Tag: DTV

  1. Do not adjust your television. The MPAA is controlling transmission.

    Jef Pearlman's picture
    By Jef Pearlman on July 22, 2008 - 12:22pm

    If you’ve never seen the intro (original/new) to the TV show “The Outer Limits” then perhaps now is the time. Be sure to have the sound up:

    There is nothing wrong with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission…

    Perhaps if the intro was written today, it would say, “There is nothing wrong with your television set. But do not attempt to view our movies. The MPAA is controlling transmission.”

  2. CES 2008 Interface Innovation

    Alex Curtis's picture
    By Alex Curtis on January 10, 2008 - 3:15am

    Sometimes the market for a certain thing or feature gets stagnant. There comes a point when a once innovative feature becomes standard on every product. Case in point, the DVR interface. You know what I’m talking about, those linear menus that force you to scroll down, sequentially through every option. Way too often, the buttons on the remote aren’t responsive enough making the whole idea of having a long list of content choices into a burden. Enter two new interfaces from Hitachi and HillCrest Labs:

    Issues

    Tags

  3. Notes from the 2008 CES International Supersession

    Sherwin Siy's picture
    By Sherwin Siy on January 9, 2008 - 11:24am

    One of the many panels at CES on Tuesday, January 8 featured a tricontinental group of communications policymakers: David Gross, United States Coordinator for International Communications and Information Policy; Viviane Reding, European Commission Commissioner for Information Society and Media; and Tsutomu Sato, Senior Vice Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications of Japan.

  4. Welcome to CES!

    Gigi Sohn's picture
    By Gigi Sohn on January 6, 2008 - 7:52pm

    Alex, Sherwin and I will spending most of this week at the International Consumer Electronics Show, otherwise known as CES. We’ll be trying to see what are the cool new technologies and trends and to consider their policy implications. The show is massive, the biggest trade show in the world, with nearly three thousand exhibits and 150,000+ attendees taking up the entire Las Vegas Convention Center and Sands Expo and Convention Center, as well as parts of the Hilton, Renaissance, and Venetian hotels.

  5. Tying together DTV, 700 MHz, and white spaces

    Susan Crawford's picture
    By Susan Crawford on December 17, 2007 - 3:25pm

    There’s a lively discussion about the DTV transition going on right now. (Go ahead, ask an elderly neighbor of yours who receives television broadcasts over the air what she knows about the DTV transition. I bet not much.)

  6. Follow up on right-to-attach to walled gardens [UPDATED]

    Alex Curtis's picture
    By Alex Curtis on November 27, 2007 - 1:35pm

    I wanted to drop a note on a couple of recent developments since my post on right-to-attach last week. They are:

  7. Right-to-Attach in Walled Gardens is Just As Important as Net Neutrality

    Alex Curtis's picture
    By Alex Curtis on November 19, 2007 - 5:36pm

    I’m an analog cable subscriber and was hoping to upgrade to an HDTV this holiday season, and apparently I’m not alone. Before I buy-in, I’ve been considering the freedom that “going digital” should give me compared to the old analog world. The primary reason I haven’t “upgraded” to digital cable up to this point comes down to TiVo, it and the freedom that devices like it that connect to an analog coax cable give me. Digital technology is supposed to deliver more, not less freedom, isn’t it? It’s not clear that upgrading to digital cable gives me the freedoms I’m used to.

  8. Broadcast Flag rumors

    Alex Curtis's picture
    By Alex Curtis on November 19, 2007 - 5:23pm

    We had heard rumblings a few weeks ago that the MPAA was trying to push the broadcast flag, yet again. More recently we heard some more details that the content industry is trying to win over some in the consumer electronics industry to push for the technology mandate that would cripple many home devices and limit fair use of legally obtained content by consumers and educators alike.

    You may remember the last push of the broadcast flag was buried in the series-of-tubes Senate telecommunications bill that thankfully went nowhere. That version’s language gave FCC the needed permission (which was lacking(PDF)) to instate the copy-protection scheme that would limit what you could do with over-the-air broadcast television.

  9. Fall Policy Preview: Copyrights (and Patents) Return to the Headlines

    Gigi Sohn's picture
    By Gigi Sohn on September 11, 2007 - 9:53pm

    This past spring and summer was all about broadband policy for Public Knowledge - we were consumed with the 700 MHz spectrum auction, Federal Trade Commission and Federal Communications Commission proceedings regarding net neutrality, and Congressional efforts to change the way the government defines broadband and gathers data about broadband deployment and adoption.

    This fall promises to be much different.

  10. In the News

    Brendan Ballou's picture
    By Brendan Ballou on July 27, 2007 - 10:03am
    • The LA Times reports on the Senate Commerce Committee’s hearing on the transition to digital television. Senators claimed that the public was dangerously uninformed on the issue, and that without a better education effort, the Senate could have “a disaster on our hands.” Currently the FCC has only $5 million allocated for educating the public, and thus far the television industry and consumer electronics companies have yet to advertise new products for the digital transition.

    • Reversing an earlier decision, Verizon agreed to bid in the 700 MHz spectrum auction under the conditions set by Chairman Martin’s proposal. However, CNet wonders whether this concession will have any impact on consumers: