Tag: satellite

  • A research by GfK reveals a rise in cord cutting in the US

    A research by GfK reveals a rise in cord cutting in the US

    MUMBAI: A research conducted by GfK Media & Entertainment shows that the estimated number of Americans relying exclusively on over-the-air (OTA) television broadcasting increased to 59.7 million, up from 54 million just a year ago. The percentage of TV households currently OTA reliant has grown from 14 per cent in 2010 to 19.3 per cent in the current survey, a 38 per cent increase in just four years. The survey also found that the demographics of broadcast-only households continue to skew toward younger adults, minorities and lower-income families.

    The 2013 Ownership Survey and Trend Report, part of The Home Technology Monitor research series, found that 19.3 per cent of all US households with TVs rely solely on OTA signals to watch TV programming; this compares with 17.8 per cent of homes reported as broadcast-only last year. Overall, GfK estimates that 22.4 million households representing 59.7 million consumers receive television exclusively through broadcast signals and are not subscribing to a pay-TV service (i.e. a traditional pay-TV service such as cable, satellite, Verizon FIOS or AT&T U-Verse).

    “Over-the-air households continue to grow, making up an increasingly sizeable portion of television viewers,” says GfK Media & Entertainment senior VP David Tice. And, the proportion of households that have never paid for cable or satellite service also continues to grow. “Our research reveals that over-the-air broadcasting remains an important distribution platform of TV programming; this year‘s results confirm the statistically significant growth in the number of broadcast-only TV households in the US, which we identified in 2012.”

    According to the 2013 study, 5.9 per cent of TV households “cut the cord” in their current home at some point in the past. Among households that eliminated pay-TV service responding to the 2013 survey, most report overall cost-cutting or not enough value for cost as the reason for doing so (respondents could give more than one reason). These were also the top reasons given in the 2012 survey for eliminating pay-TV service.

    Homes headed by younger adults are also more likely to access TV programming exclusively through broadcast signals. Twenty-eight percent of homes with a head of household age 18-34 (up from 18 per cent in 2010) are broadcast only, compared with 19 per cent of homes in which the head of household is 35-49, or 17 per cent of homes in which the head of household is 50 years of age or older. Two out of ten (21 per cent) younger over-the-air households have never purchased a pay TV service according to the current survey.

  • Satellite woes bog down Tata Sky’s Harit Nagpal

    Satellite woes bog down Tata Sky’s Harit Nagpal

    MUMBAI: Tata Sky Managing director Harit Nagpal is extremely irate. The reason: he has not been able to expand his DTH service’s offerings for sometime now. And for no fault of his or his company’s, he says.

    Eight years ago, his company had contracted to use the government owned Indian Space Research Organisation’s (ISRO) satellite Insat 4A, with a proviso thrown in that if he needed more capacity, the satellite organisation would make the transponders available to him within two years of his request.

    In 2007, his organisation wrote in asking for more capacity. By then, Tata Sky was having about two million subscribers with dishes pointing in the sky towards where the Insat 4A satellite is located in orbit.

    Isro was slated to launch its Gsat-10 satellite with communications capabilities and Tata Sky had booked 12 transponders on it. The launch was delayed on account of something or the other. It finally, got into space in September 2012 off an Arianespace launch vehicle from Kourou in French Guiana.

    The launch gave him some relief, but what has dumbfounded him, is the fact that the transponders have not been made available to him almost eight months since launch.

    Since then, it has been a constant to and fro for his company. “We have been in touch with ISRO for a long time. We have written 100 emails to the ISRO chairman, met at least three to four times in the past six months. I know he wants to move things,” says Nagpal. “But despite his wanting nothing is.”

    Nagpal has been told Tata Sky’s allocation is stuck with the Space Commission currently. Prior to that, it was held up with the Insat Coordination Committee for a few months. He has even written to the Prime Minister’s Office which has then forwarded his request to ISRO. And the yo-yoing has been going on since.

    “It’s extremely frustrating,” says Nagpal. “I am a customer with a contract that entails me to pay Rs 50-60 lakh a month per transponder to the government as a rental. And I don’t have the government sticking to its contractual obligations.”

    But why is this happening? “I guess it is inertia,” says Nagpal. “Like everything has been stuck in bureaucracy. Even on this front no one is taking a decision as yet. Our contract is stuck in bureaucratic limbo.”

    Each of the 12 Ku-band transponders on GSat-10 have 36 MHz usable bandwidth with a footprint covering the Indian mainland with a power of 51.5 dBW. It is located at 83.0 degrees east in the same orbital location as Insat 4A and another Isro satellite GSAT-12.

    “I am open to other options. If officials are worried, then let them throw Insat GSAT-10 open for tender,” highlights Nagpal. “There will be no takers for it. Tata Sky is the only DTH provider, which has 10 million dishes nationally pointing towards the same zone in the sky that GSat-10 is at currently. Imagine you have an expensive bird in the sky costing $300-400 million and it is not being used productively.”

    Nagpal says he is days away from approaching the law of the land to force the government to stick to its commitments. “It’s not the ideal way,” he says. “I have been waiting for six years for my satellite transponders to be given to me. It has gone on long enough. There are no problems with my application; everything is sorted out. I am one of their main customers; so why such an extended delay?” he asks.

    Is somebody in government listening? Or in Isro?

    Indiantelevision.com called Isro chairman K. Radhakrishnan. And at that the time of writing was still awaiting a response from him. Keep watching this space for updates!

  • TRAI extends last date for comments on interconnect agreement draft order

    TRAI extends last date for comments on interconnect agreement draft order

    MUMBAI: For all those in the cable and satellite TV industry, you can take a breather. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) which had issued the draft digital addressable system (DAS) interconnect agreement regulations on 5 June 2013 has extended the last date that they can send their comments.

    At the time of issuing the order, the last date was 18 June 2013, that is today. Under the extension, industry stakeholders can send their written comments in by 26 June 2013.

    The Draft Interconnection agreement for DAS seeks to do away with carriage fees under the must-provide clause, forces MSOs to telecast channels under the must carry provision; compliance of MSOs with the twin conditions as specified in the earlier versions of the same order.

  • Thai Global Network uses Harmonic for end-to-end video workflow

    Thai Global Network uses Harmonic for end-to-end video workflow

    MUMBAI: Harmonic which offers video delivery infrastructure, has announced that Thai Global Network (TGN), Thailand‘s first and only satellite TV broadcasting center, has chosen Harmonic production and playout solutions. TGN has built a seamless workflow, from acquisition to transmission, on a Harmonic media storage, asset management and playout server platform. Installed along with an MXFserver production management system from FilmPartners, the solution has enabled TGN to optimise and streamline its broadcast operations from end to end.

    Thai TV Global Network director Col. Sarawut Karbdecho said, “By implementing tightly integrated solutions from Harmonic and FilmPartners, we have created a highly efficient collaborative editing environment with content stored sitting at the center of the workflow.

    “In day-to-day operations, this powerful pairing enables us to produce and deliver content with much greater speed and flexibility.”

    TGN has installed Harmonic Spectrum MediaCenter media servers, the MediaGrid 3000 shared storage system, the Media Application Server (MAS) asset management platform with ProXplore and the ProDrive media server controller software. Used as an ingest server, the MediaCenter records VTR feeds under the control of ProDrive, which allows operators to capture content automatically according to a schedule or instantly specify a channel with the application‘s crash-record feature.

    As feeds are recorded, the Harmonic ProXplore launches the transfer of growing files in the MediaCenter server system over to the MediaGrid 3000 shared storage system, which supports TGN staff working on Avid nonlinear edit systems. MXFserver enables file sharing and project sharing across multiple Avid editors. The FilmPartners‘ system makes it easy for editors, graphic artists, producers and other users to find the materials they need for both private and collaborative projects.

    Finished projects are exported, at which point ProXplore automatically transfers files to a second MediaCenter server dedicated to playout. ProDrive software allows TGN staff to create scheduled playlists and to control the server‘s playout operations.

    Harmonic Asia-Pacific VP sales Andrew Thornton said, “The Harmonic media storage, asset management and server systems installed by TGN enable a very efficient file-based workflow, with the benefit of optimised file transfers over a Gigabit Ethernet network. Bringing speed, reliability, and flexibility to TGN‘s operations, Harmonic transforms the broadcaster‘s ability to create and deliver timely and compelling content.”

  • Surrogate advertising notification awaits govt clarification

    Surrogate advertising notification awaits govt clarification

    NEW DELHI: A notification issued on 27 February 2009 on surrogate advertising has still not been operationalised as the government has failed to work out a mechanism for differentiating between surrogate ads and genuine brand extensions of tobacco and alcohol products, parliament was told earlier this week.

    The notification came following a long pending demand from broadcasters to allow bonafide advertisements of genuine brands using the brand name/logo which is associated with tobacco products or alcohol.

    A committee of secretaries from different ministries held a meeting on 22 January this year and resolved to work out a formula, but this has not happened. Prior to that, A note was circulated to the department of consumer affairs, department of industrial policy & promotion, department of legal affairs, department of health and family welfare and the department of revenue.

    The committee had decided that information & broadcasting and health and family welfare ministry officials would decide a note for operationalisation of the notification and inform the cabinet secretariat within a month. In case the two ministries do not agree, the matter would be referred again to the committee, it had been resolved.

    Meanwhile, information & broadcasting minister Manish Tewari told parliament that the committee had also decided that issues regarding advertisements on genuine brand extension for both tobacco and alcohol products will continue to be dealt with together.

    Telecast of advertisements on private satellite/cable TV channels is regulated under the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995 and Rules framed thereunder. Rule 7 (2)(viii)(A) of the Advertising Code provides that no advertisement shall be permitted which-promotes directly or indirectly production, sale or consumption of cigarettes, tobacco products, wine, alcohol, liquor or other intoxicants.

    A proviso says that a product that uses a brand name or logo, which is also used for cigarettes, tobacco products, wine, alcohol, liquor or other intoxicants, may be advertised on cable service subject to the following conditions:-

    (i) the story board or visual of the advertisement must depict only the product being advertised and not the prohibited products in any form or manner;

    (ii) the advertisement must not make any direct or indirect reference to the prohibited products;

    (iii) the advertisement must not contain any nuances or phrases promoting prohibited products;

    (iv) the advertisement must not use particular colours and layout or presentations associated with prohibited products;

    (v) the advertisement must not use situations typical for promotion of prohibited products when advertising the other products;

    Provided further that:-

    (i) the advertiser shall submit an application with a copy of the proposed advertisement along with a certificate by a registered chartered accountant that the product carrying the same name as cigarettes, tobacco products, wine, alcohol, liquor or other intoxicants is distributed in reasonable quantity and is available in substantial number of outlets where other products of the same category are available and the proposed expenditure on such advertising thereon shall not be disproportionate to the actual sales turnover of the product.

    (ii) All such advertisements found to be genuine brand extensions by the ministry of information & broadcasting shall be previewed and certified by the Central Board of Film Certification as suitable for unrestricted public exhibition and are in accordance with the provisions contained in sub-clause (i) to (v) of the first proviso, prior to their telecast or transmission or retransmission.

  • CASBAA & IBF request FM Chidambaram to roll back tax hike on tech services

    CASBAA & IBF request FM Chidambaram to roll back tax hike on tech services

    MUMBAI: The Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (CASBAA) and The Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF) have requested the Indian government to roll back the increase in taxation on royalty and fees for technical services in the hands of a non-resident as proposed in The Financial Bill 2013.

    In a letter addressed to finance minister P. Chidambaram, the two associations have stated that Section 115A of The Income Tax Act, 1961, levies gross taxes of 10 per cent on royalty and technical services. The latest proposal by the finance ministry proposes to take this up to 25 per cent. Along with surcharge and an education cess, the effective rate comes to 27.037 per cent. When grossed up with other related levies, it will actually amount to 33 per cent, they say.

    Their letter to the finance minister points out that the proposed increased levy will have an impact on the Indian and international satellite and broadcasting sectors as the services they provide come under “royalty and fees for technical services.”

    India has constrained satellite capacity and it is highly dependent on foreign satellites. A recent study has shown that international satellites are providing roughly 60 per cent of the broadcasting capacity for India’s satellite DTH broadcasters.

    The associations have reiterated in the letter that international satellite operators will per force have to pass on the increased operational cost to their Indian broadcasting and other clients, as their margins are not fat enough to absorb the impact of higher taxation. DTH operators, broadcasters who deliver channels to India’s 90 million cable TV homes and cable TV operators will also in turn, then pass on the increased costs on to their subscribers. The cascading effect could be substantial, the two associations warn.

    “We believe that a good tax policy should aim at moderate rates, particularly in industries providing an engine for India’s growth. An increase to the levels proposed in the bill would be counter-productive; it would affect not only the operators providing satellite services, but a whole host of related sectors – including broadcasting, media, telecommunications and IT, which have been spearheading India’s growth story in recent years. Hence the increase should be rolled back,” the letter highlights.

    It concludes by saying that “any future increases that might be considered should be phased in, with a transition period of at least five years, to allow taxpayers time to plan ahead and to avoid any one-off uplift which could force the closure of some small operators.”

    Will the finance minister give a kind ear to Casbaa & IBF?

  • UK switchover almost complete with 98 per cent getting digital signals: Ofcom

    UK switchover almost complete with 98 per cent getting digital signals: Ofcom

    MUMBAI: A total of 25.1 million households in the United Kingdom were receiving digital TV across all platforms in the fourth quarter in 2012, marking an increase of almost five per cent from the year before.

    The Digital Television Update report by the British media watchdog Ofcom says digital TV is now received in 98 per cent of UK households following the completion of digital switchover last October.

    A total of 75 per cent households watched TV over digital terrestrial signals in the fourth quarter of 2012, an increase of 0.5 percentage points on the fourth quarter of 2011. In the fourth quarter of 2012, 54 per cent households subscribed to pay TV, up by two percentage points on the same period in 2011. A total of 37 per cent households subscribed to pay satellite in the fourth quarter of 2012, the same proportion in the corresponding period in 2011. A total of 13 per cent households subscribed to cable in fourth quarter of 2012, which was the same proportion in the corresponding period in 2011.

    In the fourth quarter of 2012, 3.4 per cent households had multi-channel platforms other than digital terrestrial, satellite and cable, up by 1.4 percentage points on the same period in 2011.

    There were an estimated 2.12 million free-to-view digital satellite households in the fourth quarter of 2012, up from 2.04 million in the fourth quarter of 2011, according to the survey data.

  • Martial Arts TV HD channel to be distributed via Measat-3a satellite

    Martial Arts TV HD channel to be distributed via Measat-3a satellite

    MUMBAI: Measat Satellite Systems has signed an agreement with Martial Arts Networks to distribute the Martial Arts TV HD channel via the Measat-3a satellite.

    Martial Arts TV HD provides a wide variety of combat sports, such as mixed martial arts and kickboxing, as well as martial arts programmes including anime, movies, reality, video game and lifestyle programming. The channel is dedicated to showcasing the beauty and strength of martial arts from around the world.

    “Measat is pleased to support Martial Arts TV distribute its HD channel throughout the Asia Pacific region. Martial Arts TV HD is the ninth HD sports channel on the Measat-3/3a video platform, underlining 91.5°E as a prime location for quality HD content in the region,” said Measat VP Broadcast Sales Jarod Lopez.

    The MEASAT-3/3a satellites at 91.5°E support Asia‘s key HD video neighbourhood which features a wide variety of news, general entertainment, sports and factual programming. The addition of Martial Arts TVHD brings to 39 the number of HD channels distributed by the satellites.

    “We are delighted to be working with Measat on their Measat-3a satellite which gives us broad coverage throughout Asia,” said Martial Arts Networks CEO Patrick O‘Connor-Read. “Through our partnership with Measat, we are charging ahead to bring Martial Arts TV to operators and fans throughout the region.”

  • IRS’ Q4 media reach findings

    IRS’ Q4 media reach findings

    MUMBAI: Is the rollout of DAS having an impact on cable & satellite TV’s reach? Prima facie it seems to be if one goes by the numbers thrown up the Indian Readership Survey for Q4 2012. Conducted by Media Research Users’ Council (MRUC) and Hansa Research, it showed that the C&S reach generated a growth of 8.9 per cent (Q2-Q4) as against 10.5 per cent for (Q1-Q3).

    Overall, television’s reach also slowed down from 6.1 per cent CAGR in Q1-Q3 to 5.2 per cent CAGR Q2-Q4.

    The fastest growing medium was the internet which grew at a slower 24.2 per cent CAGR in Q2-Q4 as against 27.5 per cent in Q1-Q3 of the IRS.

    Radio’s reach saw a CAGR of 1.9 per cent in Q2-Q4 as against a growth of 6.4 per cent. Newspaper readership grew by a more pleasing 0.8 per cent CAGR in Q2-Q4 as against 0.7 per cent in Q1-Q3 of the IRS.

    On a quarter on quarter basis, the reach of the following mediums grew as follows:

    • Cable & Satellite TV from 499.437 million (Q3) to 509.821 million (Q4)
    • Television overall from 571.426 million (Q3) to 578.011 million
    • Internet from 42.322 million (Q3) to 44.521 million (Q4)
    • Print from 353.338 million (Q3) to 353.409 million (Q4).
  • 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.