DISH -VS- VOOM - A Settlement has been reached!

Way to many repeats for me. The stations deserved to be cancelled.

You can blame Dish for the repeats too (according to Voom) because they led a concerted effort to devalue the quality of the Voom programming, by demanding Voom adhere to this schedule under threat, and thus limit the outcry from customers when they illegally terminate the affiliation agreement (again, according to Voom).
 
I am stating that waiting for a Windows machine to boot up and go thru calling a program is not for the masses. And W is generally not something you can leave on all the time. Even if you did so little with it that it was reliable, I think it's overkill, inappropriate for the application for most, and probably sucks more power.

A dedicated piece of hardware is more appropriate for most. Most don't want to deal with an HTPC. Viewed as too much of a hassle when there are much easier options out there. That's all.
I sure don't know what W OS you are talking about but W7 doesn't take long to boot up. The amount of power is rarely related to the OS that it is running. It usually is much more related to the components that are installed. Now as far as wanting to deal w/ a HTPC that is much more true than the other statements you have made in this post.
 
riffjim4069 said:
You can blame Dish for the repeats too (according to Voom) because they led a concerted effort to devalue the quality of the Voom programming, by demanding Voom adhere to this schedule under threat, and thus limit the outcry from customers when they illegally terminate the affiliation agreement (again, according to Voom).

If we suppose VOOM was correct, Dish forced them to show all the repeats, as a result VOOM decided they didn't need to spend the money anymore, and therefore spent less than the stipulated amount.

Could Dish then terminate the contract? Any attorneys here?

VOOM sounded almost as if Dish wanted to sabotage the deal, VOOM went along, knowing it would lose audience. Now VOOM wants all the money from those eyeballs that they did not care to attract.
 
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If we suppose VOOM was correct, Dish forced them to show all the repeats, as a result VOOM decided they didn't need to spend the money anymore, and therefore spent less than the stipulated amount.

Could Dish then terminate the contract? Any attorneys here?

VOOM sounded almost as if Dish wanted to sabotage the deal, VOOM went along, knowing it would lose audience. Now VOOM wants all the money from those eyeballs that they did not care to attract.

We don't need to be attorney's, it doesn't matter what we think or even speculate. It only matters what is proved in court, and what the jury believes and decides. Whether that's the truth or not, that's the reality of it.

It's quite obvious to me Dish actively sought to ruin Voom, just for a business advantage. They could have done it other ways, without the under-handed way they handled ALL of it. Perhaps they could have come to terms then.
 
I don't see how any MVPD could force any channel provider what content is available and how often to show it. It makes no sense.
 
You should hope. However, it won't do you any good. Dish is going to lose, that's obvious.
You are saying that Dish should just fold now and not bother to present a defense? So far, all we have heard is Voom's side of the argument. I think things will get interesting this week as Dish's case evolves.

We don't need to be attorney's, it doesn't matter what we think or even speculate. It only matters what is proved in court, and what the jury believes and decides. Whether that's the truth or not, that's the reality of it.

It's quite obvious to me Dish actively sought to ruin Voom, just for a business advantage. They could have done it other ways, without the under-handed way they handled ALL of it. Perhaps they could have come to terms then.
The same could be said about the Dolans. Taking Dish's money and passing all the Corporate Overhead Expenses onto the Voom expense account instead of actual programming.
 
No question to me Dish does not look on this so far. But you are right and I posted the same a while back. Have to hear the defense before deciding...
 
I think that DISH had a legitimate claim against Voom, over the lack of new content and the endless repeats. However, DISH has acted reprehensible in its behavior about the destroyed emails and the way they have conducted themselves in trial. So I can see them losing the case. I think that DISH knows they will lose the case and that is the reason they have been stalling , in coming up with requested documents for the judge.
 
That may be true, but Judge Lowe said Dish deleting emails for anywhere from 6-months to a year after they were supposed to tag/retain these emails for litigation. He said this conduct was negligent, if not worse. Voom accused Dish of hiding/not sharing documents during discovery on more than one occasion. Fast forward to August and Voom claimed Dish was again hiding evidence by asserting privilege on documents that were merely a business record. The Judge agreed on all but 2 or 3 of those documents. Anyway, the Judge ruled that Dish "deleted" email evidence and that is why they are being sanctioned. The appellate court agreed.

Quite correct. Just some here are calling forth an image of a last minute Enron-style frantic shredding and deletion effort. That is not what Dish is accused of. They just had a harsh data retention policy that they neglected to adjust in the wake of the possible suit. There is no evidence someone at Dish looked at a bunch of emails when the lawsuit came in and said "this looks bad for us; let's delete these."

You can blame Dish for the repeats too (according to Voom) because they led a concerted effort to devalue the quality of the Voom programming, by demanding Voom adhere to this schedule under threat, and thus limit the outcry from customers when they illegally terminate the affiliation agreement (again, according to Voom).

And I don't know that Voom has ever put forth any evidence to this. I have always theorized that Dish encouraged Voom to take a quality over quantity approach to new content (which would lead to more repeats). But encouraging lesser amounts of higher quality (read: more expensive) programming does not fit the Voom narrative they want us to believe.
 
My parents are in a similar situation. The switched to EA due to LOS, and thus now have a 722. They get HD as that is the only version of many channels on EA, but only have SD TVs and don't sub to HD.
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I'm on vacation, so I don't have access to my 722. There is an option in the Display menu for HD Only or HD/SD. If the latter is checked, the SD version of those channels willl show up.
 
Hopefully Charlie takes the stand today, then we will hear the full defense "story" and few key words like "soon" thrown in there for old time sakes.
 
ScottChez said:
Hopefully Charlie takes the stand today, then we will hear the full defense "story" and few key words like "soon" thrown in there for old time sakes.

I have been anxiously waiting for his testimony and the dish side of things. Hope we get some info "soon" :)

Sent from my phone using SatelliteGuys sweet app
 
primestar31 said:
We don't need to be attorney's, it doesn't matter what we think or even speculate. It only matters what is proved in court, and what the jury believes and decides. Whether that's the truth or not, that's the reality of it.

It's quite obvious to me Dish actively sought to ruin Voom, just for a business advantage. They could have done it other ways, without the under-handed way they handled ALL of it. Perhaps they could have come to terms then.

First I think Dish did try, they asked to have a 5-channel package from VOOM but was rejected.

Second, jury verdicts get overturned often, remember the TiVo case? That partial reversal might have played a role in the final contempt decision by the full bench.

I asked a legal opinion, not facts. If in fact as VOOM claimed, Dish tried to undermine the value of the VOOM service, and VOOM was complacent and allowed the value to degrade, can they now seek damages based on the most optimistic projections that they themselves did not try to achieve?
 
All Dish is doing is delaying the inevitable, as the longer they can forestall the day of reckoning, the more pressure there will be on AMC to cut them the more favorable terms due to AMC's need to get its signal back on Dish. That is it--there is no more. All the rest is lawyerly bullcrap meant for the consumption of fools. Customers are just pawns, numbers. Neither Dish nor AMC really cares about them except as part of a larger statistical whole.
 
HDRoberts said:
My parents are in a similar situation. The switched to EA due to LOS, and thus now have a 722. They get HD as that is the only version of many channels on EA, but only have SD TVs and don't sub to HD.

The 2008 card with Voom on a separate tier was from when Dish was initially citing a breach. THe affiliation agreement required Voom for a certain (and if memory serves, high) percentage of subs. Befor 2008, all HD subs had to get a $20 HD add on pack that included Voom and many of the current Platinum channels.

Ok. I switched to Dish in '08. Thanks for that info, because I was under the assumption of VOOM being in that particular channel package.
 
Newly Discovered Emails Boost AMC Networks Over Dish Network In VOOM Case

Source

The emails were discovered over the weekend and disclosed in court today — and they’re “hurting [Dish Network] in a big way,” according to an account from George Reed-Dellinger of advisory firm Washington Analysis. Susquehanna Financial Group’s Thomas Claps, who’s also monitoring the case, calls it “the most damaging evidence to date” against Dish in AMC‘s $2.5B breach of contract suit involving the satellite company’s 2008 decision to drop the now-defunct VOOM HD channels. It’s so important that Claps says Dish “may re-think its strategy” to have Chairman Charlie Ergen testify — and might be more motivated to negotiate a settlement with AMC that would return its channels to the No. 2 satellite provider before the end of the month when the jury is expected to reach its verdict. Dish dropped AMC in June.

The emails that AMC’s team found on Dish’s hard drives seem to cast a new light on an issue that central to the trial: Did VOOM’s backers (Cablevision and AMC, which the cable company spun off last year) live up to a condition in their carriage contract that required them to invest at least $100M a year in the fledgling networks? Dish says they didn’t — giving it the right to drop the channels – because the $100M requirement applied just to domestic programming, not overhead or overseas expenses.

But a 2005 email exchange between Ergen and his chief negotiator with VOOM, Michael Schwimmer, includes an appendix to the agreement with permitted expenditures and “overhead expenses are specifically referenced,” Claps says. Another email exchange when the agreement was completed in 2007 shows the execs agreeing that VOOM backers had to spend $100M a year on the venture — not just programming. “Schwimmer’s own words on April 27, 2007 are now directly inconsistent with his testimony” that the agreement was just about programming, Reed-Dellinger says.
 
Oh brother!!Just makes ya wonder if Dish tried to hide those emails on purpose?Trying not to be the judge here but,it sure seems that way to me.
 

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