So, dosborne, so let's use an example here:
You signed up for a monthly service, but because you get a discount, you have to agree to a contract of 2 years. You think that is is ok, because you get a discount, and you can afford the monthly fee. You know about the cancellation fee, but you don't think you will ever have to use it.
Fast forward 2 months into the contract, your provider tells you that your monthly fee is going to increase from $100. a month to $2,000. a month. You know that you don't even save that much on your initial purchase, so you told the provider that you cannot afford it and you must cancel. Your provider tells you that you must paid the cancellation fee, and at this point, you have little choice but to pay, because you will end up paying more if you continue.
Now after you pay the $200. cancellation fee, you end up with over a thousand dollar worth of used receivers, not useful for anything else as they are proprietary products, so those are wasted. Selling them on the used market is now becoming impossible because everyone is going away from them, and few people are signing up after the new price increase. You lost more than just the cancellation fee, but the initial investment on the hardware as well.
So the provider took your cancellation fee, your previous monthly service fee, the money from the purchasing of the hardware, and minus the discount on the hardware (but the cost on hardware is actually a virtual game, they didn't exactly cost as much as they claim). Sure the provider has little to loose, and even probably made a few bucks in the process.
I don't know about you, but old school taught me that this is called Bait And Switch, and it is illegal. I don't care what the contract says, because if the contract says that it is ok for them to it, and you agree to it, that doesn't make it legal if the law says something else. That's why I don't have to read the contract, because it is possible that the contract has violated some part of consumer law somewhere, if that is what you implied.