the internet services that power it all are entering a new era of tiered competition. For consumers who have already ditched traditional pay TV, the ecosystem is only becoming more robust.
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