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Tuesday 08 April 2014, PM

ITV and C4 attack BBC1+1 plans - News - Broadcast

ITV and Channel 4 executives have hit out at the BBC’s plans to launch BBC1+1 amid fears that the time-adjusted service will have a significant impact on the commercial broadcasting landscape. The commercial broadcasters told MPs on Tuesday that the channel will damage their audience share and force down advertising revenue. They added that the money used to launch BBC1+1 would be better spent on commissioning original content. The BBC plans to replace BBC3 with the time-shifted channel in autumn next year if it secures approval to move its youth service online. This means BBC1+1 will occupy channel slot 7 on Freeview, higher than any other +1 service on the EPG. - broadcastnow.co.uk

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Monday 07 April 2014, PM

Pono: only a man pays for music quality that he can't hear - Technology - The Observer

Photograph Franz Krachtus/AP Neil Young is a great musician. Well, I've enjoyed a few of his songs, and plenty of people have enjoyed lots more of them enough to give him a decades-spanning career in the music business. I'm not sure, though, that this quite qualifies him to tangle with mathematicians waving Nyquist-Shannon's theorem, who are lining up to tell him his Pono music player which crashed through its 800,000 Kickstarter finance-raising target within a day of being announced won't actually give people 14,600 backers pledging nearly 5m so far the benefits they hope for. - theguardian.com

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Video: Maria Miller expenses report: Listen to Telegraph reporter's phone call with special adviser Joanna HIndley - Tel

I think he is trying to get hold of Claire Newell, co-reporter as well. JH I should just flag up as well, while youre on it that when she doorstepped him, she got Marias father, whos just had a removed and come out of removed. So I am just going to flag up that connection for you to think about. - telegraph.co.uk

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David Cameron undersells UK drama - Comment - Broadcast

The Prime Minister’s jingoistic BBC-bashing conveniently ignores some monster global hits Inevitably trying to win a few political points on the back of the BBC licence fee debate, David Cameron has not only truly missed the point, he has once again proven himself to be a man of many faces. “Let’s try and make sure we produce the hits of the future, rather than having to brush up on our Danish and read the subtitles,” he told Heart, Capital and Smooth Radio in Birmingham last week. What about the success of Doctor Who, Sherlock and Parade’s End, each of which have sold to hundreds of countries around the world? Even new series such as Peaky Blinders, The Musketeers and The Honourable Woman are being eagerly snapped up by international broadcasters, jealous of the BBC’s ability to produce so much, high-quality original drama. However, more importantly, the BBC spends relatively little on foreign imports and Cameron’s jingoistic attempts to assert otherwise sound positively Farage-y. The Saturday night 9pm slot on BBC4 is the only regular slot for international drama, with BBC acquisitions chief Sue Deeks scoring incredible European series such as The Killing, The Bridge, Borgen and Salamander. Those shows make up a tiny percentage of the BBC’s schedule and are often acquired for tiny fees - The Killing was originally understood to have cost less than £20,000 per episode. The BBC’s only other significant acquisitions are Seth Macfarlane’s animated comedies Family Guy and American Dad; currently, they air on BBC3, but may struggle in the channel’s online-only future. Over the last few years, the BBC has not attempted to take on Sky or Channel 4 to buy the next Mad Men or Heroes and its budget for acquiring Hollywood studio tentpole movies has also dramatically reduced. Rather than admonishing the BBC for spending a very small amount of money on the best of European drama, Cameron should have a clearout of his own DVD collection. The Conservative leader was famously pictured inviting German leader Angela Merkel into his living room and Samantha Cameron had a very public chat with Michelle Obama that showcased his favourite TV shows. Box sets of US terrorism drama 24, spy thriller Homeland and HBO war miniseries Band of Brothers sat next to a collection of Desperate Housewives episodes. Cameron is also said to have enjoyed CBS’ Sherlock Holmes adaptation Elementary; there was no sign of Sherlock DVDs in his flat. Dave, what’s wrong with buying British DVDs? Perhaps the Prime Minister should be focusing on buying British hits of the future rather than boxsetting foreign imports. - broadcastnow.co.uk

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Monday 07 April 2014, AM

Ian Burrell: Can the BBC learn from John Lewis? - Media - News - The Independent

- independent.co.uk

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Ian Burrell: If the Discovery Channel buys Channel 5, it could transform the British television market - Opinion - Media

I was sitting about 10 rows from the stage. Discovery is seen as the front-runner among potential buyers of Channel 5, for which Richard Desmond is asking 700m. There's a level of confidence you just don't see in British TV. - independent.co.uk

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Sunday 06 April 2014, AM

BBC News - Campbell Kennedy to tackle Freeview 4G disruption

The company will cover Scotland and Northern Ireland for at800, which was set up by UK mobile operators. It was created to ensure all UK viewers continue to receive Freeview when 4G at 800 MHz is activated in their area. Some TVs and set-top boxes with Freeview have been disrupted by 4G. - bbc.co.uk

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BBC wants you to pay TV licence fee even if you don t own a set, as shows go on iPlayer for longer - Telegraph

The BBC argued that the current fee is already a near universal charge and that the rise of online viewing on demand may mean that the fee needs to be modernised in future. The proposal emerged amid growing calls to scrap the licence fee when the BBCs Royal Charter is reviewed in 2016. Last month, The Telegraph disclosed that the Government would end the threat of criminal prosecution for licence fee dodgers, a punishment seen by critics as draconian and outdated. - telegraph.co.uk

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http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/5/5584604/this-is-android-tv

Google is stripping away unneeded features like telephony, cameras, touchscreen support and near-field communication to keep developers focused, and handing them ready-made interfaces where they can hopefully just plug in shows, games, photos, music, and films. Perhaps theres room for inventive new applications that harness the big screen, but the entry point is people lazing on the couch. Google had been sending the message that developers didn't actually need to build apps for TV at all simply special webpages for TV that could receive commands from a phone. - theverge.com

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Saturday 05 April 2014, AM

TV industry take note: this is what being disrupted by Amazon looks like Quartz

Amazonyesterday thrust itself into the increasingly crowded battle for control of your living room, with the launch of its own streaming device, FireTV. The online retailerhas an uphill battle aheadin streaming videoa sector dominated by Netflix and, to a lesser extent, Hulu, with Apple also trying to crack the code.Butthose populating the television ecosystem would do well to remember just how disruptive a force Amazon has been in Americas economy in recent years. Its share price has relentlessly marched higher while the established players in the industries it has taken onfirst book-selling, thenelectronicsand office supplies, among othershave all gone backwards. - qz.com

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BBC News - BBC iPlayer shows to be made available for 30 days

The changes are expected to be brought in this summer, following a formal assessment and advice from broadcasting watchdog Ofcom. The iPlayer receives around 10.7 million requests to stream or download TV and radio programmes each day. Research published today as part of the Trust's assessment found that 91 of 1000 iPlayer uses questioned would be 'very' or 'quite' interested in the window being extended. - bbc.co.uk

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BBC iPlayer - Help - Why has hi/lo option disappeared in radio console?

In the pop-up radio player we've removed the hi/lo option as we are now able to detect your bandwidth. We deliver the best quality stream based on your connection. If your connection drops, we'll change the quality version automatically so playback will not buffer and we'll increase the quality if your connection improves. - iplayerhelp.external.bbc.co.uk

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Friday 04 April 2014, PM

Feedback: Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: 4 Apr 2014

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Friday 04 April 2014, AM

a516digital: BuzMuzik closes

The channel invited viewers to interact using facebook, twitter and text messaging, with a selection of messages posted alongside the music video being played. BuzMuzik boasted thousands of fans on Facebook and Twitter, before both accounts were deleted. BuzMuzik launched under two years ago on the 30th May 2012. - a516digital.com

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Market report: Tullow and BSkyB in the spotlight - Telegraph

The first is that, while the status quo is unchanged and the split of games is broadly similar, there is significant cost inflation of about 35pc. Worries about both possible outcomes are likely to return and weigh on BSkyBs shares, the analysts warned clients, sending the broadcaster down 26 to 892p, a 2.9pc fall. Two years ago, Tullow stock changed hands for more than 16 apiece, but a series of offshore drilling disappointments knocked the companys once-glowing exploration track-record. - telegraph.co.uk

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RadioToday - RNIB Insight Radio launches on Freeview

The station, operating a community radio licence in Glasgow, is now available on channel 730 in addition to its position on Freesat channel 777 and Sky channel 0188. The station broadcasts a mix of news, information, audio books, magazines, newspapers and general entertainment programmes presented by blind or partially sighted people. It aims to reduce the isolation felt by the up to two million people in the UK living with serious sight loss and provide a relevant point of contact and source of information for those directly affected. Insight Radio is usually live from 8am till 5pm Monday to Friday and voice-tracked or repeats at other times. - radiotoday.co.uk

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Do I need fibre optic broadband? - Broadband reviews - Computing - Which? Technology

Are the increasing number of fibre optic broadband packages over-priced and over-hyped, or the only way to stay connected We ask whether superfast fibre optic internet is really worth the extra cost, or if your best bet is to stick with the cheaper option of an ADSL connection, at least until prices for fibre start to fall. Find out what noticeable differences the extra speed will make to your everyday browsing and TV streaming experience, how urgent the need is to splash out on a superfast internet connection for your home, and when you can expect fibre optic broadband to become available across the UK, including in rural areas. - which.co.uk

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Thursday 03 April 2014, PM

BBC News - Net neutrality law adopted by European Parliament

Operators have said the move would hinder their efforts to manage traffic. The law still needs to be approved by Europe's Council of Ministers. It would also prohibit mobile networks and broadband providers from blocking services - such as WhatApp messages or Google Drive storage - that compete with their own offerings. - bbc.co.uk

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BSkyB tells staff it will not intervene in Scottish independence debate - Media - theguardian.com

BSkyB has confirmed its commitment to remain in Scotland but has not explained the outcome a 'yes' vote would have on its products, such as Premier League football coverage. Sky is one of Scotland's largest private sector employers, with several of its largest customer service centres in sites such as Livingston. The company employs 6,400 staff directly and another 1,600 through its contractors. - theguardian.com

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Media Talk podcast: Advertising Week Europe 2014

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Thursday 03 April 2014, AM

What Waterloo Road taught us about long-running dramas - Television radio - theguardian.com

Until today, the parenthesis for Waterloo Road read 2006- , but now we know that its televisual death will come in 2015. After the completion of the 10th series that is about to begin shooting, school's out forever. Ten is a neat number another BBC1 drama perennial, Spooks, also ran to that number of seasons. - theguardian.com

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Aereo Gets Support From Dish Network More Ahead Of Supreme Court Hearing

Supporters of theBarry Diller-backed company have until 1159 PM ET to add their voices to the cause. More briefs are expected throughout the evening well update as more come in. Here are a few highlights from ones submitted so far today Dish Network Chairman Charlie Ergen has good reason to support Aereo. - deadline.com

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Those Who Insist Aereo Ruling Won't Impact Cloud Computing Don't Seem To Understand Cloud Computing - Techdirt

A few weeks ago, we wrote about how the Aereo case, which will be heard by the Supreme Court in a few weeks, is likely to have a huge impact on the future of cloud computing, and went into detail to explain why. The primary issue is that, under copyright law, what Aereo is doing is effectively indistinguishable from what most cloud computing services do. However, a number of folks who really seem to dislike Aereo continually insist that the case will have no impact whatsoever on cloud computing. - techdirt.com

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Wednesday 02 April 2014, PM

Media: Local TV; Johnston Press; Geordie Greig

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Amazon announces Fire TV, an Android-powered streaming set-top box

We've been waiting for it for quite sometime, but now Amazon is finally ready to make its play for the living room. Fire TV is not a barebones device like the Chromecast, it's a powerful Android-driven platform with ties to the broader Amazon ecosystem. Browsing through the Amazon video store is basically just scrolling through an endless barrage of movie posters presented in a moving 3D bar. - engadget.com

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BBC News - Attempt to cut off illegal websites advertising revenue

It is hoped that firms that handle advertising will use the resource to make sure they do not serve advertising on those sites, cutting off revenue. Top piracy sites generate millions of pounds thanks to advertising. One estimate, from the Digital Citizens Alliance - a group backed by rights holders - suggested that piracy websites worldwide generated 227m 137m from advertising revenue each year. - bbc.co.uk

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BBC - Media Centre - Tim Davie to re-join the BBC’s Executive Board

A biography of Tim Davie is available here. - bbc.co.uk

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Wednesday 02 April 2014, AM

Government accuses BBC of creating false balance on climate change with unqualified sceptics - Environment -

In a damning parliamentary report, the BBC is criticised for distorting the debate on man-made climate change for which it says the scientific evidence is overwhelming through its determination to put the other side of the argument across. Radio 4s Today and World at One programmes come in for particular criticism, as do the BBCs television news programmes. The BBCs determination to give a balanced view has seen it pit well-respected scientists arguing for climate change against far less qualified opponents such as Lord Lawson of Blaby, who heads a campaign group lobbying against the governments climate change policies. - independent.co.uk

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MPs criticise BBC for 'false balance' in climate change coverage - Environment - The Guardian

The MPs called on the BBC to develop clear editorial guidelines for all commentators and presenters on the facts of climate change. Lawson is also the chairman of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a thinktank that casts doubt on climate change science and questions the economic costs of responding to it. The report stated unequivocally that warming was already occurring and that the dominant force behind it was human activity, but the BBC gave considerable airtime to sceptics who did not accept the findings. - gu.com

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Tuesday 01 April 2014, PM

BT executive: 'count us out' of Channel 5 bid - Media - theguardian.com

Richard Desmond's Channel 5 BT executive John Petter says there is 'not a lot to hang your hat on' at the channel. BT's apparent lack of appetite for the broadcaster will be a blow to Desmond, who acquired the business for just 103.5m almost four years ago. He is targeting a 700m sale price for Channel 5, 10 times its estimated profit of 70m this year. - theguardian.com

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BT befriends Google's lonely TV dongle – and saves YouView • The Register

The caveat, unsurprisingly, is that only BT Broadband customers will be able to view the footie via Chromecast. This entails a streaming box the standalone cost is under a tenner, with either five sports day passes, or five months of Sky Movies, for 34.99. BT this week helped assure the future development of YouView for another five years, after the broadcaster shareholders slashed their commitment to the platform. - theregister.co.uk

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The new British invasion: Why Amazon, Hulu and Netflix love UK TV shows Tech News and Analysis

The irony, of course, is that British television has consistently been heralded as some of the best in the world well, maybe Doctor Who isnt for everyone, but we can all agree about the original British Office. By supporting our originals with well-targeted advertising and publicity, weve seen a meaningful uptick in awareness not only for The Wrong Mans, but for Hulu Originals overall, Koh said. Of course, the British TV boom in America might have to do with the fact that its not seen as primarily British. - gigaom.com

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BBC News - Rural broadband: MP slams secretive BT

Her committee said that many of the maps released lacked sufficient detail about coverage and the speeds that would be provided. BT highlighted that it was audited by the National Audit Office and said it delivered value for money. - bbc.co.uk

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Ariel - World Service makes its move

1 April 2014 Last updated at 0919 The World Service moves from Foreign Office to licence-fee funding today. Ariel asks Peter Horrocks, World Service Group director, what this means for staff. Apart from a new name on the pay cheque, will World Service staff notice any difference - bbc.co.uk

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Tuesday 01 April 2014, AM

London Live: anarchy and diversity as community TV station launches - Media - The Guardian

Evgeny Lebedev, the neatly bearded Russian media tycoon who owns the Standard and though up for sale the Independent titles, has gambled that there is an audience for more about the English capital. The launch of London Live certainly saw it live up to the first word in its name at 8.15pm peak-time, we got a Chelsea fan trying to eat a pie named after an Arsenal star and the second word as well. The Lebedev version looked like any other TV panel show except for the guests. - theguardian.com

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BBC News - Rural broadband maps criticised for lacking detail

A committee of MPs said that many of the maps released lacked sufficient detail about coverage and the speeds that would be provided. Since then BT has secured all of the 18 further contracts offered. Pac also raised concern that the maps published by local bodies showing where broadband would be offered often lacked detail. - bbc.co.uk

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London Live launch review: Hollywood A-listers, sharp chat, great food – and that’s just the first course - Reviews - TV

The very first face we saw belonged to Maleena Pone, one of the roving presenters on daily entertainment-news show London Go and a sunny enough presence to shine through this overcast evening on the Southbank. It wouldnt be live TV if there wasnt one unplanned interruption, but its an auspicious start that this one was in keeping with the housing theme two Russell Brand-a-likes shouting Its better to squat than let homes rot in the middle of one of Pones interviews. This player is used within article copy as first element. - independent.co.uk

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Why a Loss for Aereo Wouldn t Threaten Cloud Services - Variety

If the broadcasters succeed, the consequences to American consumers and the cloud industry are chilling, Aereo said this week, in a statement after filingits response brief with the court. A decision against Aereo would upend and cripple the entire cloud industry. But thats just not true. The reasoning An individual user not Cablevision initiates recording and playback, from dedicated hardware, ergo its a private performance. - variety.com

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Monday 31 March 2014, PM

UK copyright tweak in June will finally allow ripping of CDs - Technology - theguardian.com

Fifteen years after the first MP3 players went on sale in the UK, it will soon be legal to copy music you've bought on to them from a CD you own. Record labels have known about this for years - but have turned a blind eye, because prosecuting everyone who bought a music player or transferred files to their phone would be both ruinously expensive and terrible publicity. If you give away or sell a CD that you have backed up, you'll have to destroy the backup copy to stay within the law, the guidance notes. - theguardian.com

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ITV commercial director: 90% of content is crap - World news - theguardian.com

Simon Daglish, ITV group's commercial director, hits out at media companies producing sub-par content. - theguardian.com

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Information Commissioner investigating alleged data protection breaches in latest BBC Panorama investigation - TV

The Mayor who has denied allegations from opponents that he has used public funds to promote himself and build his power base promptly published a statement online, accusing the BBC of making a racist and Islamophobic programme. I believe the programme is being used for political campaigning and electioneering purposes just weeks before local and Mayoral elections in May, the statement said. It said We can confirm that there has been a breach of data protection at an independent production company working with the BBC on a Panorama investigation as a result of unauthorised disclosure by a former researcher on the production team, in breach of her obligation of confidentiality. - independent.co.uk

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RadioToday - BFBS launches Brize Norton DAB station

The Brize breakfast show on weekdays will broadcast music, local news and information for the regions military community, but the daily schedule will also include live bulletins from British Forces News with national and international military stories. Posted on Monday, March 31st, 2014 at 705 am by Radio Today UK. - radiotoday.co.uk

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ITV commercial boss warns brands that 90% of content is 'crap' - Media - theguardian.com

He said ITV still sometimes got it wrong despite 57 years of experience and a 1bn annual programme spend. He said ITV had experimented with advertiser-funded programmes but said it had not worked because it interfered too much in the relationship between the broadcaster and viewer. Daglish used his appearance on the conference's opening day to announce ITV had signed up with sponsored content service, Twitter Amplify. - theguardian.com

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BBC's Peter Horrocks: 'It's not that easy to get advertising in Somalia' - Media - The Guardian

It is not the only revolution being overseen by Horrocks, the 54-year-old former editor of Newsnight and Panorama, as his organisation is about to become the first BBC licence fee-funded operation to take advertising and sponsorship. The BBC's international news services now have a record worldwide reach of 256 million 192 million via the World Service in its various forms, including digital. Plus, it has nearly 2 million listeners in the UK every week including its overnight broadcasts on Radio 4. - theguardian.com

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Can Tony Hall's plans for the BBC win over the arts crowd? - Media - The Guardian

Conducting an arts drive BBC director general Tony Hall. Looked at dispassionately, the package is one that might well improve the visibility and accessibility of BBC arts coverage of which there is already probably more than many people realise. It contains very little new money, though, and with no budget or commissioning power the new director of arts could struggle to make an appreciable impact on ratings-driven channel controllers and commissioners. - theguardian.com

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BBC News - BBC must protect World Service, MPs say

A report by the foreign affairs committee was published as the BBC prepared to take over responsibility for funding the service. - bbc.co.uk

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Ofcom - Ofcom announces its priorities for the coming year

Ofcom today published its 2014/15 Annual Plan, confirming its strategy and work programme for the next financial year. This work is designed to build on some significant developments in the UKs communications infrastructure. Network rollout Ofcom will continue to monitor and promote new network deployment. - media.ofcom.org.uk

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Cable Forum: Virgin Media wins High Court patent battle

The findings echo a previous case Rovi brought against Virgin Media in 2011, in which three other of its patents were ruled invalid. A Virgin Media spokesman said Of the five Rovi patents to reach judgment, all five have been found invalid by the Court. Were pleased the Court has dismissed Rovis claims. - cableforum.co.uk

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Licence fee shake-up ‘will cost BBC £500m’ - TV Radio - Media - The Independent

The sum would be required to cover the cost of introducing a new system to cut off television signals to non-payers, which is seen as an inevitable consequence of reforms that would make licence-fee offences civil rather than criminal matters. Management has been shocked by the potential impact of the proposals, which are outlined in an amendment to the forthcoming Deregulation Bill, and backed by ministers, on its future income. It has calculated that a probable rise in non-payment would cost 200m in lost income each year, equivalent to the combined annual budgets of Radio 2 and CBeebies. - independent.co.uk

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How not to digitally relaunch a radio station

We know that younger stations need to really focus on online - because that's where you'll find new listeners, and increasingly that's how listeners consume you. The station launched this morning with some nicely produced audio - and with almost no thought put into their digital future. Despite Phantom FM closing down on the 16th March, their website is still there pic. - mediauk.com

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