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Grand Theft Digital: How Corporate Broadcasters Will Hijack Digital TV
On February 17, 2009 a massive, but so far little-noted corporate theft of the public airwaves will be consummated as US analog TV stations switch to digital TV (DTV) broadcasting. Digital broadcast technology enables three, four and sometimes more separate channels to be compressed into the space formerly occupied by a single old-fashioned analog TV channel. So when the transition from analog to digital TV occurs nationwide on February 17, 2009 each of the nation's more than 1700 broadcast TV license holders will suddenly have two, three or more additional channels, a gift from the taxpayers worth an estimated $70 billion.
Back in the mid 1990s, the owners of TV stations promised Congress that the advent of DTV would bring with it wide selection of new programming, educational and children's shows, frequently updated local newscasts and interactive content, all free over the new digital broadcast airwaves. Of course, they lied.
"Broadcasters have no idea how they will fill the extra channels they'll get on February 18, 2009," Communications Workers of America's Carrie Biggs-Adams told BAR. They don't have the content and they don't have a clue. There are only so many reruns, reality shows and home shopping networks."
An article by David Hatch in the June 7 National Journal confirms this
With the February 17 shift to digital broadcasting just over eight months away, broadcasters are finding that the business model for multiple channels is not panning out. An often-repeated refrain is that there's no money in it. "You're not creating any new advertisers, and you're not creating any new viewers," said Shaun Sheehan, vice president of the Tribune Co., which carried an all-music channel called The Tube on some of its secondary digital stations before the network folded in October.
"It's just a pure business decision," said James McQuivey, a media analyst with Boston-based Forrester Research. "Do I run the risk of rolling out new channels that will dilute my audience base?"
The National Association of Broadcasters cited statistics from BIA Financial, a Chantilly, Va.-based research firm, indicating that 351 television stations are multicasting.
But that figure includes public broadcasters, which have invested heavily in extra stations and account for a large chunk of the ones available--compared with their commercial counterparts.
When commercial outlets do multicast, it is often to transmit redundant weather maps, which involves minimal investment and little or no on-air talent. These radar scopes are so widespread that they've saturated the airwaves in some markets, including Washington, where viewers have three to choose from. Commercial broadcasters "can say that they do have some content on there," the FCC source said derisively.
Although the airwaves are the property of the public under US law, and broadcasters receive their licenses from the FCC only on the condition that they serve the public interest, neither Congress nor the FCC, have attached any public service or public interest requirement to the thousands of new DTV channels that current broadcasters will receive. And current broadcasters, according to the deal worked out by Congress and the FCC back in the 1990s, are the only ones upon whom the new stations made possible by DTV will be bestowed. They're in. Congress and the FCC, in their wisdom didn't think local governments, schools, colleges, libraries, unions, community organizations, local churches, blacks, Latinos or females deserved a shot at any of the thousands of new DTV channels. They're out. That's it and that's all.
The DTV transition has been engineered at every level to shield broadcasters from public scrutiny or accountability. You'd think four times as many TV stations would mean the FCC would have to issue four times as many broadcast licenses. But the issuance of new licenses would make public debate about who gets them and under what conditions unavoidable. So the new stations will be brought online under existing licenses.
The simple fact that DTV means the number of available channels will increase three or four times without a single broadcast license being issued to any new players is being carefully and deliberately concealed from the American people, lest there be a public debate on whether broadcasters actually deserve the new channels, and to what other use the newly available public spectrum might be put. For example, to find a reference to and definition of "digital multicasting", the technical name for the ability to place multiple channels in the bandwidth formerly occupied by a single analog channel, you have to hit the "What is DTV" page on the FCC web site, then click the link on the word "multicasting" and read the pop-up to learn that DTV
"allow(s) each digital broadcast station to split its bit stream into 2, 3, 4 or more individual channels of programming and/or data services. (For example, on channel 7, you could watch 7-1, 7-2, 7-3 or 7-4.)"
BAR had to spend 30 minutes on the phone, calling a half dozen FCC numbers and speaking to nine staffers just to find that reference. There are others, but few are easily discovered.
What's easy to find in the press and on the FCC's DTV site are the empty promises of broadcasters that DTV will mean more programming choices for the public, along with hundreds of thousands of words about whether old and new TV sets will be able to receive the new DTV signals and how well, who needs set-top converter boxes and who doesn't and who pays for them and how.
The broadcast industry is a closed club which reaps vast private profits from its monopoly use of a limited public resource, namely the public airwaves. No clever entrepreneur or smart engineer invented the broadcast spectrum that carries radio, TV and other wireless communications. The spectrum is a fundamental property of the physical universe. The FCC is charged with regulating the use of the spectrum in the public interest.
But the FCC is effectively the captive and sock puppet for the broadcasters club. The FCC has managed to spend millions on informing the public about the impending transition to DTV, with a staff of hundreds, public meetings, extensive web sites, dozens of videos, and complete "outreach toolkits" full of sample press releases for government and community organizations to conduct DTV transition awareness programs. The FCC's desired level of public "awareness" is limited to how to acquire a converter box or a DTV-capable set and turn it on. This treatment of the American people as "consumers" --- as commodities to be manipulated rather than empowered citizens, the actual owners of the broadcast spectrum is conclusive evidence that the FCC is wholly captured by and run in the interest of the broadcast industry.
Although the FCC's digital TV web site and handouts repeat the empty promises of broadcasters for more variety, for educational and public service programming on DTV they do it without mentioning that there will be three or four times as many channels, let alone entertaining the question whose channels those will be. The questions of who owns the limited resource of broadcast airwaves, who is entitled to broadcast licenses and under what conditions, and in whose interest the public spectrum must be managed are entirely absent from the FCC's public "awareness" programs. The fix is definitely in.
On February 18, 2009, 1700 existing TV broadcasters get multiple new channels with no public service obligation. The rest of us get nothing, unless you count set-top converter boxes and more channels to watch infomercials, "reality" shows, the jewelry channel and the home shopping network in beautiful high-def TV. Although broadcast TV is a local medium with most station footprints only a few dozen miles in radius, the transition will occur simultaneously nationwide. This will make local organizing aimed at opening up distribution of new licenses for the new channels or forcing some degree of broadcaster accountability extraordinarily difficult. But there is one bright spot.
The FCC, in its wisdom, has designated an early test rollout of the new broadcast regime to take effect in a single city; Wilmington NC, on September 8, 2008. Wilmington is an historic port city with a population of about 100,000, a quarter of whom are black.
If there is truly a nationwide movement for media justice it must rear its head in the next few weeks. The people of Wilmington NC know they deserve more choices, more localism, more news and more control over their media than they have now. Right now, they don't know know that Wilmington's four local TV stations are about to become sixteen stations with no increase in local accountability, no new local news or public service, no local arts, and certainly no local ownership. They must be told.
If there is a nationwide media justice "movement" worthy of that name it will concentrate its resources in a public education campaign and a mass mobilization, first in Wilmington NC and then nationwide with the aim of overthrowing the cozy deal broadcasters have worked out with their puppets in the FCC and the Congress. There will be another new Congress soon, and another president. This is a political moment when much is possible, but only in the context of a broad and sustained demand to overthrow the secretive sweetheart deal broadcasters have cooked up for themselves to monopolize the newly available digital TV channels. That's what real movements do --- they seize key political moments, they conduct mass education campaigns to take us someplace we would never go without them.
The FCC, the current Congress and candidates for the next one, presidential candidates and everybody else should be forced to explain repeatedly over the next few months why thousands of newly available digital TV channels should not go to thousands of new local broadcasters --- to community organizations, local entrepreneurs, local churches, schools and unions, to blacks, Latinos, Native Americans and to women. It's our spectrum. It's our public space. It's our right.
If a nationwide movement for media justice really exists, it must begin to expose the privatization of the public airwaves hidden in plain sight under the guise of the "transition" from analog to digital TV. It must harness the power of the people to challenge this grand theft of our digital destiny.
Bruce Dixon is BAR Managing Editor.
© Black Agenda Report
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28 Comments so far
Show AllTechnology is getting so crazy and out of control. I saw this video where they are able to replicate politicians in digital to look so real. amazing -
http://www.minimovie.com/film-128295-Welcome%20Back,%20Clinton
This article confirms the suspicions I had when I started hearing how the government was actually going to pay for (almost) these silly converter boxes. If the gov't is wanting to do something for me, that usually means that is in the best interests of some corporation, not mine.
The only channels I watch (when I even bother at all) are the PBS ones and I don't have cable, so whatever plan the FCC has is not going to work for me!
Why don't you just unsubscribe from cable/satellite and DEFUND DEFUND DEFUND Big Media ! You're making too much out of small crap. Our ancestors did rather well without the telly and so can we. Move ON !
This is another example of the theft of public resources by private corporate media. It's obvious that these corporations understand their criminality by having a news blackout on this issue.
Frederick, if all readers of CommonDreams unsubscribed from cable and satellite, destroyed their TVs and never watched again, the broadcast media wouldn't even notice. They would still sell their pablum to the masses, who would continue to consume and to feed the corporate monster. Our challenge is to awaken people and to get them to demand changes in behavior from the media and the rest of the fascist machine. Dropping out is not going to help unless you get a significant portion of the population to drop out with you. Good luck with that.
How will we be able to tell when TV is hijack by corporate broadcasters? It seems to me we are decades too late on this issue.
At least there is still some room on the internet . . .
If Democrats would promise voters to force cable and satellite to sell only "by the channel" with ONE fixed price for each and a low minimum (say 15), they would win both Congress and The White House by landslides.
Most liberals are dying to cut their bills in half and buy only what they want. And most evangelicals are dying to do that as well PLUS absolutely not buy channels they deem objectionable for their values and their children. This is a slam-dunk coalition opportunity for groups who are otherwise often opposed to each other.
As for the broadcast spectrum, once you get your liberals (as above), you re-write the 1990s laws to citizen interest and DARE the Five-Catholic Supreme Court to find that change somehow unconstitutional.
I'm not at all sure I get the point of this. After all, who gets TV by broadcast these days anyways. Sure they have these extra broadcast channels, but who in the world is going to go buy a HD antenna to receive the signals and watch them that way?
When you think about the real world, this one seems to go very deep into the 'who cares?' bucket.
------------------
TV is a tool. It doesn't have a morality of its own. So I get really tired of this constant crap that says I should just take an ax to it.
If I unsubscribed from my sat system and destroyed my TV, I could never again hear from Amy Goodman and Democracy Now!, or see the other information put out by Free Speech TV, now watch Bill Moyers and his excellent shows.
Its simplistic and ignorant to rant about how its all crap and we should just destroy our TVs. Its all in how you use it. You can use your TV today to be brainwashed by corporate crap, or you can use it to become enlightened and get information that's hard to get anywhere else. You have this power, and its all in that remote control and how you use to decide when to watch TV and what to watch on TV.
Samson wrote:
"I'm not at all sure I get the point of this. After all, who gets TV by broadcast these days anyways?"
I do.
I refuse to pay for cable - considering their advertizing saturation, TV broadcasts, should be free. If cable provided intelligent programming, with minimal advertizing, I would consider getting it. Digital broadcasting could be a great boon for free, diverse TV content, but of course it won't.
"Sure they have these extra broadcast channels, but who in the world is going to go buy a HD antenna to receive the signals and watch them that way?"
"HD antennas" are a scam. Any ordinary TV antenna that can recieve a reasonable interference free analog signal will work fine - even regular rabbit ears.
"if all readers of CommonDreams unsubscribed from cable and satellite, destroyed their TVs and never watched again, the broadcast media wouldn't even notice. They would still sell their pablum to the masses, who would continue to consume and to feed the corporate monster. "
You're only referring to the CD readers. Of course you have to take the time to convince others that they are getting ripped off with crummy scams for all the money that goes to cable and satellite companies. Dropping does actually hurt the companies' bottom line significantly. Only from there will they be forced to listen to demands for true change. It's not rocket science.
"If I unsubscribed from my sat system and destroyed my TV, I could never again hear from Amy Goodman and Democracy Now!, or see the other information put out by Free Speech TV, now watch Bill Moyers and his excellent shows."
Those channels are not available to people who can't afford satellite. Besides, all those shows can be found on the internet. Just read the transcripts. It's not hard to do a google search.
"You can use your TV today to be brainwashed by corporate crap, or you can use it to become enlightened and get information that's hard to get anywhere else. You have this power, and its all in that remote control and how you use to decide when to watch TV and what to watch on TV."
And since there is nothing truly enlightening or informative, you might as well nix the telly.
By the way Daniel David, are you happy that Bill FUCKING Klinton signed the 1996 Telecom bill that brought us this crap on TV? Are you happy that Democrats in Congress keep capitulating to Bush and as a matter of fact secretly plan to join the GOP even with a "President Obama" ? You can preach about the need to somehow vote Democrat but a real progressive/liberal would give 3rd parties who are truly liberal and/or progressive a chance.
VOTENADER.ORG !!
When I heard all the TV's were going to "go dark" when signals changed to digital I thought that might be a blessing in disguise. Too many people get virtually all their information from the TV, never knowing how corporate controlled it already is, and never knowing about whole issues that are kept off TV. There are many important issues that are never talked about on the major network news, or only a one-sided version of it. It is no wonder that the many people who have never learned to, or cannot afford to, use the internet are in the dark about what's going on. Maybe if their magic screen actually went dark they'd be forced to seek out other sources, and think for themselves again.
This is a non-starter for me. I don't watch TV and I could care less about it. If television were to serve a public purpose it would have do so long ago. It is a wasteland for wasted minds, sports included. Rah rah zip boom bah screw it.
The only channel I'm interested in watching is freespeechtv. Once my cable company decided that that was a "special interest" channel and put it in their higher bracket tv package, I cancelled my cable. No point in paying for something I wasn't using.
The greater issue is that usually I pay for something to take the ads away (on internet forums, as an example). Yet, with cable tv, I'm paying them to pump me with more ads. If I'm going to be paying $89.95, I don't want to see a single ad.
But I can access freespeechtv online for the cost of my internet monthly bill. I can also do more things on the internet like read. It's money much better spent.
I agree with you doom n gloom. Take the power out of the government's and broadcaster's hands and DON'T WATCH TV. Most of it is garbage anyways. I watch TV but I realize before I even turn it on that it's propaganda, sometimes entertaining propaganda but still not a great way to spend one's time.
Anyways, my SO babysits a 12 year old and the kid only uses the tv for video games. Most parents of teenagers have probably seen that their kids are online, texting or playing VG's way more than they watch tv. There's a generational shift happening and in 10-15 years, tv will be like musical theatre, something people are glad that exists for nostalgic reasons but something that not a lot of people pay attention to daily.
Doom & Gloom and ashu are right--
This is both the perfect opportunity and excuse to break the favorite toy of corporate America--Once you realize that as of February of 09 TV ceases to exist the following opportunities open up:
1. No more conditioning by advertisers promoting "needs" that really are not and profligate consumption that is unwise and unhealthy.
2. Media elites will have to scramble for real work instead of their fairy-tale pink cloud existence as Big Brother's little helpers.
3. Slime-ball hucksters of sorry and disgusting programming will have to find some new way to distribute their garbage.
4. Repetitive conditioning (aka "the big lie") will have to find some new means of propagation .
5. People will have the perfect excuse to actually get to know their neighbors, family and friends by spending more time communicating with them than being conditioned by TV to be passive receptors of whatever it is spewing forth.
If 1000 channels are blaring forth 7/24/365 and nobody's watching does it reaslly matter? No! Remember Nancy Reagan's famous advice about street drugs and "just say no" to TV.
FrederickJohnson,
No, I'm not happy with everything Clinton signed, nor am I "happy" with your hair-brained analysis of promoting a non-existent third party at this late date. Nader exists, you say? No, not really. He has politically passed away two elections back after he helped America elect Bush.
I only watch the cooking shows. MMMMMM love them cooking shows they look so good I could eat the TV.
Serious, with 300+ channels now it is mostly just crap. It only takes longer to find out there isn't anyhing worth watching. You start at 8 PM and by the time you maybe find something it is 8:15 and you missed the start.
Think I will stop all the cable and dish crap and put up an antenna, will they still work?
Daniel David---
You know as well as I do that Nader never "helped America elect Bush."
You are a lying SOB. Katherine Harris twisted the Florida ballot. You know this. The stats and the story are now in the public domain for anyone interested in examining. You are promoting a lie.
Actually, FrederickJohnson makes several good points while you seek to denigrate him on one point, while you are wrong and you know it. Sophist, get off this site. You are a plant.
-30-
this whole thing is about coporate profits....that's all !the big tv manufacturers and big media is looking for ways to make more money....since they can't make more money using the tired mantra of free-market polocies....they run to the gov't for help.....it's known as COPORATE WELFARE....in order to keep the masses from revolting...they are giving free $40 vouchers....
Screw broadcast TV. Bring on digital downloads and ipTV. Death to big media.
That the commercial broadcasting companies are finding a way to monetize public airwaves to the extent that they dare to call it "our air" is nothing new. That they say one thing when trying to get it approved, then something else is done is not surprising either if one bothers to study the history of broadcasting. This is not an avenue of complete doom and gloom though as long as there is an alternative media source where the consumer is king, the Internet. The broadcasters know full well they are shedding audience share at a continuous rate, and said audience share they are losing is amongst the more desirable demographics sought by advertisers: the young. What is amusing to see is their continued ham-handedness in dealing with this trend even though its' been going on for what is an eternity in our ADD addled age.
OleManRiver,
Since you demanded I "get off this site", I guess I'll have to ask whether you're drunk, high, or just plain stupid.
I shall speak as I please and without regard to you or your demands. It's the rule here. As for Nader, he IS one of the reasons we got Bush---and now he's trying to give you McCain, with constant blessing of a few village idiots.
Obama/Gore, Nader for Attorney General or Supreme Court?
Obviously, Mr Dixon hasn't bothered to gain an understanding of how digital TV works. There are NO new channels. None, zip, nada. Each broadcaster has the same numbers of channels he had before.
What's different is that each of those channels can be divided up into subchannels (if they choose to do so). However, each channel has a maximum capacity of 19 megabits per second no matter how many subchannels there may be and that has to be divided up among the subchannels. You can't broadcast viewable HD programming on 4 subchannels at the same time.
The point here is that you can't simply give one of those "subchannels" to somebody who'd like to become a broadcaster. Two people can't broadcast on the same channel at the same time. That's not to say that the FCC couldn't require broadcasters to give away some of their bandwidth and the use of their broadcasting facilities, but that's a whole different idea than being suggested by Mr Dixon.
On June 12th, 2008 4:10 pm Samson wrote: >>I'm not at all sure I get the point of this. After all, who gets TV by broadcast these days anyways. Sure they have these extra broadcast channels, but who in the world is going to go buy a HD antenna to receive the signals and watch them that way?
When you think about the real world, this one seems to go very deep into the 'who cares?' bucket.<<
Samson,
Count me as one of those who get TV by broadcast. I have been doing it that way for 16 years since I cancelled my cable when it the price jumped two months in a row from $29.00 to $35.00. Ahh, the good old days when cable was $29.00. Previous to that I had always received TV over the air and I only had cable for about a year. But I left it with no regrets and used the money I saved to buy a set of rabbit ears and a highly directional UHF antenna which is proving to work very well with the wide-screen digital TV which brings me to my next issue.
It is breathtaking the number of channels that have been created out of this and our now being wasted. This technology could have been easily used to create a labor channel, a youth channel, or any number of community run TV channels.
My eyes weren't opened to this until I brought the new digital TV home, installed it and turned it on. We were asleep and we let the Republican congress of 1996 and the Clinton administration hand it over with out as little as a word as to why they should own more channels.
When the battle against media consolidation is won we will have to turn to this.
Sometime soon, you will receive content from the Internet routed wirelessly to your TV and everyone will wonder what those broadcasts were for in the olden days.
What a surprise. The government (Rs and Dems alike) should have less power not more.
Here's a joke. I applied for my "converters" because my only option is a satellite and I'm not ready to give up PBS. They give you a ship date for the coupons and tell you coupons must be used within 90 days of ship date. My ship date? July 4! One if by land, two if by sea, anyone?
This is our gov't (read politicians) forcing us to pay tribute to the Great Gods of Telecommunications. Their regular election year tribute was apparently not enough.
If it wasn't for PBS, Blockbuster and Netflex DVD mail-order, I wouldn't watch TV at all. Most of it is garbage, reruns, "reality shows" or game shows and just pure nonsense. I find little of it entertaining or informative. AND way too many commercials. Cable isn't much better.