I must admit that I've been following this very casually as well. It sounds like this was a decision that came down from the courts, so I'm puzzled as to why E* is taking some of the blame for this. Can someone help me out?
You make good points Rick and so do Greg & Thomas.Sorry, as others have pointed this was a civil suit brought by a number of local stations and networks- if they settle THEY can request dismissal of the suit as the wronged party. All must settle but all did not.
You keep stating Dish violated the law as if they murdered somebody. Communication law is complex. I guess you are aware Dish felt they had not violated the law. There position was not uphelp but these things must be litigated to clarify what is at best confusing legislation.
That said, I do hold Dish at least partly at fault for the mess. My position is the court, to punish Dish has screwed the ONLY INOCENT PARTIES- the subscribers. There had to be another way
Rick
And hence the issue.waltinvt said:The way I see it, this is a very complex situation (at least to me) that is the result of greedy business practices and flagrant disregard for the law by Dish, further compounded by greedy business practices and flagrant disregard for the consumer by NAB lobbyists & Congress, shamelessly exploited by the greedy business practices and flagrant disregard for ethics of DirectTV.
The injunction covers the use of the license granted in 17 USC 119. The injunction is only used for ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC.
Therefore, the superstations are still alive and kicking.
And hence the issue.
Dish Network wanted to fight so hard to gain distant network channels for everyone that they disregarded the law and fought in the system until they were slapped silly. Dish Network was slapped so silly that they could not recover from it.
Think about it. If you were caught violating a law and found guilty, and as one of the conditions forced to requalify all of your subscribers, you could either:
a) try to negotiate a settlement; or;
b) appeal and only hope everything works out in the end.
With possibility b, there is a chance you lose so badly that everyone gets cut-off. After all, if you present to the courts a list of people you only qualified as should be receiving distant networks, and you have at least one out of every five as invalid, that is one problem. However, if you do not submit a list of subscribers with waivers or with grandfather status to the court and expect mercy, it is like going into court unprepared while the officer that arrests you for going 120 in a 45 MPH zone has the proof.
Dish Network's proof to the court was horrible. It was their fault they put themselves in this predicament. And the Appeals Court mandating that the District Court issue a permanent injunction had nothing to do with FOX or DirecTV. It was all the "pattern or practice of willful infringement" and violating the law in "every way imaginable" that did them in.
I hope you're doing ok.
Interesting attitude here.
If you were in a white area you wouldn't have needed a waiver. So you don't really care about network programming? Exactly what did you watch?
I live in the mountains. I GET NOTHING over-the-air. As far as I am concerned its a white area. There is no cable either. I am limited to sat. providers. My "local" stations are over 150 miles away. There are repeaters in an adjacent valley that put out OTA signals 20 to 50 miles away but these signals are blocked by mountains. I seem to remember I only one waiver was required at sign-up. That was granted.
I do care about some network programming. "Local" stations have poorer quality signals and do not carry eastern college sport teams that I follow.
Well if a service isn't provided why should anyone pay for it?
Dish, if you cared to find out, has provided others without "local" stations- these stations at no charge until January 1st. I already pay for them- what will they do for me? Will I have to pay for them during same time period? Is that fair?
Depends on the contract. I am fairly confident that any E* contract does not include a provision that make it conditional upon receiving DNS. If DNS was that important to a subscriber, he should have negotiated it in.
Your are probably right but it WAS an option that I have paid for for 7 years. I like having that option.
Why? Do you want DNS or not? Rupert Murdoch didn't do anything to you. Charlie Ergen did. It would be like refusing to call the fire department because you don't like the mayor. I don't understand why you are paying E* for this "sucky" locals. You apparently fall into that rarified group that can have DNS and LIL. You didn't have to sign up for LIL.
So you think Murdoch did nothing. Why do you think Dish was unable to settle with those 20 or so FOX owned stations? You think it had something to do with his ownership of Direct---?
No I didn't have to sign up for LILs I did so for the really poor local news. But that is my decision. I would rather watch other events on stations with better quality service. Why should you or anyone else limit my access to service by geography.
What do you want them to do?
I don't know. My point was there was nothing in any communication to me that indicated they would credit my account for the loss of service. I have already paid for most of November. Dish knew this was going to happen and chose do to let anyone know a time frame etc. My opinion is they wanted to cause maximum about of confusion to get maximum amount of flack to the politicians.
IMHO, I think we subscribers are caught in the middle of a fight between the big boys and we will be the losers.
Rick
I'm not sure this is a fair statement. Charlie had the settlement for DNS worked out with all the other networks, but Fox refused to go along with it. Being that Rupert Murdoch owns both Fox and D*, I think there is reason to be angry with him.