ACA Praises FCC Decision to Allow Integrated HD Boxes

The American Cable Association gave the FCC a
shout-out Thursday for officially ruling that cable operators can lease
low-cost, basic-function HD set-tops with security functions.

The FCC voted Thursday to change some of the rules
implementing its mandate that security and channel-surfing functions must be
separated in cable digital set-tops. But after issuing a number of waivers for
integrated HD set-tops in the interest of spurring high-definition TV service,
the FCC voted unanimously Thursday to allow low-cost boxes (actually both
standard-definition and HD so long as they were one-way).

"ACA commends the FCC for recognizing that
the burden on independent cable operators to procure expensive HD set-top boxes
under the CableCARD regime not only slowed their analog-to-digital TV
transition but also tied up valuable bandwidth that could not be allocated to
broadband or other advanced services," said American Cable Association
President Matt Polka in a statement. "Today's laudable FCC action puts the
country on the right path and deserves broad support from industry and consumers."

In granting an individual waiver to Cable One last
May for an integrated HD set-top, the FCC made it clear it found a public
interest in promoting HD adoption and migration to digital via the waiver. It
is taking the opportunity of its revamp of the set-top regime to officially add
the presumption that it is in the public interest.

The FCC had initially said that its waiver policy
for low-cost, one-way boxes would not include ones with HD capability. But
Cable One argued that almost all cable nets would be offered in HD, and that
granting the waiver would promote the sale of HD sets.

The FCC issued several waivers at the bureau level and indicated that
meant the commission had decided that allowing the basic-function HD boxes was
in the public interest. The FCC vote Thursday made that official.

John Eggerton

Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.