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-   -   FilmFour free on Sky? (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=43743)

Zero Tolerance May 30th 06 02:22 AM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
On Mon, 29 May 2006 22:06:40 +0100, "Tumbleweed"
wrote:

I think the (tenous) argument is that you originally paid for a Sky card,
hence its a 'pay' channel (whereas for say, BBC1 it would work without a
card)


But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.

(Except it STILL isn't, of course.) :-)

--

MJ Ray May 30th 06 02:35 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
(Zero Tolerance)
On Mon, 29 May 2006 22:06:40 +0100, "Tumbleweed"
wrote:
I think the (tenous) argument is that you originally paid for a Sky card,
hence its a 'pay' channel (whereas for say, BBC1 it would work without a
card)


But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.


No, the TV licence is not linked to viewing of BBC channels.

Face it: Public Service Broadcasters should not encrypt in only one
platform owner's system. That's anti-competitive bundling.

--
MJR/slef
Free Sat FAQ:
http://mjr.towers.org.uk/blog/2006/astefaq


Zero Tolerance May 30th 06 05:01 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
On 30 May 2006 12:35:01 GMT, MJ Ray wrote:

Face it: Public Service Broadcasters should not encrypt in only one
platform owner's system. That's anti-competitive bundling.


Absolutely. But how many other satellite encryption platforms exist in
the UK? None which are major enough for it to be worth the PSBs
simulcrypting with.

--

Mark Carver May 30th 06 06:10 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 

Zero Tolerance wrote:
On Mon, 29 May 2006 22:06:40 +0100, "Tumbleweed"
wrote:

I think the (tenous) argument is that you originally paid for a Sky card,
hence its a 'pay' channel (whereas for say, BBC1 it would work without a
card)


But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.


So when my FTV card expires (because Sky change the encryption scheme)
it will be replaced by Sky free of charge ? If not, then in my book
that's an 'ongoing cost' ?


DMac May 30th 06 08:30 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
sky and free surely an oxymoron



Zero Tolerance May 31st 06 01:03 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
On 30 May 2006 09:10:23 -0700, "Mark Carver"
wrote:

But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.


So when my FTV card expires (because Sky change the encryption scheme)
it will be replaced by Sky free of charge ? If not, then in my book
that's an 'ongoing cost' ?


No more an ongoing cost than buying a new TV every time the old one
breaks, and not one which is specific to any particular TV channel in
any case.

--

Nigel Barker May 31st 06 02:38 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
On Wed, 31 May 2006 11:03:56 GMT, (Zero Tolerance)
wrote:

On 30 May 2006 09:10:23 -0700, "Mark Carver"
wrote:

But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.


So when my FTV card expires (because Sky change the encryption scheme)
it will be replaced by Sky free of charge ? If not, then in my book
that's an 'ongoing cost' ?


No more an ongoing cost than buying a new TV every time the old one
breaks, and not one which is specific to any particular TV channel in
any case.


The FTV cards are specific to Channel 4, five & Sky Three.

--
Nigel Barker
Live from the sunny Cote d'Azur

Big Al May 31st 06 02:54 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 

"Nigel Barker" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 May 2006 11:03:56 GMT, (Zero
Tolerance)
wrote:

On 30 May 2006 09:10:23 -0700, "Mark Carver"
wrote:

But you pay for a TV licence, so BBC1 must be 'pay-tv' too.

So when my FTV card expires (because Sky change the encryption scheme)
it will be replaced by Sky free of charge ? If not, then in my book
that's an 'ongoing cost' ?


No more an ongoing cost than buying a new TV every time the old one
breaks, and not one which is specific to any particular TV channel in
any case.


The FTV cards are specific to Channel 4, five & Sky Three.

--

And the TV licence is specific to the BBC



Phil Cook May 31st 06 03:09 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
"Big Al" Big wrote:


"Nigel Barker" wrote


The FTV cards are specific to Channel 4, five & Sky Three.


And the TV licence is specific to the BBC


The licence fee is specific to all television in the UK, you can't get
out of buying one by not watching Auntie.
--
Phil Cook looking north over the park to the "Westminster Gasworks"

John Cartmell May 31st 06 03:10 PM

FilmFour free on Sky?
 
In article ,
Big Al Big wrote:
The FTV cards are specific to Channel 4, five & Sky Three.


And the TV licence is specific to the BBC


No it isn't. The TV licence is *not* payment for watching BBC programs but for
having broadcast receiving equipment.

--
John Cartmell [email protected] followed by finnybank.com 0845 006 8822
Qercus magazine FAX +44 (0)8700-519-527
www.finnybank.com
Qercus - the best guide to RISC OS computing



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