Last week, as quite regularly happens, a Twitter follower shot us a question along the lines of "Is it true that Freeview was introduced partly as a means of protecting the BBC TV Licence fee?"
Yes it is.
Introducing a brand new, revolutionary (at the time) television platform might seem counter intuitive to anyone seeking to protect the archaic TV licence system, but there was method behind the madness.
Freeview came into being in 2002. It was a joint venture between the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, BSkyB and transmitter operator Arqiva.
Greg Dyke, who was the BBC Director General between 2000 and his resignation in 2004, was one of the key players in the development of the new technology. He was adamant that Freeview should be cheap, simple and available to as many people as possible.
Dyke realised that if the market was flooded with cheap "dumb" digital receivers, which lacked the ability to block television signals from individual users, then it would be virtually impossible to establish some sort of Freeview pay to view model later on.
He revealed his thoughts in his book, Inside Story.
"Freeview makes it very hard for any government to try and make the BBC a pay-television service. The more Freeview boxes out there, the harder it will be to switch the BBC to a subscription service since most of the boxes can't be adapted for pay-TV," he wrote.
"I suspect Freeview will ensure the future of the licence fee for another decade at least, and probably longer," he added.
The TV licence is effectively a poll tax that every viewer has to pay, irrespective of the channel they decide to watch. If Freeview had introduced "smart" digital receivers, with the ability to block out those channels people hadn't paid for, then you can be fairly confident that viewers would have argued that the TV licence, which exclusively funds BBC services, was obsolete.
The BBC wanted to avoid that situation at all costs, because people would then have the option of refusing to pay for its services. Given recent turbulence at the Corporation, you can be fairly confident that millions of viewers would have stopped paying.
Every year the BBC is handed billions in TV licence fee revenue, irrespective of how sordid its scandal or woeful its output. It will protect that market advantage to the death.
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Interesting article. it is probably for this reason that the BBC stopped using sky's Video-guard encryption system for their satellite services around this time (at the time you had to prove that you had a TV licence in order receive a viewing card). I was working in the satellite TV trade at the time and remember saying to my boss that the move seemed to be in order to stop people arguing that they cannot receive the BBC therefore should not need a tv licence.
ReplyDeleteAs long as the BBC channels are freely available and unscrambled , there will never really be such a thing as FREEVIEW
ReplyDeleteAs with all modern television services, they change over time. A perfect example is the digital switch-over. There's absolutely NOTHING (but GREED, especially on the BBC's part) stopping the makers of these cheap and easy to use Freeview boxes from making a new kind of box that requires a card and subscription and then encrypting the BBC's services. Anyone who then at that point, wanted to continue watching the BBC's channels would HAVE to upgrade to one of the new boxes. If that meant changing TV's to ones that had a card reader, SO BE IT. Simple. PROBLEM SOLVED!! The same could be said about Sky's services. They use a subscription based system, but you never know, one day they may decide to try something new. It's all digital and electronic, it's not set in rock.
ReplyDeleteAs long as the BBC can use the Magistrates Courts in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland to raise revenue for themselves they'll try to keep this unfair system in place.
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