I expect that not only will the current FCC decline to do anything about this, the complaint may have given Trump a new business idea.
TV Execs Warn FCC: NextGen TV DRM Could Turn Free TV Into Gambling and Pay-TV Platforms
Submitted 1 day ago by throws_lemy@reddthat.com to technology@lemmy.world
https://www.antennaland.com/fcc-nextgen-tv-drm-free-tv/
Comments
ryper@lemmy.ca 1 day ago
homes@piefed.world 1 day ago
may have given Trump a new business idea.
“How can we instantly make everyone hate TV?”
LadyMeow@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Lol if they didn’t before, I got bad news on that. Not to mention the money things like poly market and kalshi are taking in? Nah, some people might hate it, but ut would be a money tree
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Let’s just cut the shit and admit that over-the-air broadcast television is effectively dead.
This is why Net Neutrality mattered, because the future isn’t in old tech (radio broadcast) being consumed by DRM in desperate plays to stay relevant and/or profitable.
The future was always in things like YouTube, Netflix, and other online content delivery services. Which is why strict regulation of Net Neutrality and strict regulation of such services was and continues to be so important.
No, the infrastructure isn’t “open” like broadcast airwaves, which technically anyone with a license and equipment can jump into using, whereas internet infrastructure is all privately owned wired networking. The fact that it is different isn’t an excuse for any and all governments to have just effectively given up on regulation of those spaces when they’re where the media-consuming public happen to be.
I can almost guarantee you that nobody under the age of 30 gives a singly flying fuck about having an antenna on a television. They’re probably watching more than half their media on their phone or tablet anyway.
The real reason that this kind of change is happening to over-the-air broadcasting is because it doesn’t have enough viewers, and by extension, enough advertising, to sustain it as a model anymore.
I think the loss of over-the-air programming isn’t the best thing, but I also think it’s stupid to keep holding on to this idea like it matters very much in 2026 where if you asked a kid in their twenties if they even knew what an antenna for a television was they’d probably go “what the fuck are you even talking about?”
masterofn001@lemmy.ca 4 hours ago
I’m Canadian ans live near a fairly large US city.
I only use OTA and sites that sail the high seas.
My 20$ antenna gets me between 50 - 60 channels - weather and season dependent.
If/when OTA dies, my TV will never be used again.
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 hours ago
You’re very lucky. I lived 60 miles south of Seattle, 30 miles southwest of Tacoma, and was able to get a single channel with an antenna because my city was in a valley surrounded by mountainous terrain and so the broadcast signals from the TV towers were all blocked by the terrain.
I also worked in local television for a long time in the early 2000s and 3 out of 4 of the stations I worked at no longer exist and there are fewer and fewer rural stations, so unless you live in the big city or unless you’re in a very flat area where the big city signal can get to you, you’re shit out of luck.
thejml@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
While you’re probably right about the younger generation, there’s currently a huge movement away from cable and a million online streaming services and back to OTA. It’s why the antenna I bought 15 yrs ago now costs 5x what it did then.
My wife and I dropped cable 13yrs ago now and between the OTA, free streaming like Twitch and YouTube, and such, and buying physical BluRays we haven’t missed it.
credo@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I live 70 miles from my nearest broadcast. I invested in a nice antenna and an HDHomerun years ago.
Otherwise we’re beholden to $60+ a month for the basic cable package to watch any sports or local news.
Screw that.
Concave1142@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I just went through the annoying ass process of looking for my OTA antenna for my TV for the Super Bowl because you had to pay a subscription in order to watch it anywhere else and I figured that the OTA channels would at least have it on.
In the end, I gave up trying to find a live play of it and will eventually watch the highlight reels if I even care that much.
I probably threw the antenna away because as you said, no one watches antenna TV any more.
roofuskit@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Lucky enough that a bent paperclip gets me most channels here.
edgemaster72@lemmy.world 1 day ago
If you find a replay of the whole game, don’t bother with anything but the 4th quarter. But honestly the whole thing is pretty skippable unless you’re a Seahawks fan
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Also, depending on where you live its a pointless exercise. I ended up throwing mine away not because I didn’t want access to OTA television, but because I lived in a valley on the other side of mountains where all the broadcast antennae in Seattle are. So even being on the top floor of a building with my antenna as high as I could possibly mount it I still got exactly one channel total that came through and it was still glitchy a lot of the time. God the digital changeover ruined OTA broadcasts, because at least when you used to have weak signal you could tweak the antenna until the picture looked halfway decent, but no amount of tweaking fixes the digital glitching that happens from dropped packets.
Anyway, yeah, if you live in an unfortunately placed area, you need a 30 foot tall antennae pole on top of your building to even maybe have the opportunity to catch some broadcast channels. Stupid.
angelmountain@lemy.nl 1 day ago
The best way to watch sports is to go to the arena, the second best way is to go to the pub/bar/sports cafe and watch with the neighbours. Like the old days.
grue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I’ve been wanting to watch the Olympics, but have so far failed because my previous VPN + Canadian coverage strategy doesn’t work (CBC requires an account now) and I can’t find my TV remote to switch the input from my set-top box to the antenna.
partial_accumen@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I can almost guarantee you that nobody under the age of 30 gives a singly flying fuck about having an antenna on a television. They’re probably watching more than half their media on their phone or tablet anyway.
…and…
if you asked a kid in their twenties if they even knew what an antenna for a television was they’d probably go “what the fuck are you even talking about?”
I’m not sure that’s accurate. Gen Z and younger are apparently re-embracing OTA TV.
"The study found that younger viewers now over-index on digital antenna usage compared to their older (50+ year-old) counterparts (23% and 15%, respectively). " source
I’m much older but OTA TV is still a nearly daily use in our house even if the same content is available on various streaming services. DVR means skipping commecials while also getting a much better image quality than highly compressed streaming.
We found OTA TV is a great compliment to streaming. There’s no need to pay a cable/satellite subscription, you don’t have to constantly worry about that bill going up year over year or a local channel being blacked out because of contract disputes. There’s no “service” to have to worry about going out.
FauxLiving@lemmy.world 1 day ago
QuandaleDingle@lemmy.world 1 day ago
OW! MY BALLS!
FauxLiving@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I like money
JoMiran@lemmy.ml 1 day ago
roofuskit@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Unfortunately this is going to leave a lot of rural customers in the dark. Poor Internet connection and drm TV. Guess who will control everything they see and hear?
Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Sounds like an opportunity for someone to establish “el paquete” for those communities. Probably could even get reasonable financial support from the community out of it.
toiletobserver@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Aye
FauxLiving@lemmy.world 1 day ago
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 1 day ago
In Kissimmee, FL, the Democratic Sheriff, and the ONLY Hispanic Sheriff in Florida, was arrested for being part of a gambling ring that operated two machine-based “casinos” in the Orlando area. They showed them on TV, with giant windows allowing a clear view of banks of colorful lighted machines, in full view of the main road through town. They also openly posted videos on Instagram. They even had all the proper corporate documentation properly filed with the state and local governments, as well as their lawyers’ documentation. They didn’t try to hide it at all. It seems pretty obvious that they THOUGHT their business was legal.
And yet, I watched the local news channel that “broke” the story, and was selling it hard so they’d get viewership credibility, clutching their pearls in gasping tones, about the horror of this “massive $20 million dollar a year gambling operation!”
And then they cut to a commercial…
An ad for the Hard Rock’s MULTI-BILLION DOLLAR gambling operation, 45 minutes up the road.
But at least DeSantis got rid of the Hispanic Sheriff in the last Democratic stronghold in Florida, and replaced him with his hand-picked guy with years of immigration enforcement experience.
W98BSoD@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 hours ago
But at least DeSantis…
His name is DeathSanits (after how many Floridians died during COVID)
BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 1 hour ago
I usually call him DeSatan.
hodgepodgin@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
holy fucking shit… every day I get older the more I agree with Stallman on everything
curbstickle@anarchist.nexus 1 day ago
Ehhhhhh hopefully not everything.
I really, really, really hope not everything.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
You know, for kids!
roofuskit@lemmy.world 1 day ago
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day ago
Most underrated Coen Brothers film.
badbytes@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I’ve started to read instead of drinking from the content tap of TVs. Been much happier!
MehBlah@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Arrrrrr!
Thebeardedsinglemalt@lemmy.world 1 hour ago
Buy physical copies of your games, movies and books, burn music, don’t bookmark your porn, download it. Backup your stuff because the days of ownership for media are coming to a close.