1 / 11

Digital Television Transition

Digital Television Transition. CTPAA Conference May 3, 2005. Then and Now - Distribution. Then and Now - Equipment. Then and Now - Content. Content Protection-Broadcast Flag. Adopted by FCC November 4, 2003 Provides protection from mass redistribution of content over the Internet

selia
Télécharger la présentation

Digital Television Transition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digital Television Transition CTPAA Conference May 3, 2005

  2. Then and Now - Distribution

  3. Then and Now - Equipment

  4. Then and Now - Content

  5. Content Protection-Broadcast Flag • Adopted by FCC November 4, 2003 • Provides protection from mass redistribution of content over the Internet • No restrictions on home copying • No need for new equipment • New TV sets must be flag-compliant by July 1, 2005 • Interim FCC process for approval of technologies • First wave of 13 technologies approved in August 2004 • Divx application pending • FCC Order on appeal in DC Circuit – Oral argument held in Feb 2005

  6. Remaining Challenges - Distribution • Final DTV Table of Allotments • Channel election process underway • Current schedule NPRM in August 2006 • DTV Must-Carry • Feb. 2005 Order re: “dual” carriage and multicasting; recons filed • Remaining issues re: program-related, material degradation, DBS carriage, etc.

  7. Remaining Challenges - Equipment • FCC ATSC Tuner Mandate – Adopted Aug. 2002 • Mandate upheld by DC Circuit • Include ATSC tuners in receivers on phased-in basis, beginning with set 36” and above. • Phase-in schedule: • Sets 36” and above – 50% by 7/1/04; 100% by 7/1/05 • Set 25”-35” – 50% by 7/1/05; 100% by 7/1/06 • Sets 13”-25” – 100% by 7/1/07 • NPRM pending on revising deadlines for mid-sized sets • Two-Way Digital Cable Ready • Negotiations ongoing; 60-day status reports/mtgs w/FCC req’d starting 8/05 • Cable Separate Security Requirement • Deferred to July 1, 2007 • Report due by December 1, 2005 on downloadable security • Periodic 90-day reports on CableCard roll-out starting 8/1/05

  8. Remaining Challenges – Consumer Education • Need to educate consumers that there is a transition going on and how to prepare themselves • 84% of consumers are familiar with the term High-Definition TV • But how many know that analog broadcasting is ending? (In 2002, GAO found that 40% of consumers had never heard of DTV transition) • FCC web site (www.dtv.gov), tip sheet • Warning labels for analog sets?

  9. The End of Analog • Target date December 31, 2006 • But Congress specifies conditions for extensions • e.g., the “85% test” • When transition is over, government will reclaim 108 MHz for public safety and advanced wireless services (TV channels 52-69) • Broadcasting will continue on “core” spectrum channels 2-51 • Congress examining setting hard date, possibly as early as end of 2006

  10. Transition Impact on Viewers? • Over-the-air viewers: • About 15% of TV HHs rely exclusively on over-the-air TV • About 70 million TV sets not connected to cable or satellite • What, if anything, should gov’t do? • Cable subscribers: • How should DTV signals be carried?

  11. Conclusion • Transition moving from start-up phase to mass market phenomenon • Remaining challenges being addressed • Questions/further information: rick.chessen@fcc.gov

More Related