Comcast isn't trying to disqualify Eric Sahl as a beIN-hired expert or from future work, but he shouldn't have access to highly confidential information including viewership analyses and data put together by its enterprise business intelligence team and NBCUniversal affiliation agreement terms, the MVPD said in an FCC docket 18-384 reply posted Thursday. BeIN and Comcast clashed over Sahl's access to confidential information as part of the sports programmer's carriage complaint (see 1902260008). Comcast said Sahl's access to such information would skew future negotiations to Comcast's disadvantage.
The Delaware Chancery Court order restricting when Altice USA can terminate News 12 employees (see 1902210003) was a negotiated agreement between Altice and the plaintiff Dolan family.
As TiVo continues to hunt for buyers of its product and patent-licensing businesses, it plans this year to launch "the most advanced new content-discovery solution for the internet age," said interim CEO Raghu Rau on a Q4 call Tuesday evening. The product will "allow customers to build their own entertainment or streaming content bundle, and truly personalize their experience," he said. It will run on "natural language voice interactions, enabling personalized content discovery, monetizing audiences through sponsored promotions and delivering media engagement data to enable targeted advertising solutions," he said. TiVo has “ongoing discussions” with outside “parties” interested in buying the two businesses, Rau said. “This process is taking longer than we hoped” because of the businesses’ “complexity and uniqueness,” he said. TiVo owns an "extraordinary catalog" of "foundational" patents "across the TV and video domain," he said. Its goal was to wrap up finding buyers by year-end 2018, he said on the Q3 call Nov. 7. Though having failed to meet that target, Rau is “not willing to put a time limit on when this will happen,” he said Tuesday. TiVo's prolonged failure to find buyers sent the shares plummeting 13.9 percent Wednesday to close at $9.58.
BeIN Sports and Comcast are at odds over whether beIN's hired expert, media consultant Eric Sahl, should have access to confidential Comcast information as part of the sports programmer's carriage complaint against the MVPD (see 1902060052). BeIN, in a docket 18-384 posting Monday, called "untenable" Comcast's objections Sahl might one day represent stations operating in the same market as NBC affiliates, as he has in the past. The protective order doesn't "give Comcast a right to object to [consultants'] future career," beIN said, adding that the protective order's limits on Sahl's ability to use confidential information in future representations should assuage Comcast fears. Comcast's objection to protective order access Friday said Sahl is involved in analysis underlying business decisions made by its competitors as well as in those business decisions themselves.
Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., raised concerns about an FCC Further NPRM that would treat cable operators' in-kind contributions required by local franchise authorities as franchise fees and subject to a cap (see 1902040061). Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., previously raised concerns about the FNPRM's effects on public, educational and government stations (see 1811270044). “This proposal could harm my constituents by reducing their access” to PEG programming “and I request that the FCC not take any actions to reduce access” to that content, Eshoo wrote Chairman Ajit Pai Friday. The proposal “would allow cable companies to deduct the fair market value of in-kind contributions, such as channels set aside for PEG from franchise fee obligations of cable companies. Given that many city, county, and state governments face budget constraints, this policy would force them to pick between continuing to receive franchise fee revenues and preserving access to PEG programming.”
Conversion rates to vMVPD subscriptions, seen by industry as a “lifeboat” for programmers amid cord cutting, “fell off the table” in Q4, MoffettNathanson's Craig Moffett wrote investors Friday. The analyst warns a 1:1 conversion rate “was highly unlikely to be sustainable” to offset linear TV declines. Though YouTube TV and Hulu Live TV did well with what he estimated as net additions of 400,000 and 500,000 in Q4, DirecTV Now and Dish’s Sling TV “did very badly.” After accounting for smaller operators including PlayStation Vue and fuboTV, “not nearly enough" vMVPD subscriptions were added to offset declines in linear TV, Moffett said, estimating total subscriptions, including vMVPDs, fell 248,000 in Q4, the worst since mid-2017.
Charter Communications met with an aide to FCC Commissioner Mike O'Rielly as it continues to lobby the agency regarding its petition for a declaration of effective competition in Massachusetts and Hawaii due to DirecTV Now's presence (see 1902150028), said a docket 18-283 ex parte posting Thursday.
Atlantic Broadband in coming months plans to upgrade the Springfield, West Virginia, cable system and integrate it into its existing footprint in Hampshire County, the cable ISP said Wednesday as it announced it had completed acquisition of the cable system from Comcast. It said it will offer expanded video services, high-speed internet and digital phone after the work is complete.
The American Cable Association is continuing its push to let cable operators electronically send notices to broadcasters that currently have to be delivered via certified mail, with a docket 17-317 posting Tuesday recapping an ACA meeting with an aide to Chairman Ajit Pai about the proposal (see 1810170023).
Commercial leased access "is an anachronism" that probably couldn't get past a First Amendment challenge, especially since video programmers have many alternate distribution routes, NCTA, Comcast and Charter Communications officials told FCC Media Bureau staff including Chief Michelle Carey. So recounted a docket 07-42 posting Friday. The cablers said part-time leased access -- not statutorily required -- puts big administrative burdens on the industry, and cable spends millions of dollars annually servicing leased access user needs. Cable operators carrying leased access channels on the basic tier should be able to calculate average implicit fees based on a basic tier-specific calculation, not the blended calculation required under the existing formula, they said.