Last updated: April 15, 2008 - 1:51pm
Action by the Republican-dominated House Commerce Committee has broadcasters fearing the digital TV transition could leave them with a reduced audience watching degraded pictures. The gloomy scenario follows the committee's largely party-line, 33-to-17 vote on Oct. 26 to set Dec. 31, 2008 as the date to end traditional analog TV, leaving all broadcasts airing in the digital format. Broadcasters fear there's not enough money in the legislation to subsidize the purchases of digital-to-analog converter boxes that will be needed in homes that don't 1) have a digital TV set or 2) subscribe to cable or satellite TV. Subsidies were not the only feature that left broadcasters unhappy. The successful bill included language that would let cable and satellite providers downgrade high-definition pictures. Cable and satellite operators say they may need to do so if faced with constraints on bandwidth capacity; broadcasters fear their sparkling high-definition fare will appear less so to viewers.
http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/news/recent_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001392255
Links to Sources
Related
- Early converter buyers get more channels now
- Zucker Departure in Hands of Justice, FCC
- FCC Chair Genachowski's "Fake Net Neutrality" Scheme Threatens Internet Freedom, Digital Democracy
- TV Networks Should Be Afraid -- Very Afraid -- of Hulu
- Bandwidth Caps Force Netflix to Cut Video Quality in Canada
- DTV Bill Signed Into Law
- Obama backs extending digital TV cutoff date
- Technical Difficulties
- Netflix and Epix working on major digital partnership to shake up pay TV landscape
- House DTV Draft: Subsidy, No Must-Carry
- Economic Gloom Could Be Boon For Cable
- Google Street View is legal, says German court
- Nielsen Issues DTV Transition Plan to Clients
- EchoStar, DirecTV to Offer Family Tiers
- House Democrats and the Internet, Telecom Agenda
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

