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View Full Version : interesting read... and right on the money imho.


simple
May 1st, 2002, 06:02 AM
Matthew Fraser

Financial Post

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch famously declared that satellite television represents an "unambiguous threat to totalitarian regimes everywhere."

Mr. Murdoch -- whose satellite TV systems span much of the planet -- was right. The world's most detestable tyrants, presidents-for-life and ayatollahs rail hysterically against the onslaught of free-flowing information sprayed down on their populations from high-power satellites.

Mr. Murdoch could not have predicted, though, he'd be proven right by the West's last remaining authoritarian regime in broadcasting: Canada.

Friday's Supreme Court's ruling against "grey market" satellite TV operators has put Canada in the fine company of North Korea and assorted neo-medieval Islamic theocracies. Yet, while Ottawa is cracking down on foreign satellite signals, even Iran has reformed its Mad Mullah ban on satellite dishes.

Canada's satellite TV saga provides a textbook case study of how, in the closed Ottawa world of regulation-protected broadcasters, whenever commercial stakes clash with cherished principles, economic interests invariably win.

It's worth decoding these Byzantine intrigues, for this tortured saga has yet to run its course.

First, it's necessary to distinguish the so-called "grey" market from the "black" market. There has been a deliberate, and clever, blurring of the two by powerful lobbies.

The "black" market is the sale of "hacked" encryption cards that allow consumers to pick up signals from any satellite service without paying. The "grey" market is the purchase of dish-receivers for foreign satellite TV services -- notably DirecTV -- by resident Canadians who pay a monthly subscription fee.

Legal issues about the "black" market are not unique to Canada. Techno-savvy hackers are always two steps ahead of TV encryption technology. Most jurisdictions have asserted that using "hacked" cards constitutes theft.

In this respect, the Supreme Court's ruling was not egregious. It's the court's ruling on the "grey" market that is contestable, for it offends fundamental freedoms.

DirecTV finds itself in a curious conflict over the "grey" market controversy. DirecTV has a financial interest in closing down the "black" market -- in the United States and Canada. Which explains why, in Canada, DirecTV made common legal cause with a clique of large-scale Canadian firms, including Bell ExpressVu and Star Choice.

But DirecTV also has a compelling financial interest in growing its "grey" market subscription base in Canada. DirecTV knows, moreover, that Bell ExpressVu and Star Choice discreetly promote their own "grey" markets by selling services in northern American states.

Thus, the commercial hypocrisy is bilateral: They are all publicly against the "grey" market, but none shuns "grey" market revenues.

DirecTV first attempted to operate legally in Canada in the early 1990s, but got sandbagged by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. DirecTV later partnered with Power Corp. of Canada, but Power DirecTV also met CRTC resistance.

Why? Because DirecTV carried a number of banned U.S. channels, such as MTV and Home Box Office. The CRTC banned HBO because it had authorized a Canadian-based channel, The Movie Network, as a monopoly middleman for HBO product. TMN, coincidentally, was owned by Astral Media Inc., whose president, André Bureau, happened to be a former CRTC chairman.

The CRTC's rationale for its HBO ban is that TMN owns Canadian "territorial rights" for HBO programs. DirecTV -- which like all satellite systems is transborder -- is allegedly violating those rights by beaming HBO to its Canadian subscribers. But what if HBO and Hollywood studios simply stopped selling product to TMN, or sold non-exclusive rights? There would be no Canadian commercial rights to violate.

But the CRTC, unable to counter that argument, falls back on a "cultural" rationale for TMN's monopoly: TMN kicks back cross-subsidies for Canadian content -- monopoly rents that, in theory, cannot be extracted from U.S.-based DirecTV. Yet that rationale, too, is without foundation: Hollywood studios invest more in movie production in Canada than the CRTC will ever extract from Astral Media.

Canadian cable barons, meanwhile, have discreetly supported the CRTC's anti-DirecTV posture because DirecTV poses a more powerful "death star" threat than ExpressVu and Star Choice. But the cable industry's position contains one telling nuance: If DirecTV is allowed into Canada, they will also demand the right to carry HBO, Showtime and other banned American channels. Goodbye, TMN. Goodbye, CRTC.

In this complex saga of hardball politics, major Canadian broadcasting interests easily co-opted Ottawa's complicity, because their political clout far outweighs that of unsophisticated mom-and-pop dish retailers. Still, the retailers kept winning legal challenges before provincial courts. On Friday, however, they finally lost before the Supreme Court of Canada.

Yet the Supreme Court ruling was guided by statutes -- the same laws whose drafting was heavily influenced by the cabal of powerful lobbies that boast direct pipelines into the Heritage and Industry ministries.

Now it appears there will be a constitutional challenge on the grounds that the law inhibits fundamental freedoms.

Canada's Constitution, it can reasonably be expected, will prevail over commercial interests of powerful lobbies who, defending their quasi-monopoly privileges, have shrewdly exploited regulatory and statutory levers to tarnish with the stigma of illegality the mundane gesture of subscribing to a foreign satellite TV service.

If the constitutional challenge fails, however, totalitarian regimes everywhere will praise Canada as a model for the world.

mwfraser@rogers.com



Simple.

T Hell
May 1st, 2002, 07:23 AM
Good article.
Perhaps with Bev chasing windmills Bev has in fact shot itself in the foot and condemed bev to open competion with Dave tv. Could this have been the plan all along? To destroy the broadcast regulations once BEV felt it had the upper hand in customer numbers in Canada or is it just (and most likely) the myopia of corporate greed that drives Bev. Perhaps Bev has spelled it's own doom with this challenge. Instead of just taking less Bev has gambled it all away.

I actually don't have a problem with Canada having the right to set the conditions of broadcasting licience in this country in order to inject some cultural content. It is a noble goal. I actually prefer that Dave can't sell service in this country. Perhap Dave may have a licience if the cultural aspect was injected into his signal as a condition. I consider that a minor requirement to do business here.

What I prefer is to maintain the status Quo. Bev does their thing under the cultural requirements of it's licence and people have the god given right to accept or reject that option. citizens may, if they have a strong desire, go out of the country in order to do business with a foreign company like Dave.

We all have our own personal needs. Some of us feel supporting our culture by licencing broadcasters that want to do business in canada with a set of rules on cultural content. Others feel the desire to listen to other points of view or alternate language programing etc. They do this for a number of reasons. Both should have the freedom to pursue that desire.

Conclusion: Dave and BEV shutup. You know very well what the will of the people is in this country. Quit trying to pervert this intent with your overbearing greed and quest for power. The People were happy with the compromises reached with the laws. The only ones that weren't were corporations; Not the free people of Canada.
WE are not YOUR loyal subjects!

======================
Please excuse all typo's and gramatical errors. I'm only on my second cup of coffee. Is it Wed or Thurs?

apn_64
May 1st, 2002, 08:07 AM
Excellent article, I'm pleased to read that the FP (not owned by Bell) continues to take a stance against corporate hegemony.

However, I disagree with T Hell that Bell's plan all along was/is to dismantle the CRTC. At first I mused that BEV had stupidly picked the wrong fight; going after American DSS users instead of going after the CRTC to allow them to compete on a more equal footing (i.e. be allowed to broadcast HBO and channels that Canadians actually want).

Then I realized that "compete" was the operative word; BEV doesn't want to compete, it wants a blockade and the legislated freedom to monopolize Canada. Sadly our elected brainstrust, the Liberal numbskulls, were easily duped into granting their wish under the auspices of protecting Canadian culture.

The fact is that if Dave and/or Charlie ever get a licence to broadcast/sell their product in this country, it will be a death knell to BEV and *C. In the meantime, BEV attempts to lock down the Canadian market and will easily crush the likes of *C and others that dare to compete on its turf.

eeprom7777
May 1st, 2002, 08:35 AM
Wow, that is indeed a good artical!

I must say that is the first and the best description of the exact nature of these systems that I've ever seen in print....against the onslaught of free-flowing information sprayed down on their populations from high-power satellites. I never had a big intrest in studing law etc., but I must say, lately I'm starting to wonder if I'm more interested in the legalities of this freedom fight or the intricacies of assembly language programming... Awesome info! Keep up the good work!

Oh, and T Hell, Your safe, it's only Wednesday! It is the 1st though, hope ya have all you april projects complete! ;)

simple
May 1st, 2002, 10:02 AM
I have sent an email to Matthew Fraser thanking him for a great article. I hope to see more articles from him as things progress, getting the word out to the Canadian Public.


Simple.

apn_64
May 1st, 2002, 10:29 AM
Terrence Corcoran (FP) and Mathew Ingram (G&M) have also commented on the stupidity of the SC ruling. Good to see the G&M exercising their editorial freedom, despite being part of the Bell empire.

I emailed Mr. Ingram thanking him for the commentary and pointing out the sweet irony that his own employer is breaking the law by selling DISH network receivers.

We have to keep this story on the front and editorial pages to ensure that Canadians understand that this is the thin end of the wedge for corporate hegemony. Once a conglomerate takes over many forms of media, then freedom and civil liberties are at risk.

Another funny point is that I saw a quote that alleged to come from from Keith Spicer (former Chairman of the CRTC) indicating that "... we spent 50yrs telling the Russians they could not block broadcasts and publications from the West...". How's that for irony?

T Hell
May 1st, 2002, 12:11 PM
==================================
However, I disagree with T Hell that Bell's plan all along was/is to dismantle the CRTC.
==================================

Please don't misunderstand what I was saying. You must take the whole paragraph in it's entirety.

But you bring up a point. I do suspect Bev in wanting to control/manipulate the radio and communications act (the law itself) for it's personal benefit without due regard for the people of Canada. I'm not the first in this forum to suspect that. That was not the intent of my last post however. Sorry if there was any confusion cause by my pooor grammar.

gunsmoke2
May 1st, 2002, 09:46 PM
BEV doesn't want to compete


That's right they do not know how to. Just like Bell Canada who was "Protected" up to 1991 and now ExpressVu. But they know how to play the politics.


I meet Matthew Fraser once. He is extremely bright and teaches liberal arts.. not sure if he still does now.


He knows the history of communications in Canada and can tell you just about anything related.



GS2