Liste des Groupes | Revenir à a tv |
Americans who complain about the inconsequentially small subsidy givenAnd I thought our CBC got an obscene amount of money ($1.5 billion a year under Trudeau, increased by $150 million under Carney, probably to thank them for their enthusiastic coverage of his recent election campaign.)
to public television and radio licensees have no idea how good we have
it in this country. In the UK, there's been a mandatory licensing fee
for receiving radio and television via the natural electromagnetic
spectrum and expanded to receiving a signal via other methods. The BBC
receives a phenomenal public subsidy of close to lb 4 billion.
It's very difficult to avoid being not subject to the licensing fee. AThe video was educational for me. I knew about the license fee but not the precise terms. I always thought it was only for BBC channels but apparently it's for the commercial channels like ITV and Channel 4 as well. BUT you don't have to pay it if you don't watch live TV and you don't use any services like iPlayer to view programming on a delay.
man chose not to watch tv and informed BBC that he was not subject to
the licensing fee.
>
BBC sent the police to arrest him. Not watching tv is criminal behavior.I'm not so sure about that. I was under the impression that they have trucks with direction finders or something similar to tell if you are receiving a TV signal. Something along the lines of the vans they used during WWII to see if someone was operating a radio transmitter and was presumably a foreign spy.
They had videod him looking at a video with a still taken from a BBC
program that the man found on the Internet. They obviously couldn't
prove this was live tv (in fact they knew that it wasn't being
broadcast) and the judge threw the criminal case out.
But that meant they had to peep through his windows, trespassing.
I've seen videos in which UK barristers explain that BBC licenseSure you can. You just have to cough up staggering sums of money to take them to court via a lawsuit.
enforcement has an implied right of access to enter the premisis to look
for contraband unlicensed radio and tv receivers.
The man was sick of the nasty letters and pounding on the door to be let
in, so he wrote to BBC in order to withdraw the implied right of access.
You cannot stand up for your rights in the UK, what few remain.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XowfxO_-eYA--
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.