Tag: DAS

  • HC stays DAS rollout in Ahmedabad; other Phase II cities to follow?

    HC stays DAS rollout in Ahmedabad; other Phase II cities to follow?

    NEW DELHI: Ahmedabad can wait for DAS. That was the decision of the Gujarat High Court which stayed the switching off of analogue signals to beyond 31 March because of the non-availability of digital settop boxes.

    The High Court said Ahmedabadis will have till 9 April for the introduction of digital STBs following a petition filed by Cable Operators Association of Gujarat through its President Pramod Pandya. He said that STBs ordered from China had failed to arrive because of internal problems in that country and therefore the LCOs could not be penalised for this.

    An Information and Broadcasting ministry official confirmed the development in Ahmedabad.

    Sources, however, reveal that a stay on the rollout of DAS had also been granted by the Karnataka High Court till 1 April in Bangalore and Mysore following petitions filed by Karnataka Cable TV Operators Association President V S Patrick Raju and Mysore Cable TV Operators Association.
    However, no confirmation of this development was available to Indiantelevision.com till the time of filing this report.

    Meanwhile, Raju had earlier also raised the issue of who owns the STB that is installed at the home of a subscriber – the customer or the LCO. He had said that there was no clarity over who owns the box.

    “We have also not given any commitment to exchange the box if the customer so wants. In most cases, we are also unable to give the bill for the box as the Multi System Operators (MSOs), which are distributing them, are not giving us any bill. All that is given is the activation bill,” Raju told Indiantelevision.com over the phone from Bangalore.

    However, he said bills are being given to customers who are serviced directly by the MSOs.

  • Trai brings ad regulation ghost back to haunt broadcasters again

    NEW DELHI: Turning the heat on broadcasters again, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has notified the Standards of Quality of Service (Duration of Advertisement in Television Channels) after watering down the amended version of the ad regulation.

    The main regulation was issued on 14 May last year that had the broadcasters up in arms. The matter finally reached Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (Tdsat) with the broadcasters getting interim relief in the form of a stay.

    The amended ad regulation has done away with contentious clauses by keeping a standardised ad duration at 12 minutes on clock hour basis for all channels as stated under the advertising code of the Cable Television Networks Rules (CTNR) 1994.

    As per the advertising code, no programme shall carry advertisements exceeding 12 minutes per hour, which may include up to 10 minutes per hour of commercial advertisements, and up to 2 minutes per hour of a channel’s self-promotional programmes.

    The advertising code among other things also states that “all advertisement should be clearly distinguishable from the programme and should not in any manner interfere with the programme use of lower part of screen to carry captions, static or moving alongside the programme”.

    The authority has also defined clock hour in the amended regulation. “The clock hour means a period of sixty minutes commencing from 00.00 of an hour and ending at 00.60 of that hour,” Trai said in the notification.

    While refusing to bow down under pressure from broadcasters, the Trai has also tried to pacify them by doing away or moderating certain clause from its earlier version in March.

    Some of the provisions that have been done away with include: (i) advertisements should be carried only during breaks in live sporting action, (ii) time gap between consecutive advertisement sessions should be of minimum 30 minutes in case of movies and 15 minutes otherwise excluding sporting events and (iii) no part screen or drop-down advertisements should be permitted etc.

    In order to minimise other breaks during certain live sporting events, in which natural breaks either occur after relatively long periods or there are no natural breaks such as F1 races, part screen advertisements should be allowed, the Trai said.

    It also said that “the “part screen” and “drop down” advertisements are integral forms of advertising and statutory rules already exist under the Cable TV Act to regulate the format and duration of advertisements that may be carried on television channels and the regulations are beyond the purview of Trai and in conflict with the provisions of rule 7 of the CTNR 1994”.

    The watered down version will also not go down well with broadcasters who are already bearing the brunt of of ad slowdown. It wouldn‘t be surprising if the matter ends up in the court again.

    The Trai contends that it is not bringing a new regulation; rather it is just implementing an existing one under the CTNR 1994 act. It also affirmed that regulating the duration of ads on television channels is the need of the hour in the interest of the consumers.

    The authority has alleged that most channels are in ‘brazen breach’ of the advertising code contained in the CTNR 1994.

    It has based its action on a report by I&B ministry’s Electronic Media Monitoring Centre (EMMC) that validated the rampant breach of permitted duration of advertisements in an hour by a large number of TV channels.

    Unperturbed by the allegations that it is overstepping the line, the Trai asserts that it has the power to define the term “quality of service” and lay down its standard and ensure its compliance.

    “Therefore, Trai has made these regulations to effectively monitor the duration of advertisement and to ensure that the broadcasters comply with the legislation in this regard,” it said in the notification.

    In order to monitor and ensure compliance of these regulations, broadcasters are now mandated to report the duration of advertisements carried in their channels to the Trai on quarterly basis in a prescribed proforma.

    The authority also warned that it would by order or direction issued from time to time, intervene for the purpose of protecting the interests of the subscribers or for ensuring compliance of the provisions of these regulations.

    The Trai amended the ad regulation following the Tdsat ruling that directed the authority to take stakeholders into confidence before implementing the ad regulation. The Trai issued a consultation paper on 27 August asking all stakeholders to give their responses which was followed by open house discussion.

    During the consultation process, the broadcasters contended that the ad regulation would result in fall in advertisement revenue. It was also mentioned that the restriction on advertisement duration would result in sharp increase in subscription charges.

    Some of the broadcasters suggested that the said regulations should be implemented after the completion of Digital Addressable System (DAS) in December 2014 or it should not be regulated on clock hour basis; instead it should be regulated on an average basis, averaged over a period of 24 hour.

    However, the Trai feels that if the ad duration is calculated on average basis the broadcasters will push more and more advertisements during prime time which attracts the highest number of eyeballs, to fetch higher rates for the commercial time slots.

    Some of the broadcasters were also of the view that sports channels merit different treatment. Live telecasts other than sports should also be treated at par with live sporting events.

  • I&B sets up monitoring system to keep tab on digitisation by MSOs

    I&B sets up monitoring system to keep tab on digitisation by MSOs

    NEW DELHI: The Information and Broadcasting Ministry has set up a Centralised Monitoring System to monitor the progress of digitisation and to ensure the mandatory adherence of transmitting digital encrypted signals by multi-system operators (MSOs).

    The Centralised Monitoring System will be able to detect those MSOs who do not carry the mandated encrypted signals. MSOs are required to carry encrypted signals of TV channels in areas where digitisation has been implemented as mandated by Section 4A of Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995. Transmission / Re-transmission of unencrypted signals would amount to violation of terms and conditions of MSOs.

    A web based pilot project for the Digital Addressable System (DAS) monitoring system installed at Bangalore is undergoing field trials for this purpose. Once implemented, it will enable the Ministry to keep a watch on the implementation of DAS by all the MSO licensees through this system. To start with, this system will help the users to centrally acquire, log, analyse and prepare report on the status of DAS parameters like total number/name of channels, encryption status etc of cable TV signals of head end of each registered MSO across the country in real time.

    This system can be augmented in future for content monitoring of the cable TV channels at local levels. It is expected that the system will also evolve as an alternative indicator of television viewing by consumers.

  • LCOs say taxes have to be paid by MSOs under DAS

    LCOs say taxes have to be paid by MSOs under DAS

    NEW DELHI: Organisations of cable operators in Delhi have expressed surprise at reports that the Delhi Government is attempting to charge some local cable operators with evading taxes.

    The local cable operators (LCOs) say that all the set top boxes are being imported by the multi-system operators (MSOs) and the exact number is also available with these MSOs who file their records with the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai). The action of Delhi Government is therefore misplaced, the LCOs say.

    Cable Operators Federation of India president Roop Sharma said it was for the importer of the MSO to pay VAT or other taxes and this did not fall in the realm of the LCO.

    Under the Digital Addressable System (DAS), even the entertainment tax has to be paid by the MSO who generates the bill, and the LCO does not come into the picture. Prior to digitisation, the LCOs generated the billing for the consumers, Sharma added.

    She stressed that the LCOs had supported digitisation as they were consistently being accused of under-reporting, and wanted to ensure transparency.

    Earlier reports had said that the Delhi government had alleged that LCOs had been evading taxes by concealing the number of connections.

    The Department of Excise and Entertainment Tax had issued notices to nearly 1,000 of 2,200 operators in the city warning them of cancellation of licences.

    The process is likely to take two to three months, according to officials. According to 2011 census, Delhi has 3.341 million households with 88 per cent TV penetration, which implies that about 2.9 million households have TV connections.

    It is understood that the government has collected nearly Rs 1.21 billion against a target of Rs 670 million, of which Rs 300 million has been collected from cable operators. This collection last year was nearly Rs 330 million.

  • Around 6.6 mn STBs still to be installed in 38 cities of Phase II of DAS

    Around 6.6 mn STBs still to be installed in 38 cities of Phase II of DAS

    NEW DELHI: A total of 6.59 million cable television homes in the 38 cities which are to be covered in Phase II of digitisation have still to receive set-top boxes, just three weeks ahead of the deadline of 31 March.

    The level of digitisation in the cities had reached 58.84 per cent including 25.85 per cent of direct-to-home homes as on 8 March.

    Information and Broadcasting Ministry sources claimed a total of 5.28 million cable homes had received set top boxes as on 8 March, apart from 4.14 homes on DTH.

    The sources said a total of 16.01 million total TV sets had to be digitised by making provision of 20 per cent for multiple TVs in houses and TVs in offices/shops. The total number of TV Households according to Ministry statistics is 13.34 million.

    Of the 38 cities, Bangalore leads with 7,50,181 STBs installed, followed by Hyderabad with 7,33,729, while Coimbatore, Visakhapatnam, and Srinagar were at the bottom of the list with no STB installation as on 8 March.

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

    All India Radio has also started broadcasting of the radio jingles on its National and regional networks for creating public awareness. Several other initiatives like SMS campaign, video spots and print advertisements etc. 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.

    It is planned to organise a second workshop shortly to take stock of preparedness in Phase II cities. A regional workshop was also held recently at Bangalore to sensitise 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.

    In order to facilitate cable TV digitisation in 38 cities of Phase II, 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.

    For the second phase, the 38 specific cities and areas 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.

  • Hindi GECs use star power to raise DAS awareness for phase-2

    MUMBAI: As the deadline for the second phase of digitisation nears, the Hindi General Entertainment Channels (GECs) have pulled out all stops to promote, educate and inform audiences in the 38 cities that are required to switch to digital cable by 31 March.

    The four leading channels in the space- Zee TV, Star Plus, Colors and Sony – have come together to create PSAs featuring their most popular protagonists.

    Actors like Mahima Makhwala and Roopal Tyagi (Rachana and Gunjan from Zee TV‘s Sapne Suhane Ladakpan Ke), Deepika Singh and Anas Rashid (Sandhya and Sooraj from Star Plus‘ Diya Aur Baati Hum), Deepika Samson (Simar from Colors‘ Sasural Simar Ka) and Shivaji Satam (ACP Pradyuman from Sony‘s C.I.D) have been roped in to inform viewers about DAS.

    The Task Force constituted by Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) for Phase-II DAS has paved the way for the rollout of digital addressable system (DAS) II in 38 cities in India. The second phase of digitisation covers the one million plus cities across the country.

    The four metros – Mumbai, Delhi, and Kolkata – were part of the first phase of digitisation. Chennai which was also expected to go digital in the first phase has been caught in legal wrangle.

  • Decision on Arasu DAS licence will depend on Govt. view on Trai report

    Decision on Arasu DAS licence will depend on Govt. view on Trai report

    NEW DELHI: The Government has said the application by the Tamil Nadu Arasu Cable Television Corporation Ltd. for issuance of a digital addressable system licence is under consideration.

    However, Information and Broadcasting Ministry sources said that the application was being examined in the light of the report of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) which is opposed to granting licences for television channels or distribution networks owned or supported by state governments or political parties.

    The sources also said that no time frame could be given for a final decision on the application for registration as multi-system operator received on 5 July last year to operate in notified areas of Chennai.

    A newly constituted Inter-Ministerial Committee was currently examining the recommendations of Trai in its report in mid-December reiterating its stand taken in 2008, and so a decision on Arasu would be taken only after this process is finalised.

    Chaired by the Additional Secretary of the I&B Ministry, the IMC has representatives of the Departments of Information Technology, Telecommunications, Economic Affairs, and Industrial Policy and Promotion apart from some experts. The representatives of these Ministries should be of a rank not lower than Joint Secretary.

    The two Joint Secretaries (Broadcasting) in the I&B Ministry serve as member secretaries depending on the subject and section concerned.

    The experts are: Chairman and Managing Director of the Broadcasting Engineering Consultants India Ltd., the Director-Generals of Doordarshan and All India Radio, and the Engineers-in-Chief of DD and AIR.

    The Committee may co-opt any number considered necessary from time to time.

    Recommendations of the IMC would be communicated to the I&B Ministry Secretary and ‘thereafter to the Minister for instructions on matters relating to the recommendations of Trai.

  • MSOs have over 2 mn STBs in stock: Govt

    MSOs have over 2 mn STBs in stock: Govt

    NEW DELHI: The government has brushed aside claims that the second phase of digitisation in 38 cities by 31 March could hit a rough patch due to shortage of set-top boxes (STBs) in the marketplace. Providing fresh update, the government has said that multi-system operators (MSOs) have around 2.23 million STBs in stock while another 2.02 million are under procurement.

    A few days back, the government had claimed that the 38 cities had already gone through 55 per cent digitisation. Coupled with the new set of data, the government apparently feels that the second phase of digitisation should face no problems so far as availability of boxes go.

    Information and Broadcasting Ministry says while it is not responsible for seeding of the digital STBs, it had been constantly monitoring the preparedness for the implementation of digital addressable cable TV system (DAS) in the 38 cities of Phase II which comprise around 16 million television households.

    According to data received by the Ministry from the DTH operators and MSOs, a total of 8.77 million STBs have already been installed in Phase II cities as on 22 February. Out of the total of 8.77 million, DTH connections accounted for 4.07 million while cable STBs accounted for 4.7 million.

    The Ministry has set up a Task Force exclusively for Phase II cities to oversee and monitor the digitisation process. A public awareness Committee has also been constituted in the Ministry for spearheading awareness campaign and all TV channels have started to run a scroll informing consumers about the deadline for cable TV digitisation.

    Ministry sources said the STBs are being procured mostly from China and Korea, but some are also being obtained indigenously.

    The Consumer Electronics and Appliance Manufacturers Association (CEAMA) is also a member of the Task Force and is pushing the production of indigenous STBs.

    The Government announced a customs duty of ten per cent on imported STBs in the Union Budget in an attempt to encourage indigenous production.

  • How the industry looks at the customs duty hike on STBs

    How the industry looks at the customs duty hike on STBs

    MUMBAI: With the country moving towards digitisation, the last thing that multi-system operators (MSOs) and direct-to-home (DTH) companies would have wanted is doubling of import duty on foreign manufactured set-top boxes (STB).

    However, finance minister Palaniappan Chidambaram did just that when he stood to present the Budget by increasing the customs duty on STBs to 10 per cent from 5 per cent to provide fillip to domestic manufacturers.

    The minister’s intention, though novel, will have repercussions for the industry in the short term, reckon industry experts. It will drive up the price of STBs and, with intense competition in the marketplace, it is highly unlikely that the MSOs and DTH service providers would be able to pass it on to the consumers.

    An overwhelming majority of the STBs are imported while the indigenous ones are negligible and inadequate to meet the industry’s demand which has only gone up with the roll out of cable television digitisation.

    That aside, the decision augurs well for the industry in the long run provided the Indian STB manufacturers rise to the occasion by matching to the growing demand of DTH and MSO companies.

    MSOs rue the duty hike

    Coinciding with the second phase of digitisation across 38 cities, the MSOs have found the government‘s decision to hike the customs duty on STBs as “utterly nasty”. They are already financially stretched in the short term with the need to subsidise the boxes to their cable TV subscribers while content costs have been on the rise and there is a growing demand among their local cable operators (LCOs) to lift their revenue share above the Telecom Regulatory of India‘s (Trai) prescription for DAS (Digital Addressable Systems) markets.

    “We are jacked because we need the STBs for Phase II digitisation and can‘t wait for the local manufacturers to gear into action. While there is a mandate for digitisation, there is not a single thing done by the government to incentivise us. We had asked for tax holiday and we are not even given industry status. On the contrary, the customs duty has been hiked,” says Digicable managing director and chief executive office Jagjit Kohli.

    Tagged along with the countervailing duty, the net impact of the hike in STB prices would be close to six per cent. For Phase II, industry estimates put the STB requirement to be around 15-16 million.

    Den Networks CEO SN Sharma feels that the government’s decision is futuristic, although it will have an impact in the short-term on the price of STBs. “In the long run, the move will encourage local manufacturers to scale up their business which would also help us to save on costs like freight, insurance and transportation etc. However, in the short term it will lead to an increase of Rs 50-60 per STB,” he says.

    DTH operators also feel the pinch

    Bogged down by heavy taxation and high subscriber acquisition costs, the DTH companies wanted relief on the customs duty side.

    Tata Sky MD & CEO and DTH Operators Association of India (DOAI) president Harit Nagpal feels that the government’s decision is ill-timed and will rob the DTH operators of $20 million annually that they have to shell out due to rise in customs duty.

    “We (DTH operators) hope that the government will roll back the hike in customs duty. The timing of the decision is not right as there is huge demand for STBs and there are no proven manufacturers of quality STB in the country,” says Nagpal.

    He also bemoans the fact that DTH operators who are already paying two-three times the normal tax will be further burdened by this hike.

    “We would love to buy indigenous STBs as it would save us from foreign exchange fluctuation, transportation, and import duty. However, the STB manufacturing industry is too small at this stage and we import majority of our STBs,” he adds.

    The DOAI had through a memorandum requested the Finance Minister for a duty waiver. However, the government granted the wish of local STB manufacturers who had demanded a hike in customs duty to give a fillip to the local industry.

    Airtel digital TV CEO Shashi Arora feels that the government’s decision has dampened the spirits of the DTH operators who are already reeling under three layers of taxation.

    “I don’t know what the government is thinking, but this is a cost which we could have done away with. The industry imports 95 per cent of STBs as there are hardly any Indian manufacturers. The industry imports one million STBs every month,” Arora states.

    Will the price hike be passed on to the consumers? “Too soon to say anything,” says Arora.

    However, not everyone is grieving. Videocon d2h, which manufactures its own boxes, is one of them. “We won’t be impacted by the government’s decision as we manufacture STBs locally,” says Videocon d2h CEO Anil Khera.

    A media analyst believes that the industry is grieving more than what the grim reality is. “There is a negative impact in the short term but it is not as if it is casting doom on the industry. The financial impact of a 5 per cent rise on STBs won‘t be substantial to deter digitisation,” he says.

  • Media Pro, Manthan in dispute over commercial terms

    Media Pro, Manthan in dispute over commercial terms

    NEW DELHI: The Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (Tdsat) has directed Manthan Broadband Services Pvt Ltd to immediately pay a sum of Rs. 25 million to Media Pro Enterprise India Pvt Ltd within a period of one week and also pay an amount of Rs 27.5 million every month starting from 28 February pending further directions.

    Tdsat member P K Rastogi also directed that Media Pro will not give effect to its notices of 8 January and public notice issued on 11 January for disconnection of the signals of TV channels of Media Pro to the various networks of the Manthan Broadband, against which the petition had been filed by the latter.

    The dispute between the two parties relates to: reconciliation of accounts, request of the petitioner (Manthan) for downgradation of subscription fee in view of the migration of several operators, implementation of DAS in Kolkata and calculating the outstanding amount after accounting for the credit period.

    The notice had been issued under clause 6.1 of the Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) Interconnection (Digital Addressable Cable Television Systems) Regulations 2012 and clause 4.1 of the Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) Interconnection Regulations 2004.

    Listing the matter for directions on 21 March, Tdsat said the representatives of both the parties should meet to reconcile their accounts within two weeks. Media Pro may file its reply within 10 days along with ledger statements and rejoinder can be filed by Manthan within 10 days thereafter.

    Media Pro had issued notice on 4 January demanding an amount of Rs 34.71 million for Digital Addressable Systems and non-DAS areas of Kolkata and an amount of Rs 100.84 million from various non-DAS head end in East zone.

    But Manthan submitted that the account maintained by the Media Pro was always faulty and being made up for the purpose of putting pressure on the petitioner to pay over and above the agreed amount and re-negotiate the agreement to give growth to the respondent.

    It was also pointed out by Manthan that DAS has not been implemented in Kolkata due to law and order problems. However, Media Pro counsel contended that DAS commenced in Kolkata beginning 1 November 2012.

    According to a statement handed over by the counsel for Media Pro during hearing, an amount of Rs 121.4 million is to be paid by Manthan for subscription up to February 2013. If 60 days credit period is allowed in terms of the agreement, the subscription amount up to November 2012 becomes payable by 31 January which is Rs 122 million according to the statement by Media Pro.

    Manthan has paid an amount of Rs 62.7 million and Rs 35 million in December 2012 and February 2013 respectively. However, it is stated that the cheques for an amount of Rs 36.6 million were dishonoured. Tdsat noted that Manthan has to pay around Rs 60 million up to 31 January, if the statement by Media Pro is relied upon.