Droogs":3qccl067 said:
Rorschach":3qccl067 said:
I used to watch the occasional programme on iPlayer (legal at the time). Haven't watched live BBC TV for years, probably a decade, no intention to start now. I also object to the fact that people are expected to pay for a license even if they may not watch BBC services. There are hundreds, maybe thousands by now, of TV channels you can watch but you are expected to pay just to have access to 3 of them, you should be able to opt out and only watch non-bbc channels and pay no license fee, but then of course the BBC would cease to exist.
The TV licence is not a licence to watch the BBC. It is a licence that allows you to "OPERATE ANY TV YOU OWN IN ORDER TO RECEIVE AND VIEW LIVE BROADCASTS" it is this element that has now been altered to include any electronic media device that can accesses ANY digital content that is either available whilst broadcast or for later veiwng once broadcast.
If this is the case - who is getting the money from it? The govt whom then takes the lion share of the amount raised and only passes on a portion to the BBC or do ALL digital content producers get a share?
I doubt very much it's shared between all of them, so it's mostly the BBC who'll be getting it.
As far as the fee being cheaper than cable service, well of course it is, but then it has nowhere near the scope of things available - and ever since the BBC lost the majority of sport to said cable channels, their coverage of entertainment I'm interested in diminished to almost zero, mainly because I watch a lot of american or independant programming.
I do have a licence, but more and more frequently these last few years I've been wondering why exactly am I paying it on top of the £500 per year it costs me to have cable - and that's WITHOUT sport or films - when the majority of the programmes I record are not produced by the BBC.
There was a better way to do this, but I guess they decided to alter what was in place because it was easier for them than make it more intelligently implemented.
If they folded the TV Licence at a 50% reduced rate into cable costs via Sky, Virgin and Amazon and also required that a business broadcasting any content TV or radio (like a pub) have to pay a higher rate I'm certain they would actually recoup MORE money. They could also have required that a portion of a PPL licence - public broadcasting of music including workplaces - go to the BBC as no doubt quite a few radio's at work will have one of the BBC stations playing, ours did at my last place.
Right now a pub only has to pay the same as a house for a TV licence, yet far as I'm aware most pubs have live-in management so the BBC is getting NOTHING extra for the PUBLIC broadcasting they provide.
Sky business rates start from just £100 per month INCLUDING Sport channels etc - that's just £25 more than I would pay for my SOLO account with a sport channel, and that cost for a business is TAX DEDUCTABLE!!! in other words FREE so an increase there would mean the private sector wouldn't feel like they are being screwed.
Also... why is it exactly that I could spend 100% of my waking hours listening to BBC radio broadcasting for months and years on end and not pay a penny, but the moment I watch a two hour period drama I'm breaking the law and subject to a £1000 fine if I don't have a licence?
anyone?
Edit: Rorshach is right though - ever since cable came into effect the whole thing should have been changed, but it wasn't because they knew they could hitchhike on that particular bandwagon and still get the same income to produce content that in reality a significantly smaller portion of people would be watching than before.
Lets be frank and honest here, the BBC is a shadow of what it once was and it seems to me the only reason the BBC has survived until now is because of it's quasi parasitic business model, that if forced to fend for itself as the rest of the broadcasters do, would soon wither and die due to it's bloated financial administration.
(sorry Simon)
Do people who watch BBC in foreign countries via satellite also pay the TV.L? Why do I think the answer is a resounding NO?