NG
The new Local TV channels are unlikely to be carried on Freesat because Freesat can't be totally regionally restricted on satellite, and most of the local TV operations have bought content with very restricted rights (and can't allow out of region viewing).
Across the US satellite television can be restricted and carry certain channels (or affiliates) in certain market. So the technology does exist.
I think you've missed my earlier point. Freesat - our non-subscription, non-pay satellite platforms is UNENCRYPTED.
That means that Freesat receivers don't need to have Conditional Access Modules (i.e. decryption devices). This means that to be received by a Freesat receiver, your broadcasts must be unencrypted. Which means you can't regionally restrict them - because any free-to-air receiver in the satellite footprint would be able to receive them... (Freesat allow postcode mapping of services - but this isn't the same thing)
You CAN regionally restrict if you encrypt, and the Sky pay-tv satellite platform in the UK allows this. There is a non-subscription option on the Sky platform (sometimes called Free-to-View / FTV or "Freesat from Sky") but this requires a Sky receiver (which has an integrated Conditional Access Module for the Sky Videoguard encryption system) AND a Sky viewing card. London Live is one of the few channels using this option I believe - though I may be wrong. They haven't launched yet.
AIUI the dominant US Satellite platforms are DIrecTV and Dish - and both of them encrypt - and they don't have a subscription-free offering...
My original point is that London Live is not likely to be on the UK Freesat platform (something which doesn't have a US equivalent AIUI)
noggin
Founding member
The new Local TV channels are unlikely to be carried on Freesat because Freesat can't be totally regionally restricted on satellite, and most of the local TV operations have bought content with very restricted rights (and can't allow out of region viewing).
Across the US satellite television can be restricted and carry certain channels (or affiliates) in certain market. So the technology does exist.
I think you've missed my earlier point. Freesat - our non-subscription, non-pay satellite platforms is UNENCRYPTED.
That means that Freesat receivers don't need to have Conditional Access Modules (i.e. decryption devices). This means that to be received by a Freesat receiver, your broadcasts must be unencrypted. Which means you can't regionally restrict them - because any free-to-air receiver in the satellite footprint would be able to receive them... (Freesat allow postcode mapping of services - but this isn't the same thing)
You CAN regionally restrict if you encrypt, and the Sky pay-tv satellite platform in the UK allows this. There is a non-subscription option on the Sky platform (sometimes called Free-to-View / FTV or "Freesat from Sky") but this requires a Sky receiver (which has an integrated Conditional Access Module for the Sky Videoguard encryption system) AND a Sky viewing card. London Live is one of the few channels using this option I believe - though I may be wrong. They haven't launched yet.
AIUI the dominant US Satellite platforms are DIrecTV and Dish - and both of them encrypt - and they don't have a subscription-free offering...
My original point is that London Live is not likely to be on the UK Freesat platform (something which doesn't have a US equivalent AIUI)