Not sure if this has been asked....Are we talking about Showtime being pulled everywhere? And if it's pulled will Dish automatically stop charging for this package?
I hope you don't think that means they're "free".I don't think they should profit off them, if must carry. However, remember, dish does not charge seperately for locals anymore either.
Come to think of it. I've had Bell for about 15 years and I don't think I've ever lost a local channel to a dispute. Or even AMC or the superstations for that matter. Bell must have signed a 20 year agreement or something.I can tell you how to right this situation, the most of you are not going to like it, because for some reason everyone trusts greedy corporations over the government, when both are equally distrustful, the only difference being that at least part of the time, the government does have the best interest of the people in mind. Our FCC should do like the CRTC does in Canada, neither party can remove the channel, they have to come to amicable terms with one another with the channels left alone. It does not effect the viewers and forces a kind of arbitration on both parties. The Congress should make this incumbent upon the FCC to avoid situations like this from happening, and to help control prices.
The CRTC does not allow either party to remove channels in a dispute as far as I know. Also, category A channels are must carry, all cable/DBS providers must carry them. I do not remember which are category A, B, etc... Now they have different names, you can look it up if interested.Come to think of it. I've had Bell for about 15 years and I don't think I've ever lost a local channel to a dispute. Or even AMC or the superstations for that matter. Bell must have signed a 20 year agreement or something.
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The CRTC does not allow either party to remove channels in a dispute as far as I know. Also, category A channels are must carry, all cable/DBS providers must carry them. I do not remember which are category A, B, etc... Now they have different names, you can look it up if interested.
One thing you must get out of your mind. This is not personal. It's business.Well, yes...that is exactly what DISH has said throughout each and every one of these carriage negotiations over the past years. There is no "innocent" party here though. These are big business owners, they are both asses as far as I can tell just because they ARE rich and feel entitled, and they are both into this for the max amount of profit they can wring out of being in business. They have to pay for that fourth or fifth vacation home somehow.
CRTC?The CRTC does not allow either party to remove channels in a dispute as far as I know. Also, category A channels are must carry, all cable/DBS providers must carry them. I do not remember which are category A, B, etc... Now they have different names, you can look it up if interested.
Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission. Their equivalent of the FCC.CRTC?
The Raiders are insignificant in this process.Considering Oakland is just one team, I highly doubt it's a big factor.
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Had this dispute come at say the middle of March, the negotiations would be more critical. Each side would then have lots of skin in the game.Well CBS is #1 for a reason. I disagree with the part that Dish is willing to drop it.
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Because it isn't just about a viewer missing a game, TV show, or movie. It's about millions of eyes missing the advertising that retailers and other businesses pay good money for that won't be seen because a channel (or much more frequently, a whole slate of channels) goes dark on an entire provider's system. "It's the economy, stupid"It's just entertainment. Regardless of bundling practices, why should missing a football game or a movie rise to the level of federal law.
"sorry I do not agree"....."That is my belief"...Sorry, but I do not agree. Those satellites and your receiver/antenna are just like being connected to the internet as far as two way data transmission goes. And no, I do not believe installers know everything about the receiver and its capabilities because that has been proven to me more than once. I knew more about the darn thing than two of my installers. I also feel very comfortable stating that I know more about my receiver and its capabilities than a large number of the CSRs...also proven to me too frequently for my happiness.
Way back on the 722, I remember when the programming info could be sent by satellite connection only. Do not be naive enough to believe that DISH, DirectTV or whoever would not snoop on your activity for whatever reason using the receiver and satellite connection only. I am not saying they do, but to state that it absolutely does not or cannot happen is not logical. And no, I am not going to get into a pissing contest with anyone about this here. That is my belief on the subject based on what I know about computer and networking operations of many kinds. I am an expert in none, but huge dabbler in much. Anyway, I hate the combative tone most "debates" take on online, so I refrain from "debating" my opinions. I will state what I believe, as I have on this, and leave it at that.
Black helicopters, I tell ya!!!!!I can promise you, the LNBF that is installed on the antenna is a receive only, it cannot transmit, nor can the receiver, they do not have that capability. However, what they do have the capability of, it transmitting data over telephone line or broadband. Hence the reason that they require you to have receivers connected to the Internet or phone line. That is the reason that you must have a phone or internet connection for IPPV to report back for billing purposes.
She claims to have installers working for her. Imagine being employed by someone who always has to be the smartest person in the room and the only opinion that matters is theirs.....Believe what you want, but speaking as someone who has actually worked on satellite uplinks, it is not technically possible to send information back via satellite in a standard Dish hookup (if someone has Dishnet, that's a different story). This has nothing to do with "logic" and everything to do with hardware capabilities.
You can also have the opinions that bicycles can fly. Don't expect people to not question you simply because that's your opinion.
Public Affairs programming is a requirement of Local Television broadcasters as a condition of being granted a license to use the public airwaves.It's just entertainment. Regardless of bundling practices, why should missing a football game or a movie rise to the level of federal law.
Locals are somewhat the exception due to the public airwave / public interest components, but everything else is just fluff.
During my tenure as a tech, I used to hear that a lot from older and usually rural dwellersI worked with a man who swore that if the TV set was off, and plugged in to the wall, the "government" could watch you. Said he always made his wife unplug all the TV sets, especially in the bedroom before they went to bed.