Tag: K Jayachandra Reddy

  • I&B minister seeks consumer-friendly CAS regime

    I&B minister seeks consumer-friendly CAS regime

    MUMBAI: Minister of state for I&B with independent charge Ravi Shankar Prasad has placed consumer interest above all.

    Prasad, today, asked broadcasters to find ways and means to usher in a consumer friendly regime under the conditional access system (CAS), which gives cable TV viewers a choice of subscribing only to desired pay channels.

    “We have to keep the consumer interest in mind. Ultimately, the recipient of all technology is the consumer….who is also the final arbiter. He is very demanding and discerning and wants everything at competetive costs,” Prasad said, while inaugurating an international conference and exhibition on terresterial and satellite broadcasting.

    “Digitalisation: roadmap for broadcasting”, is the theme
    of the three-day conference organised by the Broadcast
    Engineering Society (India), BES, the apex body in the field of broadcast engineering in the country.

     
    Prasad, who dwelt on CAS as also bringing in digital broadcasting technology in place of the current analog system, emphasised he wanted to ensure that consumer interest was not compromised while making the changes.

    Stating that investment would have to be shared by all
    concerned in bringing the changes, Prasad said that analgoue set top boxes would cost Rs 3000 while digital boxes would be costlier.

    While inaugurating the conference, BES president JG Gupta said that the three-day conference would feature sessions on cable TV and CAS.

    Press Council of India chairman Justice K Jayachandra Reddy, who was made an honorary fellow of the BES, said in his keynote address that a meticulous transition policy was needed to to be drawn up for switching over from terresterial analog broadcasting to digital.

    “Doordarshan will have to address all the relevant issues
    which are quite complex”, he said.

    On the DTH (direct to home) front, Justice Reddy said that DTH service providers must seek to attact customers from all segments of the public using increased transmission capacity to offer new value added services.

    Additional secretary in I&B ministry Anil Baijal, said that technological upgradation has opened up a flood of opportunities for cable operators to provide value added services.

    An exhibition — BES Expo 2003 — has also been organised along with the conference in which latest sophisticated broadcasting equipment and innovative gadgets made by Indian and foreign companies are on display.

  • Regulatory body for electronic media mooted

    Regulatory body for electronic media mooted

    MUMBAI: Press Council of India (PCI) chairman K Jayachandra Reddy has said that the Council has suggested to the Central Government it constitute a regulatory authority for the electronic media, on the lines of the PCI, to function as a watchdog panel.

    The Hindu Businessline quoted Reddy as saying at a press conference in Hyderabad yesterday that it was not fair to leave the electronic media unregulated while subjecting the print media alone to all kinds of regulations. Reddy, however, expressed reservations over the regulatory authority on the electronic media taking shape in the near future.

    Reddy’s comments are likely to lead to the resurfacing of the debate that was raised in June last year on whether the print and the electronic media should have a combined regulatory body – a media council. It is an idea that has been on and off for a long while now.

    The media council idea has been strongly resisted by broadcasters through their representative body the Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF).

    Of course such a body would come in as a given if the proposed Communications Convergence Bill. The bill envisages a super-regulator, the Communication Commission of India (CCI), which would be created after is passed and monitor the content being beamed by the channels.

    In the absence of such a commission, broadcasters favour a self regulator. “The broadcasting industry has been unregulated ever since its inception. And there has been no major problems relating to security or objectionable content. Hence, there is no need for an outside council to regulate content now,” has been the stated stand of the IBF. The IBF also fears that since the number of players in the print media is larger than those in the electronic media, any such merged council could be skewed in favour of those representing print media.