Tag: DAS Phase II

  • Hathway – MSM imbroglio: MSO to not renew deal

    Hathway – MSM imbroglio: MSO to not renew deal

    MUMBAI: In a move that would surprise many, multi system operator (MSO) Hathway Cable and Datacom has decided to not renew the contract with MSM Media Distribution (MSMMD) in DAS phase II areas.

     

    As reported first by Indiantelevision.com, the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT) on 14 August had directed Hathway to pay Rs 14.56 crore towards subscription dues to MSMMD for DAS Phase I till the expiry of the agreement i.e. 31 October, 2015 in three instalments.   

     

    In a statement issued today, Hathway said that it will not renew the contract with MSMMD for DAS phase II. It may be recalled that this contract between the two expired on 31 March, 2015 and was not renewed by Hathway then.

     

    “Dripping ratings and average content cannot be a base for a broadcaster to take distribution platforms for a ride by demanding hefty growth year on year. In fact, it requires major correction in the subscription fees that the broadcaster charges. The concern with Sony Entertainment Television, the flagship channel of Multi Screen Media (MSM), has been witnessed over the last year wherein their content lacks appeal and demand as compared to other leading networks and does not deserve a growth, which was raised by us to the broadcaster. All the other channels in the MSM bouquet are also irrelevant and don’t offer any compelling content,” said a Hathway spokesperson.

     

    Hathway has said that in DAS I markets, where the contract expires on 31 October, 2015, it will offer MSM channels on an a la carte basis to consumers and not as part of any of the packages till the expiry of the contract.

     

    Speaking on the dues that Hathway owes the company, MSMMD executive vice president sales and marketing Makarand Palekar said, “Hathway has a huge outstanding and they haven’t paid us for seven months. MSM as a network is very patient and does not switch off channels on any platform, but Hathway has tested our patience and even if it wants to put the channels on a la carte, it will have to clear the outstanding first, which is close to Rs 15 crore.”

     

    It now remains to be seen how this story between the two parties pans out.

  • DAS Phase II MSOs get 29 November deadline for activating SMS

    DAS Phase II MSOs get 29 November deadline for activating SMS

    MUMBAI: The noose is tightening around those operating in digital addressable system (DAS) phase II areas. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) today stated that MSOs have until 29 November 2013 – less than 10 days from today to complete the process of collecting the consumer application forms (CAFs) with information which includes the name, address, choice of channels and bouquets and entering the information into their subscriber management systems (SMS).  They have been directed to have the SMS operationalised by then and also submit a compliance report.

     

    The direction states that the SMS system has to comply with the digital addressable cable TV system requirements as mentioned in regulation 20 of the Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) Interconnection (Digital Addressable Cable Television Systems) Regulations, 2012, for ensuring efficient and error-free service to the subscribers by recording and providing individualised preferences for channels, billing cycles or refunds.

     

    It is to be noted that the regulator had first on 26 April directed the MSOs to ensure that the SMS is operationalised and the signals of TV channels are transmitted to only those subscribers whose details such as name, address, choice of channel and bouquets etc are entered into the SMS. The MSOs were also directed to disconnect TV signals of the subscribers whose details were not entered into the SMS system and allow such subscribers to surrender their set top boxes. The MSOs had then been asked to furnish compliance report by 7 May.

     

    Again on 19 July, the Authority convened a meeting of the MSOs operating in Mumbai, Kolkata and other 38 cities covered under DAS phase-II to review the progress of implementation of DAS, wherein the MSOs were asked to collect the CAFs, complete in all respects, including choice of channels/ services and enter the complete details of the subscribers in the SMS by 20 September.  The regulator had even issued a letter on 23 July directing MSOs to ensure compliance and communicate the same to the LCOs and furnish the report in the given deadline. But with the MSOs failing to comply yet again, the regulator again held a meeting on 25 September with the MSOs to review the progress of implementation of digitization in DAS phase II cities. The MSOs in this meeting had requested for the extension of the deadline to 15 November. Once again, they slipped on that deadline.
    With the new sunset date being set as 29 November, can we expect compliance or another extension?

     

  • DAS Phase II: Analogue signals switched-off in 5 states

    DAS Phase II: Analogue signals switched-off in 5 states

    NEW DELHI: Analogue signals have been completely switched-off in five states of Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, West Bengal, Haryana and the Union Territory of Chandigarh, according to information provided by nodal officers to the Information & Broadcasting (I&B) ministry.

    The ministry said it is in constant touch with the Nodal Officers and MSOs to ensure that the cities in remaining states also speed up the process of digitisation.

    However, analogue signal continues un-interrupted in the eight cities of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Gujarat that are covered under DAS Phase II as the respective High Courts have passed orders against switching off analogue signals.

    In addition, stay continues in Chennai which was part of the DAS Phase I covering four metros which also included Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata.

    Sharing the latest figures about DAS implementation in 38 cities covered under Phase II, the ministry claims that over 85 per cent digitisation have been achieved so far.

    Out of the 38 cities, fifteen cities have achieved nearly 100 per cent digitisation, 24 cities in all have achieved more than 75 per cent digitisation, and 34 cities have achieved more than 50 per cent digitisation.

    The review by I&B ministry also reveals that as against a target of 16 million STBs, 13.6 million have already been installed by the MSOs and DTH operators.

    Of these, the total number of installed Cable TV STBs is 9.15 million while DTH operators have installed a total of 4.45 million STBs. In the last one month alone about four million STBs have been installed in the Phase II cities.

    The I&B ministry has meanwhile cautioned multi-system operators (MSOs) to implement digitisation in a ‘sensitive manner‘ so as to avoid causing inconvenience to consumers.

    The ministry stated that the objective of the entire exercise is to implement the process in a seamless, sustained yet sensitive manner that causes least amount of disruption to the consumer.

    Wherever necessary the process has been implemented in a circumspect way so as to ensure that consumers can get access to STBs, I&B ministry said.

    Separately, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has also been convening the meeting of broadcasters, MSOs and cable operators to sort out issues pertaining to agreements and service conditions.

    The ministry said that digitisation would usher in a new era in broadcasting sector reforms by bringing more transparency in the subscriber base and would lead to several benefits for stakeholders including government.

    It would bring in enhanced revenue by way of improved tax recovery for government, enhanced TV viewing experience due to digital picture quality and multiple choices of channels to subscribers and improved subscription revenue for broadcasters and cable industry.

    The ministry has also assured cable operators that digital addressable system (DAS) will provide them an opportunity to provide competitive services to their subscribers and help them retain their business in the wake of competition from DTH and other platforms.

  • I&B sec Varma: “DAS Phase II roll-out smooth”

    I&B sec Varma: “DAS Phase II roll-out smooth”

    NEW DELHI: India‘s historical march towards cable television digitisation has taken a giant leap forward with the government expressing satisfaction over the implementation of Digital Addressable System (DAS) that covered 38 cities and towns in phase II.

    Speaking to Indiantelevision.com, Information & Broadcasting (I&B) ministry Secretary Uday Kumar Varma said that analogue signals had been switched off in 33 of the 38 towns at the stroke of midnight of 31 March.

    A confident Varma expressed that the success of the first and second phase of digitisation has strengthened his resolve that government‘s digitisation initiative was on track to be completed before the 31 December 2014 deadline.

    Five cities in Gujarat and Karnataka have been left out since there was a stay by Gujarat and Karnataka High Courts on DAS. Overall 75 per cent of the television homes in these 38 cities have been digitised, said Varma.

    In Gujarat, digitisation in Ahmedabad, Surat, Vadodara and Rajkot has reached 50 per cent with Vadodara leading the pack with 70 per cent digitisation.

    Varma also asserted that seven cities including Hyderabad, Amritsar, Chandigarh and Allahabad out of the 38 had 100 per cent digitisation, while another nine had achieved over 75 per cent.

    However, he did confess that towns like Srinagar, Vishakhapatnam and Coimbatore were slow in seeding of STBs. Around 12 million of the 16 million TV households had been digitised, he said.

    He said the Ministry was keeping a watch on the situation with regard to STBs and said his information was that there were enough STBs at present for all the 38 cities in fourteen states and one union territory.

    “It was a mammoth task and I am happy that the switch-over had been smooth, without any law and order problems,” he said in a candid conversation.

    Asked about the 48-hour cable TV blackout in Delhi, Varma brushed it aside by saying that it has been an abject failure. He, however added that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) will look into the grievances of the LCOs.

  • DAS Phase II commences as analogue TV switched off

    DAS Phase II commences as analogue TV switched off

    NEW DELHI: The second phase of Digital Addressable System (DAS) in India marched on even as the month of March 2013 came to and end as envisioned by the Information & Broadcasting (I&B) Ministry. Analogue television signals in 36 cities all over India were clipped even as stay orders were imposed by high courts in Ahmedabad and Bengaluru.

    However, I&B Ministry sources told Indiantelevision.com that the level of digitisation achieved as on 30 March was 70 per cent in phase II towns, and admitted there was a likelihood of viewers facing blank TV screens in some places.

    The sources said that these problems primarily existed in Srinagar which has just 4,300 set top boxes (STBs) installed. The situation in Coimbatore and Vishakapatnam was more serious with almost zero STB deployment on 20 March.

    They also added that the estimates had been made based on information received from multi-system operators (MSOs) and making a provision of 20 per cent for multiple TVs in households and TVs in offices/showrooms.

    While the seeding of STBs and switch-off of analogue was being overseen by nodal officers in all the cities, the sources said teams would be dispatched to all these cities in the coming days to study the impact and ensure implementation. They insisted that there were ample digital STBs available.

    However, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav in a letter to I&B Minister Manish Tewari over the weekend requested for an extension of six months in the seven cities in the state that were to switch over to digital addressable system from today: Agra, Allahabad, Ghaziabad, Kanpur, Lucknow, Meerut, and Varanasi.

    While the Gujarat High Court in Ahmedabad stayed the introduction of DAS till 9 April in Ahmedabad, the Karnataka High Court issued the stay till 1 April in Bengaluru. The Karnataka High Court will hear cases relating to both Bengaluru and Mysore on 1 April.

    Ministry sources confirmed that both High Courts had issued notices to the Union government and the I&B Ministry.

    In both case, the petitioners Cable Operators Association of Gujarat through its president Pramod Pandya andKarnataka Cable TV Operators Association president V S Patrick Raju, have said there is confusion about availability of STBs and MSOs are also helpless. Raju has also raised the issue of who owns the STB that is installed at the home of a subscriber – the customer or the LCO.

    For the second phase, the 38 specific cities and towns in fourteen states and one union territory which have been listed in the notification are – Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Pune, Surat, Kanpur, Jaipur, Lucknow, Nagpur, Patna, Indore, Bhopal, Thane, Ludhiana, Agra, Pimpri-Chinchwad, Nashik, Vadodara, Faridabad, Ghaziabad, Rajkot, Meerut, Kalyan-Dombivali, Varanasi, Amritsar, Navi Mumbai, Aurangabad, Solapur, Allahabad, Jabalpur, Srinagar, Visakhapatnam, Ranchi, Howrah, Chandigarh, Coimbatore, Mysore and Jodhpur.

    A high-level Monitoring Committee has also been set up to oversee the digitisation process in the entire country, which is expected to be achieved by the end of next year.

    In order to facilitate digitization, the Ministry has already issued provisional registration to 30 Independent MSOs to operate in Phase II cities. This would enable these MSOs to operate in their respective cities to provide digital cable TV services.

    The Ministry has set up a Task Force exclusively for Phase II cities to oversee and monitor the digitization process. A public awareness Committee has also been constituted in the Ministry for spearheading awareness campaign and all TV channels ran a scroll informing consumers about the deadline for cable TV digitization, as well as an animated commercial.

    All India Radio has also started broadcasting radio jingles on its national and regional networks to get the DAS message across. Several other initiatives like an SMS campaign, video spots and prints are on the anvil. The state governments/UTs have already nominated nodal officers in 38 cities of Phase II. The Ministry had recently conducted a workshop for them.

    Workshops have been held at some places to take stock of preparedness in Phase II cities and sensitize local MSOs, cable operators and other stakeholders.

    The Ministry had set up a Control Room during Phase I, which has continued to function to address the queries of consumers, cable operators and others. The Control Room which also has a toll free number has been receiving a number of calls from consumers of Phase II cities.

  • No relaxation on DAS Phase II; analogue switch-off in stages

    No relaxation on DAS Phase II; analogue switch-off in stages

    NEW DELHI: Information and Broadcasting Ministry Secretary Uday Kumar Varma today said that the cable television sector would gain much more in the long run from switchover to digital access system than direct-to-home (DTH) television.

    Speaking on the sidelines of the India Forum of the Cable and Satellite Broadcasters Association of India which he earlier inaugurated, Varma said that cable TV would be able to provide more value added services than being provided by DTH. He also said there was greater spectrum available to cable TV than DTH.

    Earlier while inaugurating the one-day meet on the theme of ‘Digital Visions and Dividends’, he said that there would be no extension of deadline of the second phase of switching off analogue signals on 31 March covering 38 cities.

    He claimed that the first phase covering the four metros had been launched successfully despite the court case in Chennai and the initial reluctance in Kolkata.

    Varma also claimed that 55 per cent of the Phase II cities had already been digitised and the multi-system operators (MSOs) had just over two million set top boxes in stock and another two million under procurement.

    The government was keen that indigenous production of STBs should be encouraged so that the country did not have to depend on countries like Korea and China and the boxes would be BIS compliant.

    Referring to Phase III of FM Radio, Varma said that the empowered Group of Ministers chaired by Finance Minister P Chidambaram had cleared the auctioning of 839 channels.

    He expressed confidence that all the auctions would be completed within one year and the government will earn revenue of Rs 15 billion.

    Casbaa CEO Christopher Slaughter also spoke on the occasion.

    Analogue switch off in stages

    Supriya Sahu, Joint Secretary in the I and B Ministry in charge of Broadcasting Policy, said at a session later that the government was contemplating an amendment to the DAS rules to go in for switch off of analogue signals in stages after Phase II commences.

    She said that some service providers had not given the access forms to the subscribers and this was causing concern, but the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India was examining the issue. It had issued show cause notices to many service providers and was holding a dialogue to ensure smooth switchover.

    She said teams of the Ministry were also visiting service providers who had failed to meet deadlines and were helping in creating subscriber awareness. At present, she admitted that revenue flow and consumer bills were still a problem but she was confident that Trai would soon sort this out.

    The biggest challenge, she said, was to reach out to every stakeholder and also convince the last mile operator of the benefits of digitisation. The availability of STBs at affordable prizes was another challenge.

    But she claimed that the progress in Phase II was smoother than in Phase I. Data was being collected every week and meetings were held regularly with MSOs on the progress.

    Answering a question, he wondered why the industry itself did not take the initiative to go digital and the government had to make it mandatory. She denied the claim that the government stood to gain through entertainment tax, as she said this was minimal as against the benefits to the industry. DAS protects the right of every user, she said.

    More Niche channels and VAS under DAS

    Trai’s Principal Adviser on Broadcasting N Parameshwaran said that one main benefit would be the growth of niche television channels.

    He admitted that subscriber forms had not been distributed and this was leading to problems relating to revenue sharing, but Trai was actively looking into this issue.

    Answering a question, he said there was enough place in the country for both DTH and cable TV.

    Doubling of Customs Duty unwise

    IndusInd Media & Communications Ltd managing director Ravi Mansukhani wondered why the government had doubled the customs duty on imported STBs at a time when an adequate number of indigenous boxes were not available. This would also complicate the issue since the imported boxes have to first get the BIS certification.

    DEN Networks Chairman and MD Sameer Manchanda said India had overtaken many other countries in undertaking DAS in a smooth manner despite complexities. Digitisation was irreversible and therefore all stakeholders had to get together to resolve the issues involved.

    Indian Broadcasting Foundation President and Multi Screen Media CEO Man Jit Singh said that the most crucial achievement was transparency in financial deals. He said it was necessary that MSOs are helped in putting up STBs as the average revenue per user (ARPU) was bound to go up. He also felt that the TV industry which was heavily dependent on advertising may also see a change in its revenue models.

    CSG International Vice President (Product management) Chad Dunavant said that the process had taken much longer in the United States. He also said that India had an advantage as it would be able to offer more VAS and already had more variety of channels.

    Raising of FDI Negated

    Star India President and General Counsel Deepak Jacob said the raising of foreign direct investment sector on the one hand and then coming down heavily on cross media ownership would create a major problem for growth.

    IndiaCast Group CEO Anuj Gandhi said the biggest challenge was to involve the last mile operator, while Essel Group President (legal affairs) Avnindra Mohan said the biggest advantage had been the change in mindset of the consumer. He also said that cable TV had greater bandwidth than DTH.

    He said that MSOs would work harder to make Phase II a success, while learning from the mistakes of Phase I.