The Constitution established the Supreme Court. Federal judgeships are a creation of Congress
Which the power to establish is granted by the Constitution! (are we going in a circle?)
The Constitution established the Supreme Court. Federal judgeships are a creation of Congress
The bench at the Appeals Court, "failed to appreciate the penalty that would be imposed on consumers when the denied the full review"?Voyager6 said:While I don't think that a single federal Judge impacted everyone, I do believe that the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals failed to appreciate the penalty that would be imposed on consumers when they denied the full review.
And it was Dish Network's responsibility to ensure what a "qualified" viewer is. Unfortunately, it turns out with the information given by Dish Network that just over half of their distant network subscriptions were invalid, and a large chunk of that is because Dish Network couldn't (or wouldn't) produce their proof of grandfathered or waivered subscribers.Voyager6 said:One of two nationwide satellite TV providers will be permanently barred from providing DNS to "qualified" viewers.
No, only to the RV, Trucker, and subscribers where local channel service isn't available. It is very far from national. Dish Network had even issued a release saying this won't affect too many people, as they can get local channel service.Voyager6 said:This is a national issue with widespread implications.
Semantics.Voyager6 said:It should have been given a full review by the Court. I also believe that the Supreme Court should have ordered a review by the full Eleventh Circuit Court. Neither Court decided to act, so now we need a political solution to repair the law that got us in this mess in the first place.
Dish Network has not been trying to settle anything for years.
In case it has slipped anyone's recent memory, Dish Network went to the appeals court in 2003 so they didn't have to requalify everyone. The district court ruled that everyone must be requalified, and Dish Network felt that was too extreme.
The network affiliate boards (but not FOX Network) cross-appealed and asked for a permanent injunction.
Fast forward to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals decision in May of this year. The court decided that a permanent injunction must be issued, which was done once the case was remanded to the District Court.
Let's go back to 2003.Voyager6 said:You don't see the possibilty of a "massive error" by the three judge panel by granting the cross-appeal rather than just denying Dish's appeal?
Sure. Out of the seventeen claims Echostar wanted addressed, only one was worthy to be overturned. The only request made by the network affiliate boards stood, and was also overturned.Voyager6 said:I don't want to create another round of rehash but I use this as an explanation of my statement about the full review by the Court of Appeals. The three judges added the permanent injuction and threw out the requalification.
It's amazing how many people here have shifted to support Charlie when he f*ck*d up on this issue and don't hold him to task in the same way on the other f*ck *ps that have longer implications for more people then this.
Clearly something is wrong in people's thinking.
This thread could get ugly quick. LOL
I'm one of the biggest fans of E* and even I think they totally screwed up. They not only flaunted the law, but also charged customers for Distant Networks for it in the process. This is a bad comparison, but it's the only one that comes to mind. It's like a car dealership that continually sells lemons, even though they've been told they can't do it. Just hoping somebody will come to their defense and say, "hey...it's ok...you can sell these crappy cars because these customers don't know any better"
Posted by Greg Bimson As we have seen so far from the Leahy bill, most of the people that will lose their networks will not get them back.
Greg I agree that most of the fault lies with Dish for not getting this settled some time ago.
I am a Dealer I know that our customer base legally qualifyed under the network qualification rules as stated in the SHERVA Law. If the Leahy bill is signed all customers that qualify should have them restored. I am not sure there is a reasonable way looking from our vantage point to have the total correct numbers of Dish's Distant subs that qualify.
The problem is no one has seen the text of the bill that the Senate might pass. From the accounts we have seen, if a subscriber has access to local channels, they will not be able to get distant networks.CU2000 said:I am a Dealer I know that our customer base legally qualifyed under the network qualification rules as stated in the SHERVA Law. If the Leahy bill is signed all customers that qualify should have them restored.
Because Dish Network has local channels available in all three markets in Colorado, the distant network feeds will not be available.
To me, it sounds like the Senate is creating a new copyright license. 17 USC 119 is for distant networks (including RV and trucker exemptions), as well as significantly-viewed stations. 17 USC 122 is the license for local-into-local service. It is the 119 license that will have an injunction come 1 December.
As a matter of practicality, one could assume that a new section will be drawn up. Of course, Dish Network would be the only company which would use a new license. And since a new section would be written, the qualification method will change.
We really need a copy of the Leahy bill.
Tv choice and freedom is backGive it a rest guy
I called my congressman again to ask a couple of questions about the Leahy bill. Assuming the staff member I talked to is knowledgable here is what happened.
Q1. Will the bill cover SD and HD? Answer: his office has sent the writers of the bill a request to expand the bill to include HD . Therefore, if a market does not have an OTA HD signal and no Satellite provider has an HD channel for the network , then E* and D* will be allowed to give customers distant network HD. Many other Congressmen and Senators requested the same improvement. They see it as a means to get HD out sooner and stop the local affiliates from asking for further extensions.
Q2. When will a copy of the bill be available? Answer: As soon as he has a final one.
Given the above , there might be people in Colorado and elsewhere who are denied SD locals who will be able to get HD distants. I see this HD add on as a means to spur affiliates and satelite providers to roll out HD in markets. Once there is an HD presense in the market the competition loses the rights to that market. Forcing all to get HD up.
You are confusing the issue. The distinction you are talking about is between a network station's analog and digital signals. There is no such thing as a "HD channel" in the context of networks. The digital signal includes both SD and HD programming. Most of E*'s network retransmission are of the analog signal. Several major markets also have the digital signal available. The Leahy bill (as I understand) only restores the status quo (i.e. analog signals).
If I live in one city, but would like to view programming from accross the country, I should have the right to do it because the technology is here to do it. By not letting me choose, I feel it is now a restraint of trade or monopolistic behavior, both of which are not acceptable in my book!
I don't really care what has happened in the past...what is the right thing to do today. Don't take away or restrict the freedom of the consumer to choose his or hers programming.
simply put...Don't Restrict...let me choose what I want to see and pay for it accordingly...weather or not I have the ability to recive local programming or not.
You are confusing the issue. The distinction you are talking about is between a network station's analog and digital signals. There is no such thing as a "HD channel" in the context of networks. The digital signal includes both SD and HD programming. Most of E*'s network retransmission are of the analog signal. Several major markets also have the digital signal available. The Leahy bill (as I understand) only restores the status quo (i.e. analog signals).
I agree that owning another human being is not legal. But to compare distant networks to slavery is over the top.BobMurdoch said:(and please,... Greg Bimson, for the love of Pete, don't use this as an invitation to recite to me the law. I agree it is the law. But the law sucks. Slavery used to be legal too,.... doesn't make it right.)
And that is what everyone misunderstands. The current law for distant networks exists to provide network service to the unserved. At one time, with your waivers, you were considered unserved.BobMurdoch said:I'm glad that the REALLY screwed over individuals will be able to get their networks back if this goes through in the white areas, but I don't mind paying the extra $5 a month for convenience and variety and wish that the law expanded free choice instead of curtailing it.
So let's talk about choices. Dish Network could have chosen to settle this suit years ago, instead of placing their entire distant network subscriber base at risk. So it was Dish Network's choice that started the process of cutting of their entire DNS base.BobMurdoch said:I can get the New York Locals and my legally obtained waivers are about to be nullified. Sunday Timers on FOX during football season will be useless, the ability to bypass hideous Jets football for another market feed will go away (on most Sundays you get Giants and Jets games only as neither time gets to participate in most doubleheader days on either network), and most importantly my ability to follow the news on the west coast where I have family and like to discover other shows live later at night will go away. When E*'s equipment burps and doesn't record properly, I'm toast. If there is a conflict with too many good shows on at the same time, I'll be forced to give up watching it on the main TV and delegate to the 20" TV in my bedroom.
You're absolutely right that it's a digital and not an "HD" signal, of which I am fully aware (in case you were including me in that "you're confusing the issue" statment). You're also absolutely correct about the bill, as currently proposed, saying nothing about digital signals. However in your effort to be completely right (as you so often are), you appeared to miss the main point of ovbrd's post, which was that that some members of congress are apparently trying to amend the Leahy bill to include wording that would enable HD DNS in cases where people can't get a digital signal OTA (even if they can get analog signals by satellite).
No this has been the FCCs position but I believe SHVERA is so ambiguous and as yet, no specific rules exist for digital, that Dish hasn't been inclined to pursue HD DNS other than their current CBS HD deal.
What needs to happen now is to get digital completely separate from analog in terms of qualification, signal testing, retransmission rights and must carry.
There are still many areas where, although analog signals may be available OTA or by cable or satellite, there is no digital (and thus HD) signal. Either the station has been stalling or they're at such low power it's not reaching many locations. Something needs to be done to insure satellite customers can get the network's digital feeds. HD DNS until such time as the local digital feeds are available and then retrans / must carry when they are.