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Television Media Businesses

Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Others Fined Over Digital TV Notices 171

Ian Lamont writes "The FCC has fined 11 retailers and television manufacturers for violating rules relating to the 2009 digital TV transition. Best Buy, Circuit City, Target, Sears, Kmart, and Wal-Mart supposedly failed to place notices near analog-only TV sets warning customers that the sets did not have digital tuners. In part, the required notice reads: 'This television receiver has only an analog broadcast tuner and will require a converter box after February 17, 2009, to receive over-the-air broadcasts with an antenna because of the Nation's transition to digital broadcasting. Analog-only TVs should continue to work as before with cable and satellite TV services, gaming consoles, VCRs, DVD players, and similar products.' The fines total $6.6 million."
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Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Others Fined Over Digital TV Notices

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  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @07:39AM (#23045710)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by timmarhy ( 659436 )
      I challenge this idea that 6 million dollar fines are just considered a cost of doing business. have any of you actually dealt with an accounting department before? as a manager, if you cost ANY company 6.6 million your ass would be fired and there would be hell to pay.
      • by cheebie ( 459397 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @09:39AM (#23046258)
        But what if that $6 million fine was the result of an extra $60 million profit from selling cheap TVs for people to put in their bathroom/camper/boat/etc?

        These fines should be based on some percentage of the profits from the activity in question. And that percentage should be over 100%.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by c6gunner ( 950153 )

          But what if that $6 million fine was the result of an extra $60 million profit from selling cheap TVs for people to put in their bathroom/camper/boat/etc?

          For your scenario to make sense, they would not only have to sell enough TV's to create that much profit, but they'd have to sell them to people who would not have bought one if those signs had actually been placed on the TV's. Considering how few people actually care about over-the-air programming, I find that rather unlikely.

          • by cheebie ( 459397 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @12:47PM (#23047436)
            If you think people don't care about over-the-air programming anymore, you're probably only talking to well-off people. I know people who can't afford extra money every month for cable. But they could afford a one-time outlay for a small TV.

            Also, how's that cable gonna work on a boat, or camping? There's still a good market for cheap TVs.
            • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

              by c6gunner ( 950153 )

              If you think people don't care about over-the-air programming anymore, you're probably only talking to well-off people. I know people who can't afford extra money every month for cable. But they could afford a one-time outlay for a small TV.

              I never said these people don't exist. In fact, I specifically made an allowance for just such individuals by saying "considering how few people actually care about over-the-air programming". In other words, while there are still people out there who do care about OT

            • Also, how's that cable gonna work on a boat, or camping?

              A very long cord? Just a thought... :-)

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                Also, how's that cable gonna work on a boat, or camping?

                A very long cord? Just a thought... :-)

                Yeah, but just when the show gets to the good part, someone will drag an anchor over it. :-)

          • Well, its not just people who are uninterested in OTA programming. People who have (analog) cable TV will be unaffected by the switch to digital broadcasting. Therefore, if you have analog cable, and you don't care about getting HD programming, its certainly useful for you to pick up a cheap analog TV rather than shell out more for one with a digital tuner that you won't use.
        • The fly in the ointment is they have to label the TV's as non-digital or pull them from the shelves so the FCC can go back and hit them again next month and probably raise the fines for a second offense!
        • by cybereal ( 621599 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @04:16PM (#23048744) Homepage

          But what if that $6 million fine was the result of an extra $60 million profit from selling cheap TVs for people to put in their bathroom/camper/boat/etc?

          These fines should be based on some percentage of the profits from the activity in question. And that percentage should be over 100%.
          It isn't going to be, there is no chance that the 3-4 analog sets remaining in these stores makes that much revenue let alone profit.

          In fact, in most of these stores I have personally seen the warning signs that are required, so they are not skirting the issue. Most likely, a few individual stores failed to properly update their signage according to the corporate directions and that's resulting in the fine. The most likely result will either be store manager firings or at best, a massive training effort to prevent this from happening in the future.

          Furthermore the constitutionality of intentionally harming the profitability of a business as a penalty is suspect. Fines generally must be the same for anyone who violates the rules, and not based on percentages of facts about them.
          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            Furthermore the constitutionality of intentionally harming the profitability of a business as a penalty is suspect. Fines generally must be the same for anyone who violates the rules, and not based on percentages of facts about them.

            The legal idea that nobody should be permitted to profit from a crime or tort is fairly deeply ingrained into law. On what do you base the idea that a fine cannot be based on a percentage?

            Consider the idea of treble (300%) damages for willful patent infringement.

            Arguably, fines that are not scaled to the individual are inherantly unfair and ineffective as a deterrant.

            Of course, we could just structure the law to get the same effect without the percentages, such as make each individual sale of an ana



            • This isn't a violation of law, it's a violation of code. There is a significant difference. Consider it analogous to the violation of traffic movement code vs. an actual criminal offense like theft.

              FCC/FTC violations, just like traffic violations can escalate to criminal offenses in certain rare situations but it's rather unlikely this will happen here.

              And still, on your example, the damage percentage is not based on a fact of the punished party, it's based on the value of what they stole or used without
              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                I think you have missed the point. It really doesn't matter if these are fines for a code violation, for a criminal law violation or a happy bloogle day tax.

                Fines based on a per-location basis is a boon for businesses that have large locations and the death of a mom and pop establishment. If the fine is (for example) $1000 per location, the ultra-mega-TV mart that sold 1000 TVs out of it's 10 acre warehouse owes $1000. $10 profit/TV times 1000 TVs - $1000 = $9000 profit (instead of $10000). It's a 10% tax

        • These fines should be based on some percentage of the profits from the activity in question. And that percentage should be over 100%.
          What if the TVs are loss leaders? Would the FCC owe /them/ money?
        • by NateTech ( 50881 )
          Doesn't matter -- corporations do everything possible to MAXIMIZE profit. Unless a top-dog made the decision to take the fines, someone's head will roll.

          And if a top-dog did make the decision, they already had someone's head ready in mind to roll anyway, to cover for their decision. A scapegoat who couldn't prove they decided to do it.
      • by hymie! ( 95907 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @09:50AM (#23046318)

        if you cost ANY company 6.6 million your ass would be fired and there would be hell to pay.
        RTFA. The fines (plural) total $6.6 million. The largest fine (for a merchant) was $1.1 million
      • by Machtyn ( 759119 )
        The fines total $6.6 million. That means not a single company is paying $6 million, but a group of 11 retailers and manufacturers.

        The biggest fines went to Sears and subsidiary Kmart, nearly $1.1 million; Wal-Mart, $992,000; and TV manufacturer Syntax-Brillian, nearly $1.3 million.

        So adding that up, Sears(1.1)+KMart(1.1)+Syntax-Brillian(1.3)+Wal-Mart(.992) = $4.492 million. Which leaves another $2.1 million to split between 7 other companies. Wal-Mart probably makes over $6.6 million in electronics in a

      • I challenge this idea that 6 million dollar fines are just considered a cost of doing business

        Right, agreed; it's more along the lines of a 'license', which is also a cost of doing business. So, let me get this straight, you figure this was a goof-up, right, and 'heads will roll'? Let's think about that.

        For one thing, it seems likely that the 6 million in fines is portioned out to the scofflaws in relation to their size and/or sales. With me so far? Now, what do you figure the odds are that the relevant 'planners', etc, at SIX big chains, ALL made the same 'mistake', or, worse yet, that all six c

  • by Dishevel ( 1105119 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @07:40AM (#23045716)
    Companies don't really like telling you that thing you are about to buy sucks.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Companies don't really like telling you that thing you are about to buy sucks.

      Their shareholders should be up in arms about the companies wasting the chance to upsell customers on a converter box, but they're too stupid and lazy to care either.
    • by ddrichardson ( 869910 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @09:07AM (#23046126)

      Oddly enouugh, Tesco (Walmarts competitor in the UK) are running an advertising campaign on TV just now where this is the exact premise. "Buy our budget mushrooms, they're ugly as sin but are cheap and going in a pie anyway". Novel approach.

    • Companies don't really like telling you that thing you are about to buy sucks.
      How about fining everyone that spent the last few years marketing UHF only antennas as "HD antennas" when in fact, huge numbers of stations all over the country are moving their digital broadcast to their old VHF frequency in 2009.

      At least addressing an analog TV doesn't require climbing up on your roof.
      • Someday soon a UHF antenna might be all you need. There's talk of stopping broadcasts on channels 2-6 (these are the VHF-LO channels, lower frequency than FM radio, that require the really long VHF antenna). You can pick up channels 7+ just fine with many UHF antennas.
        • by NateTech ( 50881 )
          It's not talk, it's happening -- but not as a regulatory thing.

          The stations who've stayed on the low-VHF section of the band have found that they have LOWER performance (all other things being equal) on their digital transmitters vs. their analog ones, on their old VHF frequencies, for various reasons.

          Most of the large network engineering departments figured out a number of reasons why this happens, and mandated that the rest of their affiliates instead plan to move to UHF.

          Stations are indeed moving to UHF,
    • I dunno, every time I've decided to buy something at Best Buy the salesdroid insisted that it sucks, and that's why I need to buy an extended warranty.

      I don't go to Best Buy anymore.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I don't spend a lot of time in Best Buy or Circuit City(at least around the TVs) any more, but I know that Wal-Mart did have those notices posted around the DVD recorders and qualifying TVs the last time I looked.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by od05 ( 915556 )
      The notices are up in my local Sears, and have been for quite some time.
  • http://www.last100.com/2008/04/11/fud-permeates-analog-to-digital-tv-conversion-in-the-us/ [last100.com] "It seems like a straight forward proposition, but there's FUD -- fear, uncertainty, and doubt -- swirling around when it comes to the upcoming U.S. digital TV conversion."
  • by BUL2294 ( 1081735 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @07:54AM (#23045772)
    ...go to the purchasers, who got duped, into buying said TVs? NO...

    Why, oh, why didn't the government ban imports of analog-only TVs after a certain date (say 1-2 years ago)? I mean this would have solved 95% of the problem...
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Megane ( 129182 )

        Those are UK Freeview tuners. Which are cheaper specifically because they do not receive HD. The US went for HD from the start, which costs more initially, but it also means that we won't have to toss out a bunch of electronics all over again to maybe get HD by 2012, like will happen in the UK. Some of us have been getting HD for over four years now.

        Sure, a lot of the programming is up-converted and window-boxed (new studio equipment isn't cheap and can only be manufactured so fast, not to mention the SD r

        • by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @08:53AM (#23046044) Homepage

          Those are UK Freeview tuners. Which are cheaper specifically because they do not receive HD. The US went for HD from the start, which costs more initially, but it also means that we won't have to toss out a bunch of electronics all over again to maybe get HD by 2012, like will happen in the UK. Some of us have been getting HD for over four years now.
          DTV != HDTV. The cheap or free tuners (after coupon) [walmart.com] are not high definition, they are only standard. The US is switching over to a digital television...which just happens to include some high definition programming.
          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by Megane ( 129182 )

            I never said the converter box tuners output HD. But they must still receive and decode HD signals. Why? Because that's the only thing out there for them to receive. (Did you see where I used the word "down-convert"?) Most US stations are only broadcasting their main programming over an HD signal.

            Freeview boxes have no capability to receive an HD signal. (In fact, the UK hasn't even finalized the specs on HD yet!) The UK will have to simulcast an SD signal for the old SD-only Freeview boxes "forever". Once

            • by LocalH ( 28506 )
              Incorrect. Many markets do have SD DTV broadcasts, usually as a subchannel riding along with a primary HD stream. My local market has at least four that I can think of offhand, and there might be a couple more I don't know about. This is nowhere near a top market.

              I'm sure there are markets with no SD broadcasts but this is not universal, and I would definitely wager that it's not "most" stations as you say.
          • by BUL2294 ( 1081735 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @09:34AM (#23046234)

            DTV != HDTV. The cheap or free tuners (after coupon) are not high definition, they are only standard.
            You need to clarify your statement here. The converter boxes are required to down-convert all ATSC digital channels, both HDTV and SDTV , including 16x9 1080i, using an analog connection (RF, composite, or S-Video) to a TV/VCR/display. RF and composite connectors are required of all converter boxes available thru this program. S-Video connections are permitted, but anything higher than S-Video (specifically DVI, HDMI, Component, Ethernet, Firewire, and 802.11 wireless) is expressly prohibited.

            Not every HDTV channel has a multiplexed SDTV version of that same channel, and requiring one would use up bandwidth, degrading the primary HDTV channel's picture mode (i.e. down from 1080i to 720p).

            NTIA at the US-DOC has a very readable document listing the requirements for a CECB [doc.gov]--a Coupon-Eligible Converter Box. It's too bad that the NTIA didn't "lock-down" the design more as CECBs will have differing feature sets (i.e. program guide, S-Video, etc.)
        • by ydrol ( 626558 )
          The US really needed to move to HD faster because NTSC is nasty.
      • Slightly different system? DVB-T is totally different than ATSC. Without getting into the merits of one system over another, DVB-T is not as advanced as ATSC (granted, DVB-T2 will be more advanced than ATSC--3 years from now), and the technology has been out longer, so the digital-to-analog converters are cheaper due to economies of scale... At best, you've made an apples-to-oranges comparison.
      • by vtcodger ( 957785 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @08:31AM (#23045924)
        Unfortunately, since the US uses NTSC for analog and our frequency allocations are different from anyplace outside the Western Hemisphere and I believe our digital formats also are unique, your $20 converters won't work here. Ours didn't even show up in the stores until about 30 days ago and cost USD $60 or so. There is will be $40 off coupons available from the government and I've requested one, but it hasn't turned up yet. Oh yeah, and last time I looked, only 3 of our 8 local stations have their DTV transmitters on the air.

        And there is the seldom mentioned problem that analog TV viewers tend to be folks living on small incomes, fixed incomes, or both. They don't necessarily have even $20 to spare.

        I'm curious how well digital is going to work in my area which has a lot of hills and where folks tend to get marginal coverage. Analog coverage around here used to be described as "one and a half stations". Rumor has it that digital coverage is not as good as it was with analog. Oh yeah, cable coverage around here is minimal. I have cable. Folks in the next towns out from Burlington don't have cable (or DSL, but that's another story). And not everyone has a clear line of sight to satellites.

        The US DTV rollout has been an on-going shambles. It looks like they are going to procede with it whether digital works or not. I wouldn't bet that they don't turn analog back on about 30-60 days after they turn it off. There are possibly going to be a LOT more complaints than anyone anticipates.

        I'm not against digital, but the entire roll out in the US has been a textbook study in how NOT to manage a technology upgrade. We'll see what happens in about ten months.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by CastrTroy ( 595695 )
          The nice thing about analog, was that you could get 1/2 a station. Analog degrade gracefully. Sometimes you lose a bit of the picture, or the sound is a little garbled, but you can at least get something. It's kind of like watching Youtube. The quality is terrible, but at least you can make out what's going on. Anybody with satellite can probably tell you that when you get a bad signal, the whole thing drops out and becomes completely unwatchable. I know many people with satellite, and often when ther
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by TheRaven64 ( 641858 )
            The nice thing about digital is that it includes a lot of redundant error correction information so that you can lose a lot of the signal before you lose any of the picture. My parents live in a hilly area and their picture quality went up significantly when they switched to digital. When conditions are really bad, they see artefacts (usually blocks of primary colours), but most of the time they have a crisp clear signal where they used to have a fuzzy one.
            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              Unfortunately, that's not always the case.

              Here, when conditions are perfect the OTA picture is great. if it's windy, raining, or there's too many active butterflies, I have to switch back to analog to see anything at all. Of course, that won't be an option much longer.

              I have satellite, but sometimes tape one program and watch another OTA.

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            by drsquare ( 530038 )

            I hope the same won't be true for digital broadcasts.
            It is. Most of the channels are compressed to fuck, so a single drop of rain or a less than perfect signal is enough to make them unwatchable.
        • I would be interested to know what market you live in (or what stations you receive) that only 3 of 8 are on the air. I can't say I've heard of any market with such low numbers.
        • They can't turn analog back on because a lot of the changes being made (e.g. stations changing channels, stations doing flash cuts, etc) depend on other changes, and many of those depend on the way digital works. For example there are a set of specific interference avoidance technical requirements to avoid one station interfering with another. These rules differ for analog and digital. So the actual operating frequencies had to change. Quite many of the stations will be switching to an all new channel d

        • There don't seem to be any digital stations available yet where I live. I receive most of my television stations through a privately owned translator which is on a mountain top between here and Phoenix, which is the nearest large city. It is only broadcasting in analog. According to the dtv2009.gov website, "currently there is no requirement for translators and low-power stations to convert to digital." It sounds like they may be allowed to continue broadcasting in NTSC analog for a while longer.

          I have g

      • I know we're on a slightly different system here, but they start at about £10 which is equivalent to $20, half the value of the vouchers that your government is dishing out for the switchover!

        As I mentioned elsewhere, that was probably a below-cost loss leader [slashdot.org]. Excluding that factor, the "true" retail price- including even the slimmest profit margin- is probably nearer £20 than £10.

    • by Megane ( 129182 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @08:06AM (#23045818)

      Actually, they did ban the manufacture, import or interstate shipment [dtvfacts.com] of analog-only TV sets a little over a year ago, which was two years before the analog broadcasting cutoff. That doesn't mean that there weren't six months or more of analog-only TV sets in the warehouses. And this also applies to VCRs, DVRs, and any other device which has an NTSC tuner, but no ATSC tuner.

      Also, this only applies to sets with a tuner. Tuner-less sets (aka "monitors") are exempt.

  • Thrift store TVs (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Megane ( 129182 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @07:54AM (#23045774)

    Goodwill and oter thrift stores (and maybe even pawn shops) better hope they don't get noticed for not putting the notice on the TVs themselves. I know that Goodwill has just been sticking up the notice in a random place on the wall or something. And right now thrift stores and pawn shops are probably the main place to find analog-only TV sets. But hey, as long as they have a video input, they're still useful for video games. And they will still work with an external tuner.

    On the other hand, I've gotten two satellite tuners with ATSC at thrift stores for ten bucks each. One even had a broken analog NTSC tuner, which I found amusing. Unfortunately I wasted another ten bucks because I didn't realize that the DirecTV H10 and H20 require a satellite subscription to receive ATSC. Bargain hunters, stay away from those two models!

    • Analog tuners are still fine for analog cable, which doesn't have a cutoff date, and will continue to be available for a long time in many places.
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @07:57AM (#23045786) Homepage
    I dislike Wal*Mart. And if they were fined I'm sure they deserved it.

    But my personal experience is that I've only seen those notices twice within the last year, and both times were in Wal*Marts. One was in Wisconsin, late last summer; the other in Massachusetts. I didn't see any notices at all when I was recently in Best Buy.

    And: the day I received my converter coupons in the mail, which was February 29th--I must have been among the very first to get them--I called Wal*Mart to see if they had converter boxes; they said yes, I got there and they had a huge display of them in a featured location in the aisle just outside their electronics department, the pre-coupon price was $50, and they were ready and happy to process my $40 coupons.

    Based on my highly scientific sample size of two, I don't see any indication that Wal*Mart is dragging its feet. Offhand I'd think they're making a good-faith effort to comply. If they haven't been getting the notices up I'd attribute it to general chaos and cluelessness, not to any systematic attempt to unload analog sets on unsuspecting customers.

    • by garcia ( 6573 )
      Offhand I'd think they're making a good-faith effort to comply. If they haven't been getting the notices up I'd attribute it to general chaos and cluelessness, not to any systematic attempt to unload analog sets on unsuspecting customers.

      Is there some famous quote about malice and incompetence? I'm sure it applies to any of the retail chain stores that were fined.

      That said, I want to know where these fines are going. That's our money after all, just like all the money that they are collecting by selling o
    • I didn't see any notices at all when I was recently in Best Buy.

      My local Best Buy has been putting big white stickers that explain the situation (in BIG type) on the sides of analog-tuner TV boxes since February 2007. I've never noticed any signage in the TV area (I haven't really looked for the past several months either), but I do know that there has been some sort of hard-to-miss notification.
  • Why would any store hesitate to post that notice? It's one of the most opaque examples of beureaucratic English I've seen in a long time: Run-on sentences; subordinate clauses out of place and badly punctuated; any good Junior High English teacher could get a full hour's lecture out of it.
    • I agree with you about the poor syntax, but they're breaking the law by not putting them up. Supermarkets (in my experience) are not choosy about spelling or grammar on their displays. Also, it's 'bureaucratic', not 'beureaucratic'.
  • by itsdapead ( 734413 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @08:32AM (#23045928)

    At least it sounds as if the US are going to yank the elastoplast off in one go and just switch in 2009. Here in the UK they're pussyfooting around by turning it off region by region over a 4 year period.

    The TV ads are dumb - too: they're clearly designed by marketdroids who's aim in life is to establish "the Digital tick" logo and their cute little robot mascot as Brands - which is not the same as delivering factual information to people who - if they haven't got the message after 5 years - need a gentle tap with the cluebat.

    Me, I'd do it like this:

    (Burst of interference followed by black screen)

    Voicover (the woman from "Weakest Link" or similar):

    If you don't get a digital TV box in the next few months, your screen will go black permanently.

    So take some personal responsibility and find out about what you need - and check that someone's sorting it all out for the little old lady next door, too. In fact, while you're at it, check that she's eating properly and her heater is working because if she's that isolated and can't even save up £30 for a Digibox, missing Eastenders for a week is going to be the least of her worries.

    For pity's sake, people, its been in the news for the last 5 years and at the end of the day its only TV - its not like we're turning off the water supply or something!

    ...but then I was born with a defect in the gene responsible for political expediency.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      I would raise the stakes and have Anne Droid (from that Doctor Who episode) chargin' her laser at a bunch of people who didn't get a converter box. It's just too bad that the laser won't work through the telly, becuase I hear you folks over there could use a reduction in the chav population.
    • Ummm, "yank the elastoplast off in one go?" Wasn't the mandatory conversion supposed to take place close to a decade ago, but kept getting put off?

      (I could be confusing this with the plan here in Canada; apologies for any incorrect facts; I'm on dialup this weekend, arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrghhhhhhhhhhhh [now, those bytes will cost me], and so doing much research into what I remember is impractical...)
    • At least it sounds as if the US are going to yank the elastoplast off in one go and just switch in 2009. Here in the UK they're pussyfooting around by turning it off region by region over a 4 year period.

      Keep in mind that the FCC was originally trying to get "full HD implementation" by 2002, which obviously never happened. Now it is 'digital broadcast' but not necessarily HiDef. And they've been 'discussing' it since at least 1996 that I can recall. When it became clear that 2002 wasn't going to work,

      • by LocalH ( 28506 )
        Care to cite your source that states the FCC ever required any form of HD broadcasting at all?
    • I like it. Catchy.
  • by timmarhy ( 659436 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @08:50AM (#23046026)
    you can plug in that tv from 1990 and it'll still work people... talk about fud
  • ... is it used to purchase digital to analog converters for those who bought such analog TV's?

    Very doubtful!!!

    So the consumer gets screwed and based on that screw job the legal system, whatever it is, then screws the screwers.
    Ultimately the consumers get nothing and the advertisers have less audience.

    So in the end the advertisers get screwed too.

    I'm confused, Who benefits?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Vectronic ( 1221470 )
      This may sound somewhat conspiratory... but they stop Analog TV, they stop Radio Broadcast TV... "they" end up having complete control over TV... who can see it, for what price, and whats on the channels... because Bob, In South Dakota cant afford to upgrade to Digital, and his little 15watt transmitter is now void... there goes the local channel 10, you gotta watch Big Brother 16 in 1080p, cause... thats your only option..its on all 255 channels...

      Kinda like the inability to protest in many places these da
      • listen all you want, with frequency hopping, digital spread spectrum, fully encrypted military communications your not going to hear more than a chirp or two.
      • by LocalH ( 28506 )
        This tripe got modded to 4? Insightful?

        Wow, the mods-on-crack really gravitated to this post.

        Digital transition means "they" end up having complete control of TV? Hogwash.

        Big Brother 16 in 1080p? The FCC has never mandated HDTV broadcasts, and even if they did, the converter boxes will downsample any HDTV broadcasts for display on a analog set.

        Ham/CB banned? AM/FM banned? You're a fucking idiot and you should leave your /. login at the door on your way out.
  • by pla ( 258480 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @10:26AM (#23046492) Journal
    The FCC has fined 11 retailers and television manufacturers

    The FCC did what now?

    The FCC has the authority to regulate the use of a few communications-valuable portions of the RF spectrum.

    To the best of my knowledge, they have no authority to regulate trade. We even have a similarly-named governmental TLA for that - The FTC.

    Anyone care to 'splain it to me, by what stretch of the imagination fining retailers satisfies the goal of allocating spectrum for the greatest public good?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by stephanruby ( 542433 )

      The FCC did what now? The FCC has the authority to regulate the use of a few communications-valuable portions of the RF spectrum. To the best of my knowledge, they have no authority to regulate trade. We even have a similarly-named governmental TLA for that - The FTC. Anyone care to 'splain it to me, by what stretch of the imagination fining retailers satisfies the goal of allocating spectrum for the greatest public good?

      By your logic, then the FDA shouldn't able to fine supermarkets for changing the ex

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Detritus ( 11846 )
      To the best of my knowledge, they have no authority to regulate trade. We even have a similarly-named governmental TLA for that - The FTC.

      Your knowledge is deficient. Congress provided the FCC with that authority when they enacted the All-Channel Receiver Act of 1962.

    • The FCC has the authority it has been given by Congress. The FTC has the authority it has been given by Congress. When Congress passed the law to mandate the transition to digital, they included provisions giving the FCC the authority to enforce the changeover.
      The FCC does not "allocate spectrum for the greatest public good". The FCC allocates the spectrum according to guidelines laid down by Congress.
  • To any *one* of those companies that's peanuts, chump change, zilch, zero, nada, an executive retreat.

    Now $60M, or $600M, spread across them all would have gotten their attention and made a "Don't do this again" statement.

    Anything else is just toothless posturing.
  • If there wasn't a coupon program, I'd say this thing would retail for $15 and they'd make money. Charge $49.00 and the consumer is out 10 bucks, thinks it's a bargain. Meanwhile the stores get every penny of that coupon for something that cost them $10. Considering they have DVD players right next to these things for just $29, it pretty much shows they are making immense profits off those boxes at government expense.
    • they are making immense profits off those boxes at taxpayer expense.

      There, fixed that for ya. It amazes my how many people think the "government" has all this money and is some separate entity. Like, it's okay to sue the local township for $1M because you wore high heels in January and slipped on the ice. After all, you're only screwing "the government" out of $1M. In the end, you're truly screwing your friends and neighbors.

  • Can anybody point me to a Linux compatible D-TV(good) or HDTV(better) tv tuner that will allow for full myth-tv integration? I am moving soon (and not replacing my Bell ExpressVu Sat. TV) as I will live close to Detroit, Michigan and a cheap TV-tower will give me all the channels that I would want to watch.

  • by drDugan ( 219551 ) on Saturday April 12, 2008 @01:51PM (#23047838) Homepage
    yet another reason to remove the TV from your life. now we have a device that not only shuts off your brain and delivers unhelpful marketing into your home, but on top of that, it has government support to encourage a digital system that is both more expensive than working alternatives and allows increased information access control.

    every time I see places where consumer marketplaces have heavy handed intervention from government (read: not regulation to protect consumers, but rules or supports to direct consumer behavior), it seems there is something wrong. corporations a bit too close to the state.

    in a healthy marketplace, if digital TV products and services can't out compete and win vs. the analog systems, then they would lose. period. if the government is going to come in and with the corporate-directed, lobby-directed practice of mandating a specific technology -- just because it works better for the business practice of some large companies -- well, this is not in most people's interest.

    the truculent refusal to admit the changing nature of content distribution and actions like this with digital TV on the part of existing content and hardware companies has already has created a vibrant black market for their products. luckly many people are building alternatives...

    • I'm not sure, but couldn't they make digital broadcasts impossible to record on video tape and DVR? Just imagine, another marathon comes around and you're not able to record it. To my knowledge, I think it's impossible to prevent a person from recording an analog signal. Although, like an attempt at recording a DVD to tape, they can prevent you from recording a digital broadcast. This whole thing is being pushed by big media. With the Democrats coming into full control of the government, no doubt big m
      • by LocalH ( 28506 )
        That is more or less implausible, by the very digital receivers that the whole voucher system is meant to promulgate, which have analog outputs. The only way to do so would be to essentially mandate that the manufacturers pay to output Macrovision (which is not the same as VCRs being required to honor Macrovision - adding it to the signal yourself requires payment of license fees to Macrovision). Sure, it's possible, but I don't see it happening.
  • Analog-only TVs should continue to work as before with cable

    Oh really? Cable systems are trying to switch off bandwidth-hogging analog as fast as they can too.

  • I work for one of these companies, wont say which because i dont even like to admit it. But with our company at least, it must be isolated stores.

    We had the signs on all our analog TVs since i started there a year and a half ago, and almost a year ago we stopped carrying analog sets altogether. We still have the notice up on the one analog VCR/DVD combo that we have a ton of overstock in...

    Ive been fairly pleased with our stores small part in all this. Me and the other 6 people (very small store) who work i

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