BBC and ITV to start Sky TV rival

Sim One

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Just spotted this on the BBC website - anybody care to offer an opinion on what effect this will have for the ordinary Joe & Josephine Soap

Sim


BBC and ITV to start Sky TV rival

The BBC and ITV are to launch a free-to-view satellite TV service to cater for viewers unable to receive Freeview digital coverage. ITV announced plans for the service, to be called Freesat, on Wednesday.

Freesat, to be launched early in 2006, will rival BSkyB and will carry all BBC and ITV digital TV, interactive and radio services plus other channels.

BBC director general Mark Thompson said the announcement "paved the way" for nationwide free digital television.

Mr Thompson said he welcomed ITV as partners in the project "to develop a consumer friendly, subscription-free satellite proposition".

"The huge success of Freeview, already in more than five million homes, demonstrates how highly free digital television is valued by many people," he said


"Our long-stated aim has been to bring about an open market in subscription-free satellite services so we can ensure free access to all the BBC's services across the country in the run-up to switchover and beyond."

The Government plans to switch off analogue TV signals, region-by-region, by 2012.

ITV's chief executive Charles Allen said the company would also start broadcasting its channels "in the clear" in the next few months, meaning the channels can be watched through any satellite receiver.

ITV currently encrypts - or scrambles - its transmissions via satellite, using the service provided by Sky.

He said: "We want our channels to be available to as many people as possible, regardless of technological and geographical constraints.

"As we move from analogue to a digital environment, Freesat - and Freeview - will enable every family in the UK to enjoy a wide range of quality channels for free."

A recent Ofcom report said more than 60% of UK households now receive digital TV.

Approximately a quarter of TV viewers live outside the Freeview coverage area.
 
interesting...it will carry all the channels that are available on freeview at the moment..

I dont think it is a huge threat to sky, as most of their subscribers are probably subscribing for all the other stations on sky..like sports, movies etc.....that freeview do not have.

dont forget also that freeview is the partial result of the collapse of itv digital a couple of years ago.
 
I note that ITV and channel 4 announced this week that they would be unscrambling their channels on sky before the end of the year and then setting up their own free to air platform next year.
 
alri said:
I note that ITV and channel 4 announced this week that they would be unscrambling their channels on sky before the end of the year and then setting up their own free to air platform next year.

Sorry now, but thats wrong. Channel 4 have said no such thing before people rush off thinking its happy days:

From digitalspy.co.uk:

Meanwhile, Channel 4 said that it would not be joining the BBC-ITV alliance, nor was it considering going unencrypted on satellite.

"We broadly welcome any development that offers more UK homes the chance to receive the full range of digital services and creates more competition between platforms. We will watch how Freesat develops with interest," said a spokesman.

"However, we have carriage agreements for all our channels with Sky Digital and we have a number of years to run on these deals. We're happy with our current distribution deals with Sky and have no present plans to review these arrangements."

[broken link removed]
 
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