![]() Sky’s NOW TV, or advertising such as the news channel Buzzfeed, and also BT’s hybrid YouView. Within the panoply of social and AV services on offer, Facebook and YouTube have been joined by on demand and streaming services including Netflix, Amazon Prime, and others funded by pay-per-view, eg. The 30 minutes per day lost to broadcast viewing since 2011 is more than made up from audio-visual content on the internet. The biggest issue for the BBC and for PSBs as a group has to be the rise of online viewing, be it on a TV set, tablet, PC or mobile phone. ![]() Taking PSBs as a whole, the BBC retained a viewing share of over 50% in 2016, down a little as an outcome of moving BBC Three online. This rises to over 66% when PSB portfolio channels are included. The over-64s spend half as much time again as the average, but crucially, the 16 – 24s now watch broadcast TV for less than 2 hours per day.įor the last four years, some 51% of TV viewing time has been spent in watching just 5 channels of the main public service broadcasters (PSBs) BBC-1, BBC-2, ITV, Ch.4 & Ch.5. Significantly, the average time spent per person watching broadcast TV is now 30 minutes per day less than in 2011. Conversely, the stability of broadcast television revenue is remarkable, with less than a 5% change since £13.3bn in 2011 to £13.8bn in 2016 (CPI adjusted). Although these figures are tabled under the ’UK television industry’, they are excluded from the £54.9bn Ofcom ascribes to the ‘Total UK communications revenue’. The attributed revenue shows this as the fastest growing sector of the television and AV market, with returns of £0.6bn in 2013 and £1.7bn in 2016 a growth rate of over 40% pa. Nonetheless, it compares the competitive relevance of audio video (AV) online distribution with broadcasting. Ofcom’s mandate to regulate broadcasting was extended earlier this year to the BBC, but its writ does not run to internet content. The CMR draws no attention to this, but shows that Ofcom’s regulatory responsibility for broadcast impartiality is fast becoming out of date with the rapid expansion of online TV mainly sourced from the US and unregulated within the UK. Non-broadcast radio and television services delivered online have no such obligation. “To ensure that news, in whatever form, is reported with due accuracy and presented with due impartiality”. In the UK, the impartiality of broadcast news is set out in the Communications Act of 2003. ![]() It is time to shout about this from the rooftops.Īnalysis of Ofcom’s Communications Market Report (CMR) for 2017 brings home just how close we may be to the cliff edge of unregulated radio and television news as an influence on British society as we have come to know it. Ofcom is the regulator for broadcasting standards, but the content of online radio and television is beyond its scope. It is about the current broadcast landscape and the non-regulation of internet content and reflects Hugh’s viewpoint. This post is by committee member Hugh Sheppard. ![]()
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