[OPLIN 4cast] OPLIN 4cast #475: Cable in the future

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OPLIN 4cast #475: Cable in the future
February 3rd, 2016

[image: coaxial cable] It would have been hard to miss the news last week
about the FCC's "war" against the cable TV industry. Most articles
highlighted the FCC's frustration with the high rental fees for cable
set-top boxes, but there is another aspect of this story; as FCC Chairman
Tom Wheeler said on Re/Code
<http://recode.net/2016/01/27/its-time-to-unlock-the-set-top-box-market/>,
"...an overwhelming majority of consumers lease a box from their pay-TV
service that doesn't interface well with the wealth of video content
online." So this is also about bridging the gap between cable and Internet
video, and that has some far-reaching implications. Certainly the FCC
proposal would drive innovation and make the Internet even more of a video
medium than it already is, but what other side effects might there be?
Would it be good or bad for minorities, for example?

   - Inside the FCC's audacious plan to blow up the cable box
   <http://www.theverge.com/2016/1/28/10858658/fcc-unlock-the-box-open-cable-plan>
   (The Verge | Nilay Patel) "...the critical disagreement is how to speed up
   the rate of innovation in TV hardware and interface innovation. The FCC
   thinks the best way to do that is to let any company build a front-end
   interface to cable TV and create a competitive market for cable TV hardware
   and software, while the cable companies say that they're already facing a
   ton of competition from streaming apps like Netflix and Hulu, and they have
   lots of market-based incentives to get rid of cable boxes and move to an
   app-based model that makes their services better and faster. The FCC is
   saying it wants anybody to be able to make a cable box. The cable industry
   is almost saying it just wants to kill the cable box altogether and move to
   apps. Both of these answers are probably right! That's what's going to make
   this so complicated."
   - FCC's new plan for set top boxes could blow the cable market wide open
   <http://www.forbes.com/sites/robsalkowitz/2016/01/28/fccs-new-plan-for-set-top-boxes-could-blow-the-cable-market-wide-open/>
   (Forbes | Rob Salkowitz) "But cable companies' dominion over the set-top
   box is more than just a cash cow. It gives them control over the interface
   between viewers and the programming. That lets them lock up the signal with
   proprietary standards that make customization and interoperability with
   other devices difficult or impossible. It also gives cable companies sole
   access to the invaluable data generated by set-top boxes: what people are
   watching, how often they change channels, pay-per-view metrics and even
   information about what they record and when they play it back."
   - What if your Apple TV was your cable box? The FCC wants you to have
   that choice
   <http://www.digitaltrends.com/business/fcc-rule-allowing-use-of-competitors-set-top-boxes/>
   (Digital Trends | Kyle Wiggers) "The new rules face opposition from
   lawmakers, too. In a letter to the FCC in December, more than two dozen
   members of the Congressional Black Caucus argued that an open set-top
   system could disproportionately affect programming and raise costs for
   consumers. Specifically, wrote Representative Yvette D. Clarke, the
   proposal would force users to buy expensive new hardware that wouldn't
   necessarily be subject to the same regulations [including] privacy and
   emergency alert regulation, as pay-TV hardware."
   - Here's why cheaper set-top boxes are vital for minority communities
   <http://motherboard.vice.com/read/heres-why-cheaper-set-top-boxes-are-vital-for-minority-communities>
   (Motherboard | Nicholas Deleon) "In Nogales' view [president and CEO of the
   National Hispanic Media Coalition], making set-top boxes more affordable
   would not only lead to a proliferation of Latino-oriented television
   programming, but would in turn lead to a greater understanding of Latino
   culture among non-Latinos.... As an example, he cited the lack of
   television channels aimed at Latinos whose primary language is English.
   'There's Fusion [a joint venture between Univision and ABC] and that's it,'
   he said, noting that a significant percentage of Latinos in the US don't
   speak Spanish at all
   <http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/6/2/more-latino-voters-dont-speak-spanish.html>
   ."

*Articles from Ohio Web Library <http://ohioweblibrary.org>:*

   - App-tastic future for retail cable boxes.
   <http://search.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=109944881&site=ehost-live>
   (*Multichannel News*, 9/21/2015, p.16 | Jeff Baumgartner)
   - Set-top's death greatly exaggerated.
   <http://search.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=110413494&site=ehost-live>
   (*Broadcasting & Cable*, 10/19/2015, p.42-43 | Jim Barthold)
   - The hidden cost of cable.
   <http://search.ebscohost.com.proxy.oplin.org/login.aspx?direct=true&db=buh&AN=109385355&site=ehost-live>
   (*Consumer Reports*, Nov.2015, p.12)

------------------------------
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