Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
EU against
// The Premier League have lost their case in the European Court of Justice (ECJ) against a pub landlady who used a foreign decoder to show live matches at 3pm on Saturdays. //
http://www.telegraph....Court-of-Justice.html
The Premier League sell their packages to territories, creating monopolies. Sky and ESPN (in the UK) are then able to sell to UK viewers uncontested, and therefore at a high price. This has now been ruled against (not yet quite a victory). We should now be able to shop around Europe for the cheapest football packages.
A victory for UK football fans from the ECJ.
Unless you disagree?
http://www.telegraph....Court-of-Justice.html
The Premier League sell their packages to territories, creating monopolies. Sky and ESPN (in the UK) are then able to sell to UK viewers uncontested, and therefore at a high price. This has now been ruled against (not yet quite a victory). We should now be able to shop around Europe for the cheapest football packages.
A victory for UK football fans from the ECJ.
Unless you disagree?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The fear has always been that showing football at 3 o'clock on a Saturday will stop supporters from turning up at their local club. If this does prove to be true then lower league clubs could find themselves in even more trouble than they already are, the rich will get richer and the poor get poorer
Sky charge pubs based on their rateable value. This was a deal handed to them by Mr A. Blair. My local, a small pub in north London, was presented with a bill for last season of £1600 a month! They'd need to sell over £4,000 EXTRA to pay for that. That's just not going to happen. Basically, Sky have priced themselves out of the market. It's no wonder publicans are looking for something cheaper. Mind you, the Albanian commentators aren't a patch on Alan Parry.
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Oddly I know pubs in Belgium that use UK decoders ! They dont have the tell-tale pint in the corner though !
Just think, if they cant rip us off we might even see less of the stupid salaries paid to a load of thicko's to use on prostitues etc. Won't happen though is my guess, they will find a way around the ruling.
Just think, if they cant rip us off we might even see less of the stupid salaries paid to a load of thicko's to use on prostitues etc. Won't happen though is my guess, they will find a way around the ruling.
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Essentially what Sky and/or the Premier League are saying by their argument is that they should be able to control who receives what on TV sets in the UK. This is an outrageous argument and it should not have taken a ruling by the ECJ to put them straight.
Having said that, owners and managers of pubs that pay the ridiculous sums demanded by Sky to show their football need to get round to the doctors. It is no use them moaning about the costs. If they all refused to take the programmes it would not be long before the prices came down.
And finally pubs should not be allowed to show football matches anyway. The football clubs and the police go to great lengths to ensure that the risk of trouble at matches is minimised. They segregate opposing supporters; they pen one lot in until the other has left; specific laws relating to behaviour inside football grounds were enacted. Yet they can all walk round the corner, pile into a pub and none of this applies. People who want to watch football should either go to the match or watch it on TV in the comfort of their own home. It would free up the pubs for those who want a pint and a chat (which is what I thought pubs were for).
Having said that, owners and managers of pubs that pay the ridiculous sums demanded by Sky to show their football need to get round to the doctors. It is no use them moaning about the costs. If they all refused to take the programmes it would not be long before the prices came down.
And finally pubs should not be allowed to show football matches anyway. The football clubs and the police go to great lengths to ensure that the risk of trouble at matches is minimised. They segregate opposing supporters; they pen one lot in until the other has left; specific laws relating to behaviour inside football grounds were enacted. Yet they can all walk round the corner, pile into a pub and none of this applies. People who want to watch football should either go to the match or watch it on TV in the comfort of their own home. It would free up the pubs for those who want a pint and a chat (which is what I thought pubs were for).
When the FA renegotiate the screen contracts in 2 years time probably the Greeks will find they are paying the full price and this landlord will suffer the hate consequences.
You have to admire her though taking on a world conglomerate like SKY. I wonder how they get away with having a monopoly which is totally against the public interest when it comes to competition and pricing.
You have to admire her though taking on a world conglomerate like SKY. I wonder how they get away with having a monopoly which is totally against the public interest when it comes to competition and pricing.
I think alot of you have misread the judgement. "The ECJ now says national laws which prohibit the import, sale or use of foreign decoder cards are contrary to the freedom to provide services".
It does not say that her showing live football was legal, it only refers to the decoder. It also ruled that broadcast live football matches were NOT copyright, so SKY will probably only need to delay broadcast by 5 minutes or so to enable the match to be classed as copyright. It also said that any inherent copyright part of the broadcast (music, logo's images etc) would need the copyright owners permission.
As a season ticket holder at a premier league club I consider it wrong that cheapskates can watch it live on the cheap, with relatively little financial input into the product that entertains them.
It could affect not just football for the few, but other sports/films/dvd's/ even music concerts. So the minority cheapskates will have ruined it for the true supporter of the event.
It does not say that her showing live football was legal, it only refers to the decoder. It also ruled that broadcast live football matches were NOT copyright, so SKY will probably only need to delay broadcast by 5 minutes or so to enable the match to be classed as copyright. It also said that any inherent copyright part of the broadcast (music, logo's images etc) would need the copyright owners permission.
As a season ticket holder at a premier league club I consider it wrong that cheapskates can watch it live on the cheap, with relatively little financial input into the product that entertains them.
It could affect not just football for the few, but other sports/films/dvd's/ even music concerts. So the minority cheapskates will have ruined it for the true supporter of the event.