Rogers written contracts always have a clause which says they can change the terms at any time.
I was a Rogers Internet customer for exactly two years, until the 24 month contract expired. When I signed up, I was promised a substantial discount for the first three months, and unlimited bandwidth use.
Halfway through the initial three months, the bandwidth usage was reduced to 60 Gigabytes per month, combined upload and download, with an additional charge of $5 per month for each additional GB of bandwidth use.
About three months later, the bandwidth was increased to 100 GB per month, but upload bandwidth was throttled to almost nothing; less than 10 kb/second, a fraction of what I used to get from dial-up AOL 25 years ago. I spoke to a rep in the Office of the President of Rogers, who verbally confirmed that the throttle of upload bandwidth was a new policy name 'traffic shaping'. He also confirmed that there was, and would be, no posted notice of the policy on the Rogers website, and he would not confirm what he had told me by e-mail. I managed to bypass the upload throttling by choosing different UDP ports.
I wasn't getting anywhere near the speed I was supposed to get, so a technician came to the building. He said the previous technician had connected three units in the building to the same incoming feed, so I got the correct speed after that.
After the two year contract expired, I switched to DSL from Teksavvy, (December, 2006), and they are still my ISP.
At that time I shared a two bedroom apartment. The other tennant was the phone customer through Bell, and I was a customer of Rogers for Cable TV only. The other guy switched to Rogers phone based on a telemarketing cold call. Shortly after the Rogers phone technician came by, my DSL Internet didn't work anymore. A Bell technician came by, and pointed out that the Rogers technician had cut the Bell wiring, and removed about an inch. The Bell technician said that, when he had worked for Rogers, they were instructed to do this, and he didn't charge me for the service call.
When I moved to my current location in 2013, I kept the Rogers landline phone because it was only $15 per month, but I switched to a new carrier in 2016, when the monthly amount increased twice within six months, more than tripling in cost to almost $50/month. With a week of having phone service with a different carrier, Rogers were calling me to see if I wanted to switch to their phone service.
I was a Rogers Cable TV for about 25 non-consecutive years. In 2014, I elected the rent-to-own option for the cable de-scrambling box - I paid an extra $8 per month for 36 months to own the box outright, as opposed to renting it indefinitely. In March 2017, I had fully purchased the box. sometime between 2014 and 2017, Rogers discontinued the rent-to-own option, but continued the contracts already in force. There was no written contract for rent-to-own.
In Spring, 2017, I got behind in my bill paying for a few months, but by August 1, the arrears was less than $200. A few days later, a hand-written notice was posted by Rogers on the front door of the house, informing me that Rogers would be terminating my service in mid month. They did this by disabling the cable de-scrambling box which, by the, belonged to me, not them. Rogers then charged me a $35 re-connection fee, which I didn't request, and billed me for two additional months of Cable TV, while providing no services. When I spoke to a Rogers rep from accounts receivable in October, 2017, I pointed out that I had fully purchased the de-scrambling box. There was a moment of silence, then the Rogers rep hung up. Since then a series of collection agencies has tried to collect money from me on behalf of Rogers. After I send them an e-mail explaining why I don't owe any money to Rogers, (what I had paid for the box was more than the arrears amount when they terminated my account), the next call I get is invariably from a different collection agency.
Needless to say, I'm not very polite whenever I get a call from Rogers, offering me discounts to switch my services to them.