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Sunday, May 27, 2012

TV Networks Say You're Breaking The Law When You Skip Commercials

Television networks are having a busy month trying to stamp out new TV-watching technology, including telling a court that skipping a commercial while watching a recorded show is illegal. Yesterday, Fox, NBC, and CBS all sued Dish Network over its digital video recorder with automatic commercial-skipping. The same networks, plus ABC, Univision, and PBS, are gearing up for a May 30 hearing in their cases against Aereo, a New York startup bringing local broadcast TV to the Internet.

EFF and Public Knowledge filed an amicus brief supporting Aereo this week.

The suits against Dish are a response to the "Hopper" DVR and its "Auto Hop" feature, which automatically skips over commercials. According to the networks' complaints, the Hopper automatically records eight days' worth of prime time programming on the four major networks that subscribers can play back on request. Beginning a few hours after the broadcast, viewers can choose to watch a program sans ads.

These suits are yet another in a long and ignominious series of lawsuits by content owners seeking to control the features of personal electronic devices, and to capture for themselves the value of new technologies no matter who invents them.

1 comment:

  1. The networks make it sound like Auto Hop and PrimeTime Anytime are things that they are not. They are not automatic, and I have to choose if I want to use both. Auto Hop has to been enabled before each recording as well. I personally think the Hopper is great, but now with Auto Hop, I think it's fantastic! I've had problems in the past where I'd watch a TV show before heading off to work at Dish, and end up being late because of the commercial breaks during an hour show. Now, with Auto Hop I can watch in 40 minutes and use that extra 20 to make it to work on time. :)

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