Ofcom has told
television producers and broadcasters that they have a little over two months to
settle their differences over sharing rights on new media platforms, according
to reports in the Financial Times.
The watchdog says that if agreement has not been reached by 21 March it will
bring out amendments to its code of practice to settle the matter.
So far it has stated that new media rights should be divided into what it
calls two 'windows'.
This would allow a public service broadcaster full rights across all
platforms to any programme it acquires – the 'primary window'.
This would then be followed by a 'hold-back' period during which the
programme's producer could exploit the rights subject to restrictions applied by
the broadcaster.
But Ofcom declined to put a time limit on these windows or detail how
secondary revenues are shared.
According to the Financial Times, the
BBC has agreed a seven day
primary window but Channel 4 is pushing
for a 30 day period.
In the absence of a way to legally buy TV downloads online, Britain is the
world's biggest market for illegal TV downloads, according to
research last
year from web tracking firm
Envisional.
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