Europe's Digital Revolution: Broadcasting Regulation, the EU and the Nation StateRoutledge, 2003. gada 2. sept. - 226 lappuses Europe's Digital Revolution assesses the impact of digital broadcasting on regulatory practices in Europe. The current roles and responsibilities of nation states and the EU will have to respond to rapid technological and market developments. Levy considers how these responsibilities are likely to be divided in the future, and which are the emerging issues and problems. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 53.
xv. lappuse
... increased role in regulating an industry that is internationalising as well as converging? Many of these questions are currently being addressed both by national governments and by the EU. The mid to late 1990s will be remembered as a ...
... increased role in regulating an industry that is internationalising as well as converging? Many of these questions are currently being addressed both by national governments and by the EU. The mid to late 1990s will be remembered as a ...
3. lappuse
... increased channel choice, charging for programmes currently viewed free- to-air, and using live sport, first release ... increasing variety of information will be conveyed and transactions conducted. No one can be certain about the ...
... increased channel choice, charging for programmes currently viewed free- to-air, and using live sport, first release ... increasing variety of information will be conveyed and transactions conducted. No one can be certain about the ...
4. lappuse
... increases in computing, processing and storage power that are currently taking place. Moore's law suggests a doubling of ... increased processing power with three other key technological changes: first digital compression; second ...
... increases in computing, processing and storage power that are currently taking place. Moore's law suggests a doubling of ... increased processing power with three other key technological changes: first digital compression; second ...
5. lappuse
... increased prices for key film and sports rights. Convergence Technological convergence is made possible by a common digital coding system, compression and increased transmission capacity. It has been described as a multi-faceted ...
... increased prices for key film and sports rights. Convergence Technological convergence is made possible by a common digital coding system, compression and increased transmission capacity. It has been described as a multi-faceted ...
7. lappuse
... increased numbers of channels and sophisticated EPGs will lead to the Internet model, where channel identities disappear and relatively crude search engines supply a comprehensive listing of what is available, or whether instead the ...
... increased numbers of channels and sophisticated EPGs will lead to the Internet model, where channel identities disappear and relatively crude search engines supply a comprehensive listing of what is available, or whether instead the ...
Saturs
3 | |
Regulating analogue broadcasting | 17 |
National regulatory traditions in France Germany and the UK | 19 |
European regulation of analogue broadcasting | 39 |
National and European responses to digital broadcasting | 61 |
Regulating access to digital broadcasting The Advanced Television Standards Directive | 63 |
The impact of European competition policy on digital broadcasting | 80 |
National approaches to digital regulation | 100 |
From the European Information Society to convergence Coordinating or transcending national responses to digital broadcasting? | 123 |
Conclusions | 141 |
Convergence New approaches | 143 |
Broadcasting regulation the nation state and the European policy process | 159 |
Notes | 169 |
Bibliography | 186 |
Index | 199 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Europe's Digital Revolution: Broadcasting Regulation, the EU, and the Nation ... David A. L. Levy Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 1999 |
Europe's Digital Revolution: Broadcasting Regulation, the EU and the Nation ... David Levy Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2003 |
Europe's Digital Revolution: Broadcasting Regulation, the EU and the Nation ... David A. L. Levy Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2001 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
analogue approach areas argued audio-visual policy Bangemann Bertelsmann broadcasting policy broadcasting regulation broadcasting sector BSkyB cable networks Canal cent channels Commission's communications sector competition policy conditional access systems consumer content regulation Council countries create cultural debate decoders Deutsche Telekom digital broadcasting digital satellite digital television digital TV dirigiste dominant economic electronic programme guides ensure Europe Europe's European Commission European level film France free-to-air French Germany Government Green Paper impact implementation increased industry Information Society internal market Internet intervention issues Kirch KPMG Lander launch legislation liberalisation licensing limited major media companies media ownership rules Member merger move offer OFTEL operators pay TV pluralism policy-makers political programmes proposals public service broadcasters quotas regulatory convergence regulatory framework response role set-top box Standards Directive technological change telecommunications telecoms Television Without Frontiers terrestrial tion Treaty TV market TVWF viewers whilst