Soldato
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- 28 Dec 2017
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I think it is the same end result but it's worth pointing out that it's still a TV license not a BBC license. That's kind of my main frustration with this thread.I'm not so sure. I do not hate the BBC; it is just a service I do not use. There are legitimate grievances with its licensing policy, when it comes to limiting or restricting a consumer's ability to watch non-BBC live services, especially in the internet age where there is no reliance on legacy radio wave broadcasting and the associated costs of maintaining that.
Yes it seems unreasonable that the vast majority of TV licensing money goes to a single provider and not the rest. But that is still what it is; if the TV license was reduced by 30% and excluded the BBC, how many people would start paying it in order to then watch the other 100+ live broadcast channels? Not many I suspect.
I have real issues with how the fee is enforced and policed, that is completely unreasonable and often unhinged IMO. Not least because they only try to catch people out in areas with lots of non payers, so it's already targeting people unfairly. I also think the definition of live has been intentionally blurred to try and benefit the license funds unfairly.
But in the original and clear definition, where live TV means something that is being broadcast as a live channel in the terrestrial network (even if the viewer then views it over IP), it is quite clear what is and isn't under the jurisdiction of the license.
So really the majority of the issue is in how they try to apply the rules for the fee really. Which could easily be adjusted e.g. by letting the gov do it instead of the BBC, seeing as it IS a license for all TV channels not just BBC ones. Or as 413x suggests, just stop criminalising people for it and trust users to pay. I especially dislike the company BBC has chosen to enforce the fee - Capita are atrocious and the BBC's hands are dirty even if they leave Capita to do the work.
I don't have an issue with the funding model itself - the four main Public Service Providers are well regulated by Ofcom in terms of their responsibilities, and the funding going to the BBC while others have their own funding models, is fine. It is a good thing that we have multiple public service broadcasters who are on the hook from government to deliver valuable and balanced TV. BBC is part of a bigger, regulated system.