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17. 03
2008

Diaspora TV

Written by: Brian Greene - Posted in: diaspora TV, freesat
press release

Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources29-31 Adelaide Road, Dublin 2, Ireland
Tel +353-1-6782000 Fax +353-1-6782449

Paris France 17th March 2008

This St. Patrick’s Day, Communications Minister Eamon Ryan announced that Diaspora TV would be on air in the UK by next St. Patrick’s Day. Diaspora TV will be an RTÉ channel available on the new Freesat service in the UK.

This channel will be a hybrid of RTÉ One and RTÉ 2 with some additional programming from TG4. The One, Six-One and 9 o’clock news bulletins will be carried live.  It will carry a range of home-grown Irish programming that will be of real interest to Irish communities abroad.

Minister Ryan: The 2001 Census in Britain records a figure of 850,000 Irish born people living in Britain. There is many more of direct Irish descent. I know that many of these people have been looking for an RTÉ channel in the UK for some time. I am pleased that foot of last year’s Broadcasting Act, this new channel will be up and running by next St. Patrick’s Day.

I will be working closely with Minister Dermot Ahern to ensure that vulnerable groups in the UK will be supported in receiving the service.


This new channel
will provide the Irish abroad with a valuable link to home.”

ENDS

Note to editors:

Freesat is a new free-to-air satellite service that will be available throughout the UK and across the Astra satellite footprint, covering Ireland and some other parts of Europe.  It is led by the BBC and ITV.  Further information is available at www.freesat.co.uk

comment by RTE2FTA. we welcome this move we will monitor the progress. nothing in it says how RTÉ will fund Diaspora TV, RTÉ have real funding issues when it come to this project (according to statements made by its DG to the old audience council). It is a shame that the Minister Eamon Ryan TD has failed to press release on next Mondays medium  wave close down that he supports that will CUT THE VALUABLE LINK TO HOME he mentions above. We also look forward to Freesat a project, we are happy to see RTÉ involved with Freesat a move away from the RTÉ/BSKYB encryption deal that stinks. Perhaps RTÉ along with Channel 4 will leave Sky encryption in 2008, don’t hold your breath. No mention of Dáil TV output

personal comment. I don’t like the name Diaspora TV, i hope its only a working title.

8. 03
2008

DTT FTA?

Written by: Brian Greene - Posted in: DTT

While RTE will be FTA on DTT, BBC & ITV look like they will not be. RTE are trying to partner with other players to bring a more cohesive DTT platform. RTE want the UK channels FTA on DTT but the other potential players may have UK channels on their existing platforms where they are in a mixture of FTA & subscription. If the UK public service broadcasters (PSB) are not FTA on Irish DTT I predict that DTT in Ireland will fail, and here are the reasons why.

1. it makes sense to have UK Public Service TV in Ireland
over spill history - we have been used to FTA analogue TV from the UK from since before Irish TV was born in the mid to late 1950’s
reciprocal arrangements - If we will show theirs, they will show ours,

2. it makes sense to have Irish Public Service TV in UK
RTE international has been sanctioned by the Dail. - there is no requirement for RTE to broadcasts any blackout images (as they suggest) into the UK. RTÉ seem  to think that if they were to broadcast into the UK they would be broadcasting blackouts every second programme, this is rubbish. Take 50% of RTE1 50% RTE2 50% TG4 50% Dail TV 50% RTE International and 45 years of archive, RTÉ has lots of programmes to broadcast, they just need to transmit a modified version of itself, blackouts and the old copyright arguments do not stop RTE transmitting in the UK.

GFA -  the Good Friday Agreement encourages TV / Radio in an all island way.

Emigrants - the public service remit of the national broadcasters does not end at the sea shore or the border. We have a 70M diaspora outside Ireland versus the 4-5 million Irish / non Irish in Ireland, the broadcasters have been shown that they have a duty to emigrants through the dicta of RTE International coming from the Dáil.

3. Current thinking of BCI, RTE & DCMNR
BCI - the BCI (old IRTC) are not yet the BAI. They are there to regulate the Irish commercial sector. TV3 is being carried on RTÉ multiplex leaving regulation by the BCI where? the BCI seem to be regulating foreign imported commercial TV to the remaining 3 multiplexes. very odd. see point 6. do the BCI even regulate the foreign imported commercial TV channels? No.

RTE - RTÉ want FTA DTT UK public service channels operating in competition with RTE. this is a mature view, and a realistic view. RTE is well able to compete with Digital BBC / ITV / C4 who have 55 million more potential viewers / licence payers than Ireland will ever have. How can RTÉ compete? they are Irish, and the BBC / ITV / C4 are not providing local programming that is still essential to making network television successful.

RTE stated this  in August 2007 in this document http://url.ie/7ik Advisory Note to the Directorate General For Competition and the Directorate General For Information Society & Media of the European Commission concerning RTÉ’s approach to Digital Switchover in Ireland. see Page 9 para 3. Although recent utterances by RTE in front of the Dail Broadcasting committee 27/02/2008 would seem to suggest that RTE has moved away from this objective a little, following their incomplete attempts to team up with potential commercial operators of the remaining 3/4 multiplexes.

DCMNR - the DCMNR via the website Digitaltelevision.ie does not dispel the indication in the Sunday Business Post article [last sunday]
http://www.sbpost.ie/post/pages/p/story.aspx-qqqt=IRELAND-qqqm=news-qqqid=30927-qqqx=1.asp
that “RTE has held talks with a number of parties with regard to joint ventures for the operation of the DTT platform. While RTE will be free-to-air on DTT, it looks increasingly likely that there will be a modest charge to access British channels.”

4. The UK’s analogue switch off has begun
The analogue switch off began in Whitehaven Cumbria in the first week on October 2007 when BBC2 went off the air.

The analogue switch off has begun in Ireland when we can not access UK analogue signal we once did, digital is the replacement and Irish audiences who get the spill over are measured in this RTÉ document. http://url.ie/7ik  these audiences are large!. They watch everything from Animal Magic to Z-Cars on the trusty old analogue TV since the 1950’s. Policy must allow this to continue without hindrance of encryption or a charge in favour of commercial operators - OR DTT WILL FAIL in terms of adoption like ONdigital did in the UK. RTÉ are clearly concerned by this also.

5. The Irish DTT system is still being designed
While it is still on the drawing board, policy should drive the shape of things to come for DTT (as well as technical development like HD and wide screen & MHEG5 text services MPEG4 transport streams & EPG). RTÉ claim that the DTT service will be sovereign and DTH satellite can not be. While satellite is not sovereign neither is DTT. The shareholders of BT Ireland and Sky & Eircom & UPC are not sovereign and 3/4 multiplexes will be commercial, 1/4 public service. As HD enters the equation there will be less room on newly vacated analogue space that boasted extra room via compression by the digital believers (of which I am one). Less channels than low definition DTT means less channel choice versus other platforms making DTT less of a player against DTH SAT & cable where 100 channel bouquets are now expected by the digital clientele. Space on the DTT system will always be precious. If the commercial operators are to provide imports and DTT needs ITV / BBC / C4 to succeed then market logic will dictate that those 3/4 multiplex owners (3 companies) will need / require the UK PSB channels to survive, but read point 7. What if some the 3/4 multiplex operators fail spectacularly like ONdigital? will the Irish tax payer be called in to bail them out? for it to work (for DTT not to fail) a multiplex of reciprocal arrangement should be provided FTA for the UK channels at the tax/licence payers expense up front. Like wise RTE TV3 TG4 should be carried by BBC / Crown Castle on the Freeview DTT system in the North. Meeting GFA kite mark.

6. you can’t do that
Sky & UPC will not be happy with the point made in number 5 above. They will see free / supported carriage of UK PSB channels as interference in the marketplace, but its not their marketplace, they are all not regulated in Ireland by Irish law. Some do not pay tax here, they do not even comply with advertising policy when it comes to childrens TV, they are not regulated here and they no longer serve an Irish brand of their news services. They do not employ many people here either. Meanwhile 500,000 Irish dish owners need to pay up to  40 million euro per month to carriers like Sky - yes 40Million. or 0.5Billion euro per annum, aided by RTÉ policy to encrypt its signal via Sky under a secret deal.

Sky gains as currently the only wide screen digital RTÉ is on Sky while Sky Ireland advertises in Irish media the fact that if you do not want TV snow (interference), then get Sky. This is an insult. While foreign carriers may not like point 5, they would have to put up with it if policy dictated instead of market forces dictating.

7. DTT & freesat
while RTE has been positioning itself under BSkyB encryption, claiming copyright spill over for its cozy Sky deal, BBC 1 2 3 & 4 BBCNews24 BBC Parliament ITV1 2 3 & 4 (all? +1) and 6 BBC interactive streams and Film 4 have all gone FTA unencrypted on Astra 2003-2006 led by Greg Dyke in the BBC. Thus staying on Sky EPG but dropping encryption. Channel 4 are due to join them in late 2008, and to top this all off, BBC & ITV and others have joined up and created http://www.freesat.co.uk to launch march? 2008 as a DTH (direct to home) satellite provider to challenge BSkyB at its own game. Remember Freeview DTT has more subscribes than BskyB in the UK already, but where freeview has penetration issues Freesat will have 99% penetration. Freesat will be available to all of ireland Free To Air. It will be impossible for DTT in Ireland to compete with cable or DTH sat from Sky or Freesat IF UK PSB channels are not FTA on Irish DTT.

8. other items not yet considered that will impact on DTT success
IPTV,
apple TV programme downloads,
the end of TV’s golden age,
community TV access to digital is non existent

I hope this will help the debate (if there is a debate on DTT)
comments welcome

when you only deal with stakeholders you end up getting a lot of stakes, DTT should be for the citizens of Ireland Like FreeView not a mini platform for the big 3 to put up low cost shop windows to their other PPV platforms.

Brian Greene - digital media consultant http://doop.ie
disclaimer - “i could be wrong, i could be right”

4. 03
2008

FTA debated in the Dáil

Written by: Brian Greene - Posted in: freesat, rté says

feb 27th 2008 JOINT COMMITTEE ON COMMUNICATIONS, ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES direct link

did  Senator O’Toole ask the right questions? yes. did he get answers? no. Take 50% of RTE1 50% RTE2 50% TG4 50% Dail TV 50% RTE International and 45 years of archive, don’t think “Desperate Housewives” think “Desperate Broadcasters” We have what it takes to transmit FTA to Ireland via satellite no blackouts no encryption. Wake RTÉ up and smell the FreeSAT.

 

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  Tá mé thar a bheith buíoch daoibh as ucht teacht isteach arís ar maidin. Gabh mo leathscéal nach raibh mé anseo an lá deireanach ach bhí commitment eile agam. D’éist mé leis an méid a bhí le rá agaibh, go háirithe an méid a dhírigh isteach ar chraoladh digiteach agus leis an míniú a thug Conor Hayes. Caithfidh mé a rá nach bhfuil bealach níos simplí ná seo - I have this nightmare of 190 sites, planning permissions, hearings and appeals with 190 groups writing letters to 166 TDs and it still will not be received in the Black Valley or the lower reaches of Mitchelstown. I raised this matter with Mr. Goan a couple of years ago. Does an easier way exist to do this?

Before we all fall off the table, the Astra satellite is up there along with 24 others, and this answers every issue raised here. I meant to check the legislation prior to this meeting but I did not get a chance to do so. I understand it requires us to have an all-Ireland reach for part of the multiplex. This is also reflected in what is loosely referred to as the Good Friday Agreement and they should mirror each other in some sense.

I want a simple answer to one question. Recently, I walked into a ordinary shop, bought an LNB and inserted it on a dish. I can now get free to air channels including BBC 1, 2, 3 and 4 and ITV 1, 2, 3 and 4. I can also receive Malta and Cyprus television free to air. I can take this as far as the Urals and receive every single station except RTE. We do not need a huge transmission network. Even if we do, if we also had it on satellite, all of the questions about the all-Ireland aspect and the problems on the east coast would be answered. People would be able to receive Welsh television but also Ulster television, ITV and London television along with all of the other channels.

I do not want Mr. Goan to respond to this with copyright issues. If he does I will tell him to let the screen go blank if it arises. It has been done before for football matches. I want to be able to tune in to “Prime Time”, “RTE News” and other programmes. The technology is there to allow a switch-off where copyright or cost implications are raised. I want to know, simply and cleanly, why we cannot answer all of the problems raised at this meeting by unencrypting the RTE signal. It is even more irritating because anywhere in Europe one can tune in and see the strength of the RTE signal but one cannot see or hear it, apart from the radio stations. This is because the arrangement RTE has with Sky is to have it encrypted.

I recall ITV had a major court case with Sky because Sky charged more to unencrypt rather than to encrypt. The outcome is that ITV is now free to air. This is a major issue. It would deal with the multiplex issue as well as the question of which station it would be on it. It would cover the legislative intention, it would get rid of all of the planning permission difficulties, cover everywhere in Ireland and deal with the all-island matter. Whatever it would cost, it would cost less than what we are doing.

I see Mr. Hayes is shaking his head. I will take a lot of convincing that building, maintaining and operating 190 sites is cheaper than the couple of million euro, a cost which is getting cheaper, we would pay each year to rent a couple of channels on a satellite. I have examined the cost of this and if people wish to discuss it we can do so. This is a simple issue. People have many reasons for not wanting to get into it but none of them make logical sense.

Mr. Cathal Goan:  The first reason is that we have a legal obligation under the Broadcasting (Amendment) Act 2007 to establish a national DTT—–

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  Sure, and I asked these questions of the Minister when the Act was going through the Houses. I did not get a satisfactory answer at that stage either.

Mr. Cathal Goan:  There is another issue which we should not disregard entirely. DTT on 190 sites, and Senator O’Toole will be glad to know the vast majority of them have planning permission, is a national sovereign platform. Whatever else it is, a digital satellite platform is not a sovereign platform. One would have to share by agreement with others in terms of electronic programme guides.

Senator O’Toole is right that many broadcasters across Europe are unencrypted. RTEs broadcast schedules are approximately 45% home produced and 55% acquired programming. Senator O’Toole may dismiss the copyright issue and state we should leave the screens blank. Frankly, it would untenable for us to have a blank screen for 50% of our afternoon children’s programmes, and a blank screen for all our sporting activity because we only have rights for the sports programmes we have for this territory.

Of course it would be good to have RTE programming available internationally. We intend to address this separately, through the other part of the 2007 legislation, which requires RTE to set up a television broadcast service for communities living outside the island of Ireland.

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  Why can we not provide this service now? The question of a sovereign channel is easily dealt with. There are other satellites, including Eutelsat and satellites owned by the European community. I am not interested in paying money to Mr. Murdoch or his like. I agree with Mr. Goan on the sovereign ownership issue but it is not an insurmountable difficulty. How can places such as Malta and Cyprus deal with it? I do not understand.

Mr. Cathal Goan:  I do not know how Malta does it because I have not asked the Maltese broadcaster. I am sure the programming they broadcast is only the programming over which they have rights. As I stated, the screen may be blank more often than it is full.

On the issue of why we cannot do this already, we are actively pursuing the establishment of a service for the Irish abroad. I am not committing to a date but we are in active talks with operators of satellite services so a free unencrypted version of RTE, together with programming from TG4, will be available to the United Kingdom.

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  Could not every one of Mr. Goan’s difficulties be dealt with by RTE doing what Sky does? In other words, allowing everybody within the jurisdiction to watch a satellite-transmitted programme from RTE free to air but with a card.

Mr. Cathal Goan:  It might deal with some of them but again, the legislation is for digital terrestrial television based on a number of sites which have been internationally co-ordinated so we can have a terrestrial television solution in the future. This is what we are legally obliged to do and this is what we will do.

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  I thank Mr. Goan.

Mr. Ed Mulhall:  Another point is that this solution requires everyone to have a satellite dish. A major challenge with digital terrestrial is that we want to have a universally available free to air service. This is one of the basic principles of public broadcasting. The real challenge for us is that because of the switch over and the technological change, we face an uphill battle to close the gap on the competition from a strongly embedded satellite system and a long-lasting culture of cable services in the main cities.

Mr. Conor Hayes alluded to the policy challenge in terms of ensuring that if digital terrestrial is the model, it happens in a viable way and all parts of the platform happen at the same time so the consumer is not faced with multiple choices for the basic services or unable to access the complete range of services from the start.

Mr. Conor Hayes:  The primary television reception mechanism in Malta is DTT, not satellite. In 2002 we examined the satellite option. The Senator is making a common sense point, in that satellites are already there and can achieve widespread coverage, so why not make use of them? We examined that option but it is much more expensive than one would think, there is not much space available and there are significant costs involved in the encryption technology one must use. For us to broadcast on a continuous basis would be prohibitively expensive. We broadcast “Desperate Housewives” last night but we could not make that free-to-air because we only buy the rights for that for the Republic of Ireland, for 4 million people.

Deputy Liz McManus: Information Zoom  Now, that is a serious matter.

Mr. Conor Hayes:  Absolutely. There are 65 million people in the United Kingdom. What we would find, ultimately, is that we would not be able to purchase rights for Ireland.

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  I accept that point.

Mr. Conor Hayes:  It undermines the viability of the overall project. It pushes in a direction we cannot go. The Department and the Minister have decided that DTT is the model and that has been enshrined in legislation. We are working on the basis of trying to put —–

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  RTE could restrict the satellite reception to people living in the jurisdiction. That is not difficult.

Mr. Conor Hayes:  Yes, but we would have still have to use encryption technology and we would have all of the same problems. People would have to have satellite boxes and so forth. As for the issue of planning permission, I hope we will not have planning permission problems, but one must bear in mind that we have already got —–

Senator Joe O’Toole: Information Zoom  Masts.