They can block it. They can encrypt it and force you to pay a subscription.
Not legally. The FCC public broadcast license will not allow them to encrypt it. In a matter of fact, until recently, cable companies which rebroadcasted public television stations were not legally allowed to encrypt them either (they have found other ways of dealing with it now.) The cable companies have been complaining about that for some time, because they all had "Essential" tiers which had the local broadcast channels plus a few basic cable channels for a huge discount (I believe I was paying about $35 for it, at the time.) The problem was, the person could cut out all the channels and just use broadband, and could still receive the broadcast channels without "paying for it".
Man, the only network I watch is CBS. IF they were to shut down, I would be sad but I would find other things to do.
So long as they didn't kill their web presence, shouldn't be much of an issue. The only show on CBS I watch religiously is Big Bang, and they stream it from their website.
I actually can't get them from my house, ever since they went digital. My digital receiver looks cross-eyed whenever I try to connect because their signal is too weak and too far away. The only time I've seen them recently (since cutting the cord) is when I had my RV in a campsite a couple miles from them and they came in clear.
Supernatural is re-running on TBS or TNT.
If the CW drops, it could move to the Turner stations...
Correct me if I am wrong, but isn't TBS/TNT a cable only network? How would moving those to TBS/TNT help someone who has gotten off of cable and is digesting over-the-air broadcasting if that over-the-air channel disappears?
Sure, it would still exist if it moved stations, but why would CW die if it was still accessible on cable?
It just wouldn't be available to those who cut the cable.
I'm more forgiving with Activision/Blizzard because they still make good games, but I don't buy them at the drop of the hat anymore
But that is the problem. They still make a few "good" games, which they can milk over and over again to make up for all the crap that loses them customers. So long as people are willing to buy them despite their best efforts to screw their customers, they won't learn and will continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. Only by removing all funding do we convince them that a change is necessary.
Of course, that requires the assumption of sanity, and we have pretty much confirmed over and over again that they don't have any, so I suspect a total lost of funding will be rationalized as a 100% increase in piracy.
Unfortunately, from the looks of things, not changing will pose no problem for them anyway.
It kept me from buying a number of their games. I have not bought a single game (except through DRM safe GOG.com,) from either Activision or EA since this madness started. With Activision, it was Warcraft 3. With EA, SPORE. I would have bought SimCity 5, since I have all the other ones and love playing them, but EA proved a while back they didn't want my money.
Sure, they have a large community still willing to throw money at them, but how long before they burn all their goodwill and through all their funds. They can't live forever. But that being said, Scientology still exists, so it takes a long time to kill off hellspawn.
The funny thing is, reading the consumerist article on this topic, is the worst company in America, possibly two years in a row, still doesn't understand why they are the worst company in America. Which is probably why they will remain at that spot for years to come. You can lead a horse to the water, but you can't make them drink, and no matter how much bad press the EA is getting, if they aren't willing to understand why they suck so bad, and want instead to rationalize it away, they won't change.
It isn't homophobia or bad choices for a game cover, it is the abject failure to understand your customer and provide them a reason to buy. It is the antithesis of CWF:RTB, played out far better and quicker than the MPAA/RIAA example.
Re: Re: So you're saying ISP records shouldn't be like phone records.
No. Juries have the power to rule on fact. A Judge tells the jury what the law is, and the Jury weighs evidence and makes a ruling of fact, that is to say, what happened. They take that ruling of fact and use the instructions as to the law to come to a verdict.
Rest assured, you'll see this argument again from OOTB, but the statement is still insightful*1000.
Discounting jury nullification, the jury weighs the evidence (and the veracity of the witnesses testimony of that evidence.)
I can barely tolerate this protection of "geographical" designations, but trying to prevent companies from saying "wherever-style" is going too far.
Amen. As a beer brewer (hobbyist), nobody who drinks my Belgian-style beer thinks, "Hey, we aren't in Belgium. How can you call it Belgian-style?" They think..."yum". California is known for a number of "styles" of beer, including Steams, and if anyone tried to trademark steam as a California only style, I think they'd get lynched by a mob headed by the majors (unless the majors tried to do it, which I wouldn't put them past trying to do.)
After all, one of the major's claims to fame is their honed tradition of brewing Bavarian-style Lagers in St. Louis, MO (and quite crappy, I might add.)
Re: Re: Re: You promote tiny outlets, disregarding collateral damage
* Yes, I'm making stuff up. I don't have a crystal ball (because I am a cheap bastard).
You really should. It is only $15 a year, which according to some commercials is far less than a cup of coffee a month (apparently those commercials don't drink 7-Eleven coffee.) And the added advantage is you get a nice "insider" badge next to your name and keep Mike running this site.
Try reading the last paragraph: when I do, I get the feeling that a bit more got left out, it doesn't read the same as the conclusion to any other article here on Techdirt.
I believe the last paragraph was more of a P.S. then anything else. The original Ars Technica interview ended as abruptly, as Mullen kept asking the pointed questions Hansmeier had no intention of answering.
After all, the poor guy's going to need a rhinoplasty, and after this disaster, his executive bonus won't be big enough to cover it.
I think we may have found the perpetual motion machine that saves mankind from future destruction. The spin EA does puts off enough energy that it rivals most stellar black-holes, and the suck is nearly the same. If we could figure out how to capture and harness this energy, we wouldn't need fossil fuels ever again.
Gibeau and the rest of the execs at EA are so hopelessly incompetent that they don't know what DRM is.
Apparently they don't know what MMO is either.
Every MMO I've played, ever, even back in the days of the pseudo MMO called a Multi-User Dungeon (MUD), you instantly saw the manipulations of other users instantaneously (or as close to it as possible, accounting for lag.)
From what I understand talking with those who have it, you may see some updates to other people's cities once in a while, and interactions may happen between cities (I say may, because there are a lot of people who have complained about it never happening.)
That isn't a MMO. That may be an online experience, but unless you can see what is happening in the world to both you and to others in your area, that is not an MMO.
The election of Police Chief, Fire Chief, and other "public servant" managerial positions is more than bizarre to those living somewhere other than America. In fact it's downright fr3eakin weird and abhorrent.
For the most part, I'd agree with you. I happen to live in a city in which our Police Chief, Fire Chief and other managerial positions (except the City Attorney,) are appointed positions. However, I see little difference between the politicians we elect choosing their best friend to be Police Chief and the public at large choosing their best friend to be Police Chief. Of course, the public doesn't usually receive kickbacks, unlike the politicians, and thus in some cases it is the fairest way to chose a Police Chief.
Hopefully, however, the public has enough information to choose the best one for the job. But that is a problem with appointments too.
Re: Re: Silly premise. First, DRM works unless circumvented.
Just watch your back when you're lifting all that cash you'll make from me not watching/listening/reading/experiencing your movie/song/book/whatever.
Yeah, but their ultimate goal, shown by charging "piracy" taxes on consumer storage devices, is to get paid whether or not you are consuming their product, legal or otherwise.
So they want to control the device, and still get paid whether or not you consume their content.
Re: Re: Interesting to juxtapose a paywall may be going up:
I'm afraid many will fail to do it right here. For Youtube it'll be a smashing success. For the content providers it all depends. It's yet one more channel for the artists to make money!
If what they want is priced properly to the value, I'd go for it as a consumer (provided they removed the advertising, unlike Hulu's pay us for free content and we'll still give you the same commercials model, but then again, I still have a Hulu Plus account and still pay each month, so apparently it isn't enough to annoy me.)
I'd buy into subscriptions for Nerdist/Geek & Sundry because I know those guys make good material, and I am willing to support them, as with RoosterTeeth, MinutePhysics and HISHE. But anything more than a couple bucks a year is probably too much for most folks. Hell, I'd even throw a little money towards collegehumor.
Not to mention that it's easily more money for HBO as bandwidth is incredibly cheap, and that they could have *gasp* global reach.
What I don't understand is why they don't team up with an existing system (Netfix, Hulu) to peddle their channel. Use someone who is already in the market instead of creating your own confusing service. It isn't like Netfix/Hulu and the other systems don't already have the capability of handling subscriptions and they are already what the consumer is familiar with. Hell, even iTunes would be a start.
I am good with forking projects, but only when you provide better service than the other project can provide. HBO GO seems like a solution in want of a problem, and HBO could reduce their costs significantly by using existing technologies instead of rolling their own.
CISPA might be OK if those agencies get my data only if all of them ask for it at the same time (and each agency only has a fixed quota of requests per month, so they actually have to convince each other it's worthwhile)
As long as I can treat them as FOIA Requests and unilaterally deny them for security purposes, or even better, return 60 pages with every line blacked out, I am cool with that.
On the post: Hilarious And Ridiculous: Networks Threaten To Pull Channels Off The Air If Aereo & Dish Win Lawsuits
Re: Re:
Not legally. The FCC public broadcast license will not allow them to encrypt it. In a matter of fact, until recently, cable companies which rebroadcasted public television stations were not legally allowed to encrypt them either (they have found other ways of dealing with it now.) The cable companies have been complaining about that for some time, because they all had "Essential" tiers which had the local broadcast channels plus a few basic cable channels for a huge discount (I believe I was paying about $35 for it, at the time.) The problem was, the person could cut out all the channels and just use broadband, and could still receive the broadcast channels without "paying for it".
On the post: Hilarious And Ridiculous: Networks Threaten To Pull Channels Off The Air If Aereo & Dish Win Lawsuits
Re:
So long as they didn't kill their web presence, shouldn't be much of an issue. The only show on CBS I watch religiously is Big Bang, and they stream it from their website.
I actually can't get them from my house, ever since they went digital. My digital receiver looks cross-eyed whenever I try to connect because their signal is too weak and too far away. The only time I've seen them recently (since cutting the cord) is when I had my RV in a campsite a couple miles from them and they came in clear.
On the post: Hilarious And Ridiculous: Networks Threaten To Pull Channels Off The Air If Aereo & Dish Win Lawsuits
Re: Re: Re: Re:
If the CW drops, it could move to the Turner stations...
Correct me if I am wrong, but isn't TBS/TNT a cable only network? How would moving those to TBS/TNT help someone who has gotten off of cable and is digesting over-the-air broadcasting if that over-the-air channel disappears?
Sure, it would still exist if it moved stations, but why would CW die if it was still accessible on cable?
It just wouldn't be available to those who cut the cable.
On the post: EA COO: We Get Votes For 'Worst Company' Because We're Awesome And Voters Are Homophobes
Re: Re: Re: Re:
But that is the problem. They still make a few "good" games, which they can milk over and over again to make up for all the crap that loses them customers. So long as people are willing to buy them despite their best efforts to screw their customers, they won't learn and will continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. Only by removing all funding do we convince them that a change is necessary.
Of course, that requires the assumption of sanity, and we have pretty much confirmed over and over again that they don't have any, so I suspect a total lost of funding will be rationalized as a 100% increase in piracy.
On the post: EA COO: We Get Votes For 'Worst Company' Because We're Awesome And Voters Are Homophobes
Re: Re:
It kept me from buying a number of their games. I have not bought a single game (except through DRM safe GOG.com,) from either Activision or EA since this madness started. With Activision, it was Warcraft 3. With EA, SPORE. I would have bought SimCity 5, since I have all the other ones and love playing them, but EA proved a while back they didn't want my money.
Sure, they have a large community still willing to throw money at them, but how long before they burn all their goodwill and through all their funds. They can't live forever. But that being said, Scientology still exists, so it takes a long time to kill off hellspawn.
On the post: EA COO: We Get Votes For 'Worst Company' Because We're Awesome And Voters Are Homophobes
It isn't homophobia or bad choices for a game cover, it is the abject failure to understand your customer and provide them a reason to buy. It is the antithesis of CWF:RTB, played out far better and quicker than the MPAA/RIAA example.
On the post: Copyright Troll Malibu Media Seeking 'Six Strikes' Info From Verizon In Lawsuit
Re: Re: So you're saying ISP records shouldn't be like phone records.
Rest assured, you'll see this argument again from OOTB, but the statement is still insightful*1000.
Discounting jury nullification, the jury weighs the evidence (and the veracity of the witnesses testimony of that evidence.)
On the post: Belgium: We Want To Be The Champagne Of Chocolate
Re: Re: I'M A BELGIAN CHOCOLATIER
Amen. As a beer brewer (hobbyist), nobody who drinks my Belgian-style beer thinks, "Hey, we aren't in Belgium. How can you call it Belgian-style?" They think..."yum". California is known for a number of "styles" of beer, including Steams, and if anyone tried to trademark steam as a California only style, I think they'd get lynched by a mob headed by the majors (unless the majors tried to do it, which I wouldn't put them past trying to do.)
After all, one of the major's claims to fame is their honed tradition of brewing Bavarian-style Lagers in St. Louis, MO (and quite crappy, I might add.)
On the post: UK Music Licensing Agency Says You Can't Use Its Music In Your Podcast Without First Purchasing A License It Doesn't Even Offer
Re: Re: Re: You promote tiny outlets, disregarding collateral damage
You really should. It is only $15 a year, which according to some commercials is far less than a cup of coffee a month (apparently those commercials don't drink 7-Eleven coffee.) And the added advantage is you get a nice "insider" badge next to your name and keep Mike running this site.
On the post: Paul Hansmeier: Those Class Action Cases Are About Correcting Injustice
Re:
I believe the last paragraph was more of a P.S. then anything else. The original Ars Technica interview ended as abruptly, as Mullen kept asking the pointed questions Hansmeier had no intention of answering.
On the post: EA Labels President: DRM Is A Failed Strategy, But SimCity Didn't Have Any DRM
Re: Taking Up a Collection for Gibeau
I think we may have found the perpetual motion machine that saves mankind from future destruction. The spin EA does puts off enough energy that it rivals most stellar black-holes, and the suck is nearly the same. If we could figure out how to capture and harness this energy, we wouldn't need fossil fuels ever again.
On the post: EA Labels President: DRM Is A Failed Strategy, But SimCity Didn't Have Any DRM
Re:
Apparently they don't know what MMO is either.
Every MMO I've played, ever, even back in the days of the pseudo MMO called a Multi-User Dungeon (MUD), you instantly saw the manipulations of other users instantaneously (or as close to it as possible, accounting for lag.)
From what I understand talking with those who have it, you may see some updates to other people's cities once in a while, and interactions may happen between cities (I say may, because there are a lot of people who have complained about it never happening.)
That isn't a MMO. That may be an online experience, but unless you can see what is happening in the world to both you and to others in your area, that is not an MMO.
On the post: True Purpose Of DRM: To Let Copyright Holders Have A Veto Right On New Technologies
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Silly premise. First, DRM works unless circumvented.
Mission Accomplished?
On the post: Georgia State Court Issues Censorship Order Blocking Free Speech On Anti-Copyright Troll Message Board
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
For the most part, I'd agree with you. I happen to live in a city in which our Police Chief, Fire Chief and other managerial positions (except the City Attorney,) are appointed positions. However, I see little difference between the politicians we elect choosing their best friend to be Police Chief and the public at large choosing their best friend to be Police Chief. Of course, the public doesn't usually receive kickbacks, unlike the politicians, and thus in some cases it is the fairest way to chose a Police Chief.
Hopefully, however, the public has enough information to choose the best one for the job. But that is a problem with appointments too.
On the post: True Purpose Of DRM: To Let Copyright Holders Have A Veto Right On New Technologies
Re: Re: Silly premise. First, DRM works unless circumvented.
Yeah, but their ultimate goal, shown by charging "piracy" taxes on consumer storage devices, is to get paid whether or not you are consuming their product, legal or otherwise.
So they want to control the device, and still get paid whether or not you consume their content.
On the post: HBO Admits That Perhaps Cable-Free Access Might Possibly Make Sense One Day, Maybe
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Maybe they are new world creationists and don't believe in evolution. Just as annoying and hopefully, just as short lived in the scheme of things too.
On the post: HBO Admits That Perhaps Cable-Free Access Might Possibly Make Sense One Day, Maybe
Re: Re: Interesting to juxtapose a paywall may be going up:
If what they want is priced properly to the value, I'd go for it as a consumer (provided they removed the advertising, unlike Hulu's pay us for free content and we'll still give you the same commercials model, but then again, I still have a Hulu Plus account and still pay each month, so apparently it isn't enough to annoy me.)
I'd buy into subscriptions for Nerdist/Geek & Sundry because I know those guys make good material, and I am willing to support them, as with RoosterTeeth, MinutePhysics and HISHE. But anything more than a couple bucks a year is probably too much for most folks. Hell, I'd even throw a little money towards collegehumor.
On the post: HBO Admits That Perhaps Cable-Free Access Might Possibly Make Sense One Day, Maybe
Re: Re:
What I don't understand is why they don't team up with an existing system (Netfix, Hulu) to peddle their channel. Use someone who is already in the market instead of creating your own confusing service. It isn't like Netfix/Hulu and the other systems don't already have the capability of handling subscriptions and they are already what the consumer is familiar with. Hell, even iTunes would be a start.
I am good with forking projects, but only when you provide better service than the other project can provide. HBO GO seems like a solution in want of a problem, and HBO could reduce their costs significantly by using existing technologies instead of rolling their own.
On the post: The List Of Government Agencies That Can Get Your Data Under CISPA
Re: I have an idea how to fix this
As long as I can treat them as FOIA Requests and unilaterally deny them for security purposes, or even better, return 60 pages with every line blacked out, I am cool with that.
On the post: California Attorney General Claims Foreign Companies Using 'Pirated' Software Represent Unfair Competition
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Driver support.
But why install Windows 7 on the box and spend the money when Linux works and does what I need it to do?
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