Talk:NextGen TV: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with "Given the communications act of 1932, they should not be encrypting broadcast data.. that's OUR airwaves they're using, and we give them a license.." |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Given the communications act of 1932, they should not be encrypting broadcast data.. that's OUR airwaves they're using, and we give them a license.. | Given the communications act of 1932, they should not be encrypting broadcast data.. that's OUR airwaves they're using, and we give them a license.. | ||
Gray owned stations are now going encrypted, with no plans to go back. Seems Hearst and Gray are in competition on who can encrypt all of their channels first! WSMV in Nashville, TN is now encrypted. They give this BS about safety, and such. But it’s to block non-DMA reception (Geo Fencing), recording, ad skipping, etc. Perhaps even subscription costs at some point. Though they say it will always be free. | |||
It seems NBC is leading the move toward encryption. |
Revision as of 21:30, 4 April 2024
Given the communications act of 1932, they should not be encrypting broadcast data.. that's OUR airwaves they're using, and we give them a license..
Gray owned stations are now going encrypted, with no plans to go back. Seems Hearst and Gray are in competition on who can encrypt all of their channels first! WSMV in Nashville, TN is now encrypted. They give this BS about safety, and such. But it’s to block non-DMA reception (Geo Fencing), recording, ad skipping, etc. Perhaps even subscription costs at some point. Though they say it will always be free.
It seems NBC is leading the move toward encryption.