Big ATSC 3.0 Update

OTA broadcasters' business plan is not profitable today. Too many other places for advertiser to spend their money. And with the popularly of cord cutting and free add-supported streaming TV no more carriage fees. They are trying to force viewers back to cable or other pay services. OTA TV is dying a slow painful death.
 
I watched it last night - I thought it was very good. You should not need internet access to watch OTA tv...and with this encryption/DRM stuff, it seems to be necessary. To me, you should just be able to turn on your TV and watch it. As I mentioned in the other thread, and Lon mentioned in his video - bad weather. What if the internet goes down and you can't access OTA TV for the latest news and weather? There are a lot of issues. I don't know all the ins and outs, but if DRM and encryption was banned by the FCC, it seems like ATSC 3.0 has promise - but I could be missing something.
 
But my flip phone does not do apps. :D :D
How to use your Flip Phone for weather detection.
Take you flip phone outside. If it gets wet it is probably raining. If it has white flakes on it, it is probably snowing. If the phone breaks you are probably in a hail storm. If it blows out of your hand, you could be in a Tornado or a Hurricane.:cool:

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I watched it last night - I thought it was very good. You should not need internet access to watch OTA tv...and with this encryption/DRM stuff, it seems to be necessary. To me, you should just be able to turn on your TV and watch it. As I mentioned in the other thread, and Lon mentioned in his video - bad weather. What if the internet goes down and you can't access OTA TV for the latest news and weather? There are a lot of issues. I don't know all the ins and outs, but if DRM and encryption was banned by the FCC, it seems like ATSC 3.0 has promise - but I could be missing something.
Its basically the same argument for keeping AM radio in cars. Except most AM stations are owned by just a handful of corporations. They have to much money wrapped up in them as they just kept taking over and no one stopped them!
 
Sadly I think under the current FCC leadership the broadcasters are going to get whatever they want. I do think the DRM and the total shutdown of ATSC 1.0 earlier than anticipated (if allowed) does present a safety issue. When Helene hit my area of SC cell phones didn't work because the towers either had no power, no data connectivity, or were overloaded completely. We only have one local radio station in the county that primarily operates from a 250 Watt FM Translator.

Thanks to generator power and an antenna we were able to tune into the TV news and follow what was going on to get updates. If ATSC 3 was in play and internet was required to decode the DRM that wouldn't have been possible. Now you see people in the same situations with the winter storm we've had over the last week.
 
Here's a question, if DRM is about sports, as the broadcasters say, then why not encrypt only during sporting events?

CBS already does that on C-band during NFL season. They encrypt during Sunday games, then go back FTA afterward.
 

National Association of Broadcasters FCC Filing