Tag: MSO

  • DAS: TRAI to hold open house with MSOs, LCOs on draft interconnect agreement

    DAS: TRAI to hold open house with MSOs, LCOs on draft interconnect agreement

    NEW DELHI: Having received inputs from stakeholders and also directives from Courts to expedite the matter, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), on 28 January, will hold an Open House meeting on the draft model and standard interconnection agreements between multi-system operators (MSOs) and local cable operators (LCOs) for digital addressable system (DAS).

     

    The regulator had issued a consultation paper on 9 December on the issue and asked for comments and counter-comments on 31 December and 7 January respectively.

     

    The meeting will be held at the PHD Chamber building in south Delhi.

     

    The paper was aimed at reducing disputes and ensures that the regulations for pacts between MSOs and LCOs can only be entered into on the basis of interconnect agreements.

     

    The interconnection regulation further provides that the interconnection agreement between the MSO and its linked LCO shall have the details of various activities rendered by LCO and MSOs, and the revenue settlement between the parties for these services. The regulatory framework applicable for DAS also provides that the revenue share between LCO and MSO shall be determined by mutual agreement. In case the MSO and the LCO fail to arrive at mutual agreement, TRAI has mandated the subscription revenue share between the MSO and the LCO as a fall back arrangement.

     

    The model is the outcome of interactions with MSOs and LCOs in various parts of the country between January and October last year, with the objective of enhancing awareness about the regulatory framework among stakeholders and to assess the compliance of the regulatory framework.

  • Liberty-owned MSO Virgin Media to axe 900 jobs over 2 years

    Liberty-owned MSO Virgin Media to axe 900 jobs over 2 years

    MUMBAI: Liberty Global owned MSO Virgin Media is planning to axe as many as 900 jobs in the UK over the next two years.

     

    In this business reorganisation exercise, the company said it will now focus on network expansion. As a part of the restructuring, some employees will also be moved to other roles within the company.

     

    Virgin Media CEO Tom Mockridge “Over the last three years Virgin Media has been transformed. We’re expanding, investing and growing our business. The proposed reorganisation will give us an even sharper focus on the customer, network expansion and business growth.”

     

    Virgin Media, which is one of the UK’s biggest telecommunications brands, providing fixed and mobile telephone, TV, and broadband internet services, was bought by American tycoon John Malone’s Liberty Global in 2013 for ?15 billion.

  • Liberty-owned MSO Virgin Media to axe 900 jobs over 2 years

    Liberty-owned MSO Virgin Media to axe 900 jobs over 2 years

    MUMBAI: Liberty Global owned MSO Virgin Media is planning to axe as many as 900 jobs in the UK over the next two years.

     

    In this business reorganisation exercise, the company said it will now focus on network expansion. As a part of the restructuring, some employees will also be moved to other roles within the company.

     

    Virgin Media CEO Tom Mockridge “Over the last three years Virgin Media has been transformed. We’re expanding, investing and growing our business. The proposed reorganisation will give us an even sharper focus on the customer, network expansion and business growth.”

     

    Virgin Media, which is one of the UK’s biggest telecommunications brands, providing fixed and mobile telephone, TV, and broadband internet services, was bought by American tycoon John Malone’s Liberty Global in 2013 for ?15 billion.

  • Net neutrality: Sony India finds analogy in MSO packaging of prioritising content

    Net neutrality: Sony India finds analogy in MSO packaging of prioritising content

    NEW DELHI: While opposing differential pricing for data services, Sony Pictures Networks (SPN) India has – like Star India earlier – said that this replicates the system where the multi-system operators (MSOs) and not the customers had been prioritising the content to be carried on their cable platforms.

     

    In its response to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s (TRAI) Consultation Paper of 9 December on ‘Differential Pricing for Data Services,’ SPN India said such a differential pricing regime would also create a system, “which replicates the harmful effects of arrangements between carriage and content playing out in the cable and satellite space wherein MSOs instead of consumers have been prioritising the content to be carried on their cable platforms, the basis of such prioritisation being the carriage and placement fees being paid by content owners.”

     

    The broadcaster said this anti-competitive behaviour by MSOs has led to small content providers being hit the most as carriage and placement fees act as entry barriers for new content providers. Differential pricing with regard to data would inevitably create the same concerns as in the MSO and content space.

     

    SPN India said, “It is submitted that differential pricing, is a discriminatory regime of charging different consumers different prices for the same product or services and is antithetical to the fundamental rationale of openness and equality. Differential pricing of data services is conceptually the very antitheses of net neutrality, and competition. Providing sponsored or subsidised data to consumers is a prime example of a differential pricing regime since it involves charging different consumers different prices for the same product or services.”

     

    Even though service providers have suggested time and again that any concern of market abuse/discrimination, should be addressed on a case to case basis rather than by imposing a blanket ban on any particular business model/pricing innovation, SPN India submitted that differential pricing is against competition and a level playing field and cannot be addressed by placing adequate safeguards.

     

    Differential pricing leads to restriction of access to information, SPN India said. It enables telecom service providers to play the role of “gate-keepers” to the internet where they are in a position to differentiate between data packets.

     

    SPN India said the principle of net neutrality “clearly prohibits any blocking, differentiation or prioritisation of data packets based on their type. Once differential tariffs for data are in place, the principles of net neutrality no longer hold valid since such tariffs are based on differentiation of data packets. While they may be portrayed as means of subsidising costs of accessing the internet, it needs to be understood that such subsidisation is also a way of differentiation, which can distort the equilibrium of the internet as it is enjoyed today, where everybody has unrestricted access and also has equal opportunities.”

     

    According to the company, allowing TSPs to charge differently for different uses of data essentially would essentially create a tariff regime where TSPs would have the right to create different classes of subscribers based on the kind of content they want to access and determine different prices for different websites, applications and platforms. Such differential pricing would thus allow TSPs to fundamentally alter the nature of competition between these websites, applications and platforms in a manner not linked to the quality of the services they deliver to consumers, but on the business arrangement between the TSPs and the websites, applications, platforms etc.

     

    The possibility of competition between different companies could be subverted if competitors could collude with TSPs. Such collusion would invariably result in financially able entities paying carriers to ensure that a competitor’s website loads slowly, or is inaccessible altogether, or the use to it is more cost intensive.

     

    Saying this would also end up distorting and altering the primary role of TSPs, SPN India submitted that a differential pricing arrangement in addition to having the effect of directly determining the price of data would also limit or control access to or control of the provision of data services while having an appreciable and adverse effect on competition, which does not form a part of such an arrangement.

     

    It said such activities in addition to being anti-competitive and unfair, would also give rise to increasing market entry costs for non-participating entities, using dominance in the market to abuse the same through service tie-ups and predatory pricing.  

     

    Thus, any such differential pricing arrangement for data services between the TSPs and websites, applications, service, content providers etc would be violative of the provisions of the Competition Act, 2002.

     

    As an example, SPN India said that in recent times it had been seen that a prominent TSP in the country was providing access to one of the foremost social media networking sites on a zero rating plan. Such an arrangement would have an appreciable and adverse effect on competition, which does not form a part of such an arrangement. Sony added that such service tie-ups and predatory pricing would ensure that there is an increase of market entry costs for non-participating entities, which incidentally did not exist when the said social media networking site itself was a start-up.

     

    SPN India also felt that the TRAI should seek the opinion of the Competition Commission of India (CCI) to understand the anti-competitive effects of the differential price regime.

     

    It gave the example of other countries where TSPs had been fined for zero-rating certain internet-based services. Furthermore, differential pricing as a model has been banned in countries such as Japan, Chile, Norway, Netherlands, Finland, Iceland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Malta.

     

    Differential pricing of data services would enable large incumbents to create a framework with TSPs that allow them, covertly or overtly, to create different versions of the Internet which they package and control. This would inevitably result in various versions of the internet, with or without all features, including ones that are available at lower prices and include only the content and the service providers that have chosen to play by the regime established by the large incumbents, and another version being the less privileged one which would be expensive, more difficult to discover, and occupied by the smaller players who don’t have the financial ability and muscle to take on their powerful counterparts.

     

    While stressing that its stand on differential pricing for data services was not meant to stifle an innovative data regime, SPN India said it, “strongly believes that while there is an urgent need to connect a billion unconnected people and narrow the digital and developmental divide, we certainly believe that there are other transparent and more effective ways of achieving that goal.”

     

    The broadcaster suggested that investing in infrastructure for common access and providing subsidised and non-discriminatory access directly to the consumers could be some of the ways that could be explored. Subsidised time based models, creations of public or community networks are some of the other routes available to expand access to the Internet.

     

    Additionally, local data centre requirements could also reduce costs of accessing the internet. Local data centre requirements mandate that enterprises establish a data centre within a country as a condition of being permitted to provide certain digital services in that country.

     

    Such requirements prevent data form being produced, stored, and processed anywhere. Brazil, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea, Venezuela, and Vietnam are among the many countries that have imposed or are considering imposing local data centre requirements. We could also consider having similar data centre requirements in India.

     

    Additionally, SPN India said any such requirement would also have the added advantage of enhancing security of data since they would lie on servers within the country.

     

    SPN India added that the TRAI paper does not talk about Big Data, a broad term, which is generally used to refer to the use of predictive analytics or certain other advanced methods to extract value from data. In the differential pricing regime, since the TSPs would be acting as gatekeepers to certain packets of data, based on their business arrangement, they would also tend to obtain sensitive information of consumers such as their data usage patterns. Such data patterns in addition to raising issues of privacy would effectively make it easier for sellers to identify new customer segments and target those segments with customised marketing and pricing plans.

  • AP & Telangana MSO VSML opts for Nagra’s OpenTV content protection

    AP & Telangana MSO VSML opts for Nagra’s OpenTV content protection

    MUMBAI: As the Indian cable television landscape gears up to get fully digitised by the end of this year with the Digital Addressable System (DAS) in place, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana based multi system operator (MSO) Venkata Sai Media Private Limited (VSMPL) has taken a step forward and opted for Kudelski Group’s Nagra anyCAST and OpenTV solutions for the launch of its digital cable and high-speed broadband offering.

    Nagra is an independent provider of content protection and multiscreen television solutions. The launch marks the first commercial deployment of OpenTV middleware and the first user interface to support Telugu language with a cable operator in India. Nagra’s anyCAST content protection and OpenTV middleware technologies were selected by the operator in the context of the government-mandated transition to digital, to provide local cable operators in the state of Andhra Pradesh with access to a variety of digital TV services under the brand name ‘Media Vision.’ These will include 276 SD and 24 HD services with plans to introduce value added services (VAS) like video-on-demand (VOD), home shopping and more. “We are excited to deliver these new digital services to local operators as part of the ongoing digitisation efforts in India. Nagra was the vendor of choice in this effort providing pre-integrated conditional access and set-top box software solutions across multiple chipsets. This was a key factor in helping us deliver the services quickly and efficiently,” said VSMPL. “VSMPL has acted quickly to meet the digitisation timeline set forth by the Indian government and is now able to reach more local operators with our pre-integrated, scalable and fast time-to-market solutions. We are pleased to have been able to support them in this effort helping them deliver advanced functionalities and robust content protection to whole new cable market. We wish them much success with their new platform,” added Nagra SVP sales – Asia-Pacific Jean-Luc Jezouin. VSMPL’s new service will enable a new generation of digital TV services for local cable operators. It boasts built-in features powered by OpenTV middleware such as PVR and targeted advertising and a user interface adapted to the region’s multi-lingual landscape. Robust content protection is provided by the Nagra anyCAST Security Services Platform, which supports a range of services from basic free-to-view to enhanced content like 4K Ultra HD. VSMPL claims to have close to one million subscribers in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

     

  • MIB grants permanent license to Uttar Pradesh MSO

    MIB grants permanent license to Uttar Pradesh MSO

    NEW DELHI: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has granted a permanent (ten-year) license to the Uttar Pradesh based multi system operator (MSO) Eminent Cable Network. With this the number of MSOs, who have got permanent licences has gone up to 231.

     

    This also takes the total number of MSOs to get a license to 655 including 424, who have got provisional registration in all urban areas in the country.

     

    The MIB by 12 January cancelled the licences of 26 MSOs and closed their cases. It had initially cancelled the licences of 30, but restored those of four of whom one – Tanuku Communication Network from Andhra Pradesh – was given a provisional registration and another – Eminent Cable Network from UP – is the latest entrant to the permanent licensees.  

     

    As was reported earlier by Indiantelevision.com, of the provisional licensees, a total of 12 MSOs were given provisional licences on 12 January and another 30 on 1 January, 2016.

     

    The other two licensees whose permanent licences had been cancelled but have been restored are Skynet Digital Services and Silverline Entertainment, both for most parts of Uttar Pradesh.

     

    An earlier list had put the figure at 382 provisional licensees on 31 December, 2015 the day the analogue signals were to be switched off, showing 45 new MSOs had been added in the last fortnight of 2015.

      

    With the Home Ministry directive about doing away with security clearances for MSOs not being communicated in writing to the MIB, the pace remains slow.

     

    The new licensees covering 11 states include one MSOs in the northeast for Tripura, but it also includes two MSOs in Tamil Nadu and one in Chhattisgarh where DAS Phase III remains stayed.

     

    The other states covered include Haryana, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Padesh, and Kerala.

     

    The permanent licence issued to Kal Cable of Chennai had been cancelled on 20 August, 2014 but this cancellation was set aside by Madras High Court on 5 September the same year. However, Kal Cable’s name continues to be in the Cancelled List – presumably because the cases are still pending.

     

    The number of MSOs was 612 on 31 December, 567 in mid-December, 553 by 24 November and 470 earlier in November, but this increase was merely in those who have provisional licences.

     

    Sources said many MSOs holding provisional licences had not completed certain formalities relating to shareholders and so on.

  • MIB grants provisional licences to 12 MSOs as DAS Phase III gets going

    MIB grants provisional licences to 12 MSOs as DAS Phase III gets going

    NEW DELHI: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has granted provisional licences to another 12 multi system operators (MSOs) after 1 January, 2016 in a bid to help expedite the implementation of Phase III of digital addressable system (DAS) in all urban areas in the country.

     

    The number of MSOs that have received provisional licences has now gone up to 424, from 412 on 1 January, which had proved lucky for 30 MSOs as they got their provisional licences in a single day. In fact, once again, all the 12 MSOs got their licences on a single day – 12 January. So far, January has seen as many as 42 MSOs getting provisional licences.

     

    An earlier list had put the figure at 382 provisional licensees on 31 December, 2015 the day the analogue signals were to be switched off, showing 45 new MSOs had been added in the last fortnight of 2015.

     

    Adding to the 230 who have 10-year permanent licences, the total number of registered MSOs now goes up to 654.

     

    While the MIB website did not display the number of permanent licensees, indicating that the number remains at 230 as it has remained since 20 November.

     

    With the Home Ministry directive about doing away with security clearances for MSOs not being communicated in writing to the MIB, the pace remains slow.

     

    The new licensees covering 11 states include one MSOs in the northeast for Tripura, but it also includes two MSOs in Tamil Nadu and one in Chhattisgarh where DAS Phase III remains stayed.

     

    The other states covered include states like Haryana, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Padesh, and Kerala.

     

    The number of MSOs was 612 on 31 December, 567 in mid-December, 553 by 24 November and 470 earlier in November, but this increase was merely in those who have provisional licences.

     

     

    Sources said many MSOs holding provisional licences had not completed certain formalities relating to shareholders and so on.

     
  • DAS Phase III: MSO Alliance heading towards Caveat route in multiple states

    DAS Phase III: MSO Alliance heading towards Caveat route in multiple states

    MUMBAI: The Digital Addressable System (DAS) Phase III deadline came and went and what it’s left behind is chaos and carnage. The analogue signals, which went off for a day or two in some territories, are all back now. Last mile operators (LMOs) who faced the set-top-box shortage crisis have taken the judicial route to challenge the deadline given by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB). In six states so far the High Court has permitted an extension where as in Assam’s Kamrup district, the District Magistrate after reviewing the petition allowed an extension.

     
     
    Now multi system operators (MSOs) are also exploring various legal routes and if sources are to be believed, then the MSO Alliance is moving the Uttaranchal and Jharkhand High Courts to file a Caveat. “We sense that the LMOs will go to the honorable court in the two states and hence before they reach out in order to aware the court about the scenario, we are filing a caveat,” a source close to the development tells Indiantelevision.com
     
    The DAS Phase III dilemma has also opened the piracy floodgates says a senior cable operator in Assam. “We have migrated from analogue to digital and therefore did not have the infrastructure to provide analogue signals, which we were ordered to be discontinued. But others continued with their analogue signals. ACC in Assam had the analogue signals running all throughout, which is piracy. Now the district magistrate has also ordered the extension in a particular territory, but the analogue signals are running all across Assam. Is it not piracy?” he questions. 
     
    The path ahead will be watched keenly as various stakeholders pull rabbits out of their hats in the coming days.
  • Petition on MSO Arasu postponed to 28 January, status quo to continue

    Petition on MSO Arasu postponed to 28 January, status quo to continue

    NEW DELHI: The hearing of a petition by the state owned Tamil Nadu Arasu Cable TV Corporation (TACTV) challenging the failure of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) to grant it provisional licence has been put off to 28 January.

     

    The Court, which on 21 December ordered status quo on the issue relating to disconnection of TV signals transmitted by TACTV, is understood to have given time as some of the parties wanted more time to file their replies. 

     

    The status quo order had been given by Justice M M Sundresh on a plea filed by TACTV general manager K Priya seeking a direction to the Union Information and Broadcasting Ministry to grant provisional license for Digital Addressable System (DAS).

     

    Counsel for TACTV Abdul Saleem had then submitted that pending consideration of their application of 5 July, 2012 and 23 November, 2012 for regularisation of the licence, the status quo should be maintained.

     

    Even as it failed to give provisional licence to TACTV, the Ministry had said its signals would be disconnected if it failed to give digital signals to Phase III areas comprising municipalities and corporations by 31 December, 2015.

     

    The “inaction on the part of the Ministry is illegal, against the due process of law and violative of Article 14 and 21 of the Constitution of India,” Saleem had contended.

  • MIB grants 30 provisional MSO licences on 1 January to push DAS Phase III

    MIB grants 30 provisional MSO licences on 1 January to push DAS Phase III

    NEW DELHI: Even as almost six states now have received two months’ extension from their respective High Courts to implement Phase III of Digital Addressable System (DAS), the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting granted provisional licences to as many as 30 multi-system operators (MSOs) on New Year’s Day (1 January) in a bid to push cable TV digitisation.

     

    With the new licenses granted, the total number MSOs holding provisional licenses has jumped from 382 to 412 in a single day.

     

    An earlier list had put the figure at 382 provisional licensees on 31 December, the day the analogue signals were to be switched off in Phase III that covers all urban areas in the country, showing 45 new MSOs had been added in the last fortnight of 2015.

     

    Adding to the 230, who have 10-year permanent licences, the total number of registered MSOs now goes up to 642.

     

    The Information and Broadcasting Ministry website did not display the number of permanent licensees, indicating that the number remains at 230 as it has remained since 20 November.

     

    But this slow pace is in direct contradiction to the fact that the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) had nearly seven months earlier announced that it was aiming to do away with security clearances for MSOs.

     

    The new licensees covering 11 states include two MSOs namely Hashmee Cable Network and Vaadi Television, who have got provisional licences in Jammu and Kashmir.

     

    The other MSOs are from states like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu where the implementation of DAS Phase III has been extended by varying periods. These are: Yuvaraj Cable and Anantha City Digital Comm. Network from AP; Hi – Tech Communication Network from Telangana; Rainbow Digitech, Sangli Media Communication, World Vision Cable Network, Chikhali Cable Network, Shah Cable Network, Shree Balaji Cable Network, TK Cable Network, Alone Cable Network, Amarnath Cable Network and Creative Cable Network from Maharashtra; and Tiruvannamalai Cable Network and Amoga Digital Netcom from Tamil Nadu.

     

    MSOs who have received licenses from the state of Uttar Pradesh are: Netvision Elegant Networks, V.B Distribution Cable Network, Welcome Cable Network and Jagjeet Cable TV Network; from Rajasthan are: Shekhawati Cable Networks, Om Cable Network, Kankroli Digital Network and Jaisal Cable Vision; and from Chhattisgarh are: CCN Digital Network and Vande Mahamaya Cable Network.

     

    Additionally, one MSO each from MP, Haryana and Karnataka namely Yash Cable Network, ABC News Palwal and RST Digital Media Services respectively received the provisional licenses.

     

    The number of MSOs was 612 on 31 December, 567 in mid-December, 553 by 24 November and 470 earlier in November, but this increase was merely in those who have provisional licences.

     

    Sources said many MSOs holding provisional licences had not completed certain formalities relating to shareholders and so on.