Rovi Corp. has deployed its programming guides on more than half a million standard and high-definition digital terminal adapters (DTAs), the company said in a news release Tuesday (http://bit.ly/Zcgqti). Rovi is providing its TV programming guide “throughout the U.S. and Latin America” through deals with Armstrong, Arris, Cablevision Argentina, Evolution Digital, Pace and “more than a dozen leading cable operators,” Rovi said. DTAs convert incoming digital signals into analog signals that can be viewed on older TV sets, it noted. The devices help cable companies upgrade local systems from analog to digital and optimize bandwidth to support HD channels and high-speed data, said the company. It said Rovi’s DTA Guide “eases the digital transition and enhances the experience for consumers by offering cable subscribers an Interactive Program Guide for navigating content choices."
Nielsen and Simulmedia partnered to develop a measurement solution for unmeasured cable network TV audiences. Joint research by the companies will seek to capture the sizable audience activity “that goes unmeasured today on niche cable networks to enable these networks to sell advertising based on reliable, qualified ratings systems,” Nielsen said Tuesday in a news release (http://bit.ly/1x7sHwU). The research was accumulated through the Nielsen People Meter panel and Simulmedia’s set-top box viewing data representing 50 million viewers, it said.
The FCC and U.S. would be better served by net neutrality rules based on Communications Act Section 706 rather than Title II, said NCTA in a blog post Friday (http://bit.ly/1ujKL2b). Title II doesn’t provide a “bright line” standard for what would be reasonable under open Internet rules, said NCTA. Such decisions are “rarely simple or straightforward and they are never quick,” the association said. NCTA also disputed the idea that Title II regulation would cost less. Imposing new Title II regulations on the Internet “will involve significant legal, regulatory, and administrative work” even under the mildest form of Title II regulation, NCTA said. Forbearance provisions won’t make being regulated under Title II any easier, NCTA said. “The idea that it will be easy for the Commission to decide whether to forbear with respect to dozens of Title II provisions for hundreds of companies defies all logic and experience.” The American “light touch regulatory regime” is more successful at attracting broadband investment than European models, said the association, which has been sparring with groups that want Title II in comments on the net neutrality NPRM. “Imposing Title II regulation on broadband providers and services introduces a risk of stagnation that should be of significant concern to the Commission."
Time Warner Cable’s responses to FCC information requests about its planned purchase by Comcast were posted in docket 14-57 Friday (http://bit.ly/1wOdj8B). Heavily redacted under a joint protective order, the responses don’t yet include all the information requested by the commission, TWC said. “All non-privileged documents requested in the Commission’s Request for Information will be submitted shortly following adjustments to reflect ongoing clarification discussions with Commission staff,” several responses read. Some responses, such as a request for a list of program access disputes with multichannel video programming distributors, are wholly redacted. Other items contain brief paragraphs of explanation above long columns of redacted information.
Alaskan cable and telecom company General Communication Inc. joined the American Television Alliance in an effort to “reform” retransmission consent, GCI said in a news release Thursday.
Comcast’s buying Time Warner Cable would have a “direct and harmful effect” on the spot cable advertising market, said spot ad company Viamedia in an ex parte filing posted in docket 14-57 Thursday (http://bit.ly/1DlYITB): “Eliminating TWC and facilitating Comcast’s ability to achieve significant growth and even greater scale will have a direct and harmful effect on competition within the $5.4 billion spot cable advertising market.” Comcast/TWC would have a 71 percent share of the spot cable ad market, and already owns 80 percent of cable ad company National Cable Communications (NCC) and controls 54 percent of the interconnects used for spot cable commercials, Viamedia said: “Holding the dominant share of cable homes, owning NCC, and controlling the Interconnects are the three bottlenecks that would allow Comcast absolute control of the distinct cable spot cable advertising market.” The FCC should address this through deal conditions, said Viamedia. “Comcast’s increased dominance means that any technological development in next-generation advertising technologies would be on Comcast’s terms."
Ericsson agreed to pay $95 million for Fabrix Systems, a provider of video cloud storage, computing and network delivery that includes cable and telecom cloud DVRs. The deal lets video providers more quickly move customer services and applications to the cloud and ensure high-quality video delivery to TV Anywhere devices, the companies said in a news release Friday (http://bit.ly/WTf4Sa). It said the deal is expected to be completed next quarter. IDT said separately that it agreed to sell its approximately 78 percent stake in Fabrix to Ericsson (http://bit.ly/YDuv2R).
Comcast deployed CSG Content Direct’s content monetization and management platform to launch its Xfinity On Campus service. Comcast debuted the service last month (CD Aug 22 p13). CSG facilitates the sale of premium services through the Xfinity On Campus service “by using a student’s university ID to provide a seamless user experience,” Comcast said Thursday in a news release (http://bit.ly/1qNnghI). A commerce management engine also facilitates recurring payments for the premium subscription services that students select “by storing preferred payment methods in a fully integrated eWallet function to provide convenient and flexible purchase options,” it said.
Comcast and Univision Communications reached a long-term agreement for the operator to distribute Univision Deportes Network, Comcast said in a news release Tuesday (http://bit.ly/1p84kWV). It said UDN will go to XFINITY TV customers who receive Comcast’s Digital Preferred or XFINITY Latino service. UDN is a 24-hour all-sports Spanish language network showing professional and international soccer, Formula 1 races, boxing, NFL, NBA, MLB and other sports leagues, said Comcast. “This partnership speaks to the growing influence of Hispanics,” said Univision President-Sports Juan Carlos Rodriguez.
NCTA again said if the FCC opens a proceeding to consider requiring that cable operators post public inspection files online, it should examine how to tailor requirements to cable operators’ obligations. Seeking to minimize undue burdens on cable operators is important “in light of comments that describe problems television stations have experienced with the existing online database,” it said in reply comments in docket 14-127 (http://bit.ly/1qedwza). “Real world experience with the impact of the increased volume of television station activity on the commission’s database during the fall 2014 political advertising season” before considering expanding the rules, it said. The Campaign Legal Center continued to urge the FCC to propose and adopt a rule expanding the online public file regime to cable and satellite TV operators, and to radio stations (http://bit.ly/1pMx8Ey). Small commercial radio stations shouldn’t be exempt, it said. CLC supports allowing waivers in certain, narrow circumstances where a station can show that it isn’t physically capable of uploading the documents to the system, “or the station’s situation is such that online filing truly imposes a heavy burden,” it said.