No more speculation than Disney taking a harder line against Dish Network than any other provider. More on that in a moment...dangue said:I'm sorry, but unless you have insider knowledge of the contracts related to the HD feeds of these channels, the first statement is pure speculation.
That's not correct.dangue said:And without inside knowledge of the contracts involved and the circumstances under which other providers were granted HD carriage rights, there's no way to tell if the court rightly decided the matter.
The court rightly decided the "most-favored nation" clause is specifically about pricing and packaging of carried stations, not about carriage of additional channels. That is simply the court's decision based upon the existing agreement. There was no need to compare another contract.
Why is Dish Network suing? From Multichannel.com:
Dish Network is suing over contracts recently signed by Comcast and DirecTV, the two providers that have a higher number of subscribers than Dish Network. "Most-favored nation" pricing usually has a bulk discount, so that in effect DirecTV and Comcast would pay slightly less than Dish Network, because they have more subscribers.In its complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Dish cited deals ESPN announced in May with Comcast and DirecTV for ESPN Classic and ESPNU. Those agreements include what "Dish understands are more favorable" terms than those Dish had agreed to.
The Comcast and DirecTV pacts represented the first manifestations of ESPN's initiative to push ESPNU from sports packages to wider digital carriage, in exchange for distributors repositioning ESPN Classic on less widely penetrated tiers[...]
In Comcast's case, the MSO said it would launch ESPNU on its Digital Classic level of service, its second-most-widely distributed package. The deal also left it up to individual Comcast systems whether to leave ESPN Classic in its current position, switch it immediately, or swap it out when ESPNU is upgraded through the fall and into early in 2010.
DirecTV said it would widen its distribution of ESPNU to the Choice programming package, beginning July 1, with ESPN Classic being repositioned to its Sports Pack.
Currently, Dish offers ESPN Classic in the Classic Silver 200/SilverHD package, and ESPNU as part of Classic Gold 250/Gold HD.
Dish's September 2005 agreement with ESPN, which runs through the end of 2013, includes a "most-favored nations" clause that requires the programmer to provide the same provisions, according to the lawsuit.
So although my opinion is that DirecTV, Comcast and Time-Warner signed some type of an agreement to provide the four disputed HD channels, it is consistent with the industry standard, as that is exactly what happened with respect to the ESPNU and ESPN Classic swap.