Cable television
Cable television is a system of providing
The abbreviation CATV is often used to mean "Cable TV". It originally stood for Community Antenna Television, from cable television's origins in 1948: in areas where over-the-air reception was limited by mountainous terrain, large "community antennas" were constructed, and cable was run from them to individual homes.
It is most commonplace in
Cable television deployments
Asia
Taiwan
Taiwan currently has more than 80 cable television channels. Taiwan's main cable provider is Chunghua Telecom (中華電信).People from mainland China favor watching Taiwan's cable channels, and do so over iptv because of the greater varieties of programs compared to their own country's television.
China (Mainland)
Cable television in the usual transmission method in all urban areas of
Mainland China had more than 25 million digital cable television users in 2007. [ [http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS114752+11-Apr-2008+PRN20080411 CCID Consulting: Cable DTV Achieves Rapid Development in 2007 | Reuters ] ]
Unlike many cable television operators in other countries that support two-way modes, China's cable television runs in a one-way mode (download only, no upload)
Hong Kong
Only one traditional cable provider operates in
Many people in Hong Kong subscribe to satellite TV services like
India
India has over 130 million homes with television sets, of which nearly 71 million have access to cable TV. The overall Cable TV market is growing at a robust 8-10%. [ [http://www.scatindia.com/indianmarket.htm Scatindia ] ] The cable TV industry exploded in the early 1990s when the broadcast industry was liberalized, and saw the entry of many foreign players like Rupert Murdoch's Star TV Network in 1991, MTV, and others. The emergence and notification of the
The Raj Television Network was started in 1994 and continues to be an important player in the South Indian cable TV provider space.
Indonesia
Israel
outh Korea
There are many cable operators in South Korea, such as Tbroad, C&M, and CJ. The cable TV subscriber is approximately 14 million. The cable operator provides TPS to its subscribers.
Malaysia
Mega TV was launched in 1996 by TV3 as the only cable television service. However, it failed to expand its content, and so, had to close down in 2001, and was replaced by its competitor, the satellite television network Astro.
Maldives
There over 100 cable TV operators across the country. As the population of the Maldives is separated across around 200 inhabited islands, there is a cable TV operator for nearly every island. Media Net Pvt. Ltd. is the country's largest cable TV operator. Media Net is a Male-based cable TV operator that provides cable and MMDS service to five islands near Male. Media Net holds the license of distribution for 41 channels and distributes channels to nearly all the operators of the country. In Maldives, cable TV subscribers can get most premium channels available in Asia.
Philippines
In Metro Manila, SkyCable and Global Destiny are the primary cable operators. SkyCable also has provincial affiliates, which carry the former's brand and programming may vary from the one provided in Metro Manila. In 2006, digital cable was launched. This not only made additional channels possible but also pre-paid cable service. Both companies also offer cable internet where cable television is bundled either free or at a discount.
Besides cable, direct-to-home satellite is offered through Dream Television and has pre-paid variants as well.
ingapore
ri Lanka
Lanka Broadband Networks pay television broadcaster using cable networks to serve 10,000 customers. Southern Broadband Networks (Pvt) Ltd television broadcaster using cable networks
Thailand
TrueVisions [ [http://www.truevisionstv.com TrueVisions ] ] is the only exclusive CATV in Thailand, formerly known as UBC (United Broadcasting Corporation). True Visions is a subsidiary of True [ [http://www.truecorp.co.th True Corporation - ·ÃÙÁÙ¿, ·ÃÙÍ͹äŹì, ·ÃÙÁѹ¹Õè, ·ÃÙÇÔªÑè¹Êì,·ÃÙäÅ¿ì ] ] , provides CATV only in Bangkok area while operate DSTV (Digital Satellite TV) outside Bangkok.
Europe
According the European Audiovisual Observatory, there were 58 million cable households in the European Union as of 31 December 2004, i.e. a rate of penetration of 32 % of the television households. 5.7 millions were connected to digital networks.
Belgium
Belgium is the second most dense cabled country in the world after the Netherlands with over 99% of all households connected to cable television networks. The first networks were built in 1960 in Namur and the Liege region. In 1972, cable television was deployed nationwide as a measure made by the government to eliminate the millions of antennas. Currently most cable companies are active on the triple-play market, offering television, telephone and internet services. Currently the analogue services are phased out to make way for digital television services and high definition television...
Cyprus
Greece
Since 2006, 2 companies distribute cable television in
Macedonia
Macedonia has more than 15 cable providers all over the country. The two main cable operators are CableTEL and Telekabel and they offer services in 80% of Macedonia. Both companies offer Internet, Analogue and Digital Television and telephony (Trpile Play). CableTEL distributes 77 analogue channels and 70 digital chanels and Telekabel distributes 65 analogue channels and 68 digital channels. HDTV in Macedonia is expected in the beginning of 2009. The penetration for cable television in Macedonia is high rated with 67% of all households. The Macedonian Broadcasting Council gave a warning to Telekabel and CableTEL to remove the Serbian and Bulgarian subtitles of the foreign channels and to add Macedonian subtitles. Till the end of July more than 6 foreign channels will be transmitted with Macedonian subtitle. The internet which is offered from the cable providers is fast and cheap. The cable tax is also very cheap and it costs 350 denars or 5 euros.
Romania
The reasons for this appeal started in the early '90s. After the fall of the communist regime, in 1989, there was only one state owned TV channel available (see TVR), a second channel being closed in 1985 (see
Cable TV is very cheap for all standards, the standard/basic service, offering about 50 channels, is around 20-30 RON/month including
Republic of Ireland
witzerland
In
United Kingdom
When the UK’s infant television service was re-established after WW2, in June 1946, it had only one transmitter, at
By law, these cable systems were restricted to the relay of the public broadcast channels, which meant that as the transmitter network became more comprehensive the incentive to subscribe to cable was reduced and they began to lose customers. In 1982, a radical liberalisation of the law on cable was proposed by the
The result was that cable systems were permitted to carry as many new television channels as they liked, as well as providing a telephone service and interactive services of many kinds (as since made familiar by the Internet). To maintain the momentum of the perceived commercial interest in this new investment opportunity, in 1983 the Government itself granted eleven interim franchises for new broadband systems each covering a community of up to around 100,000 homes, but the competitive franchising process was otherwise left to the new regulatory body, the
The franchising process proceeded steadily, but the actual construction of new systems was slow, as doubts about an adequate payback from the substantial investment persisted. By the end of 1990 almost 15 million homes had been included in franchised areas, but only 828,000 of these had been passed by broadband cable and only 149,000 were actually subscribing. Thereafter, however, construction accelerated and take-up steadily improved.
The first new television channels launched for carriage on cable systems (going live in March 1984) were Sky Channel,
In 2005 it was announced that NTL and Telewest would merge, after a period of co-operation in the preceding few years. This merger was completed on 3 March 2006 with the company being named ntl Incorporated. For the time being the two brand names and services were marketed separately. However, following NTL's acquisition of
There are a small number of other surviving cable television companies in the UK outside of NTL including
Cable TV faces intense competition from
However, subscription-funded
Another potential source of competition in the future will be TV over
North America
Canada
Caribbean
The
Mexico
The first cable system started to operate in the early 1960s in Monterrey, as a CATV service (an antenna at the top of the Loma Larga, which could get TV signals from South Texas). Most of the other major cities didn't develop cable systems until the late 1980s, due to government censorship. By 1989, the industry had had a major impulse with the founding of Multivisión—a MMDS system who started to develop its own channels in Spanish—and the later development of companies such as Cablemas and
Over the past few years, many US networks have started to develop content for the Latin American market, such as
United States
A large majority of American television viewers get their signal from CATV.
Oceania
Australia
Cable television services have been available in
Inside the capital cities, cable is the more predominant form of pay television distribution. In regional areas or in new or outskirted areas of cities, satellite is far more common.
Due to its history, financial backing and market dominance, most local versions of channels are either owned directly by Foxtel and Austar or through related companies.
In terms of coverage,
Austar is available by satellite in most of regional and rural Australia, but does have a small cable network in the city of Darwin.
New Zealand
outh America
Argentina
Cable television had its origins in the 1960s, when a CATV service started to operate in
In the 1980s cable operators started operations in the absence of local regulations. Those earlier operators started a merged process which evolved toward the merge of Cablevision and Multicanal, the two biggest cable companies. The resultant company, named Cablevision, is owned by Grupo Clarin, the biggest newspaper in Argentina, who is also the owner of LS85-TV (the highest-rated TV station in Buenos Aires) TyC the owner of the monopoly of the soccer TV broadcast right, thus turning into the dominant player.
Some small TV cable companies are operating, but the tendency now is that Cablevision will dominate this market in the future. Telecom Operator, Telefonica and Telecom, the monopoly in the fixed-cellular market is lobbying for opening the market towards the triple play. The Government is opening a window to allow the cable operators to enter in the telephony and extend internet coverage, before fully deregulating this market.
In order to operate as a cable company in Argentina, a license from Comfer is required. This license is very difficult to get.
Brazil
Cable television is distributed in
;All Brazil and São Paulo Digital TV
* NET Cable TV (Organizações Globo)
* NET Digital TV (Organizações Globo)
* Globo SAT (Organizações Globo)
* SKY(***) (The DirecTV Group)
* DirecTV(***) (The DirecTV Group)
;Only in São Paulo
* TVA Cable (Abril Group Viacom)
* TVA Digital (Abril Group Viacom)
* VocêTV (Telefônica Digital TV LTDA)
* Vivax Cable TV (Organizações Globo LTDA)
* Alphaville Cable TV (Silvio Santos Group LTDA)
;Assis
* TvCassis (***)SKY and DirecTV are together since 2007.
Ecuador
The dominant company nowadays is
Other cable-based services
Coaxial cables are capable of bi-directional carriage of signals as well as the transmission of large amounts of data. Cable television signals use only a portion of the bandwidth available over coaxial lines. This leaves plenty of space available for other digital services such as
Broadband internet is achieved over coaxial cable by using
In
[Pakistan] Cable Modem
Beginning in 2004 in the United States, the traditional cable television providers and traditional telecommunication companies increasingly compete in providing voice, video and data services to residences. The combination of TV, telephone and Internet access is commonly called triple play regardless of whether CATV or telcos offer it.
Consumer issues
The cable industry spends millions of dollars annually on government relationships. [ [http://www.spinwatch.org/content/view/485/9/ Spinwatch - Anatomy of a Lobbying Blitz Cable industry enlists diverse crowd in high-level i ] ] http://projects.publicintegrity.org/telecom/search/profile.aspx?id=M000018] [http://www.nashvillecitypaper.com/index.cfm?news_id=56172] [http://www.sdreader.com/php/cover.php?mode=article&showpg=1&id=20001005] Regularly this industry employs the spouses, sons and daughters of influential mayors, councilmen, commissioners, and other officials to assure its continued local monopoly and preferred market allocations, many of which have been questioned as unethical. [ [http://www.fppc.ca.gov/index.html?id=299 California Fair Political Practices Commission - Enforcement Pages: Ch-Cz ] ] The monopoly on cable television has historically been enforced by local governments. Cable maintains thousands of such de facto monopolies. In order to provide service to individual homes, a cable provider must place its cable wiring along and across local streets or other rights-of-way. To do so, the provider must get permission from the local government(s) that own those streets via rights-of-way permits. Operational permission comes in the form of a document called a local franchise agreement. Most of local government(s) chose to grant permission to only one company, however, recently states have developed broader franchising laws to drive more investment and competition. Changes in the federal law in 1992 had forced local governments to grant permission to other companies to provide service, however the U.S. Government found in 2006 that only 2% of U.S. households had a competitive choice. In some cases Comcast, with municipal government approval, had entered into market allocation schemes. By agreeing to not compete head to head, consumers thus are perpetually locked into a single monopoly cable provider with annual price escalations reaching 93% in the past decade. [ [http://www.sfbg.com/39/26/news_comcast.html San Francisco Bay Guardian News ] ] [ [http://www.law.com/jsp/law/LawArticleFriendly.jsp?id=1157557741772 Law.com: Motion to Dismiss Fails in Closely-Watched Comcast Antitrust Suit ] ] [http://rapidshare.com/files/35850727/Arvada_-Comcast_Market_Allocation_Agreement.pdf.html] [http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-06-179A1.pdf] A recent third party survey of citizens found approximately 62% of the respondents were very dissatisfied (along with another 25% who were dissatisfied) with the cost of cable television service. A majority of the respondents were satisfied with the friendliness and courtesy of customer service personnel, however, approximately 30% of the respondents rated the cable company's performance as poor. With regard to open-ended comments, respondents felt that the cost of the cable service was too high, a need for cable competition existed and the desire for a basic cable package offering was desired. Although respondents cited these critical issues, the local monopoly structure preserves the status quo of poor customer service, limited product choices, no direct competition and uncontrollable annual cable TV price increases. Relief for consumers is being created by state level a multi jurisdictional franchise and service process that will spur investment and competition; thus driving economic development sought by state and local government leaders. [ [http://www.ci.fort-collins.co.us/cablefranchise/pdf/needs-assessment-report.pdf Cable Franchise: City of Fort Collins ] ] The industry strongly lobbies against federal "family tier" and " ee also * References External links * [http://www.thisiscable.com/ ThisIsCable.com]
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* [http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/blogs/cooper/archives/Cable_mergers.pdf Cable Mergers and Monopolies: Market Power in Digital Media and Communications Networks]