Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 3, 2026

Cable box (outside)

A cable box is a metal enclosure that connects a house or building to the cable provider. The box is usually located near the connection points for other service connections. Other locations of the cable box include centralized locations, lawns, or telephone poles. This feature serves as the demarcation point in which the provider's responsibility ends and the customer's responsibility begins.

Last revised
Jul 3, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
187 w
Citations
1
Source
A cable box sits on the roadside in front of a house source ↗

A cable box is a metal enclosure (found in the vicinity of a house that has cable service) that connects a house or building to the cable provider.1 The box is usually located near the connection points for other service connections (electric or telephone). Other locations of the cable box include centralized locations (apartment buildings), lawns, or telephone poles. This feature serves as the demarcation point in which the provider's responsibility ends and the customer's responsibility (cabling and connections) begins.

Purpose

Cable boxes direct cable service to the cable wiring inside the house or building being serviced. To control which channels are available to the subscriber, service providers may place analog filters at the transmitting or receiving end, a method once popular in the '90s although now less common. Digital cable providers now use digital methods to control the availability of channels.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Staff Writer. "What's in the (cable) box? Possibly the future of television". Akron Beacon Journal. Retrieved 2024-04-14.