View this site in pounds View this site in dollars

Latest Technology News from Pulse Web Hosting

Latest Technology News:

Technology news from around the world subscribe to our RSS feed.

New rules for 'on-demand TV and videos'

29/05/07 - The European Commission has agreed on new rules for on-demand television video content on the internet. European ministers say that the new version of the 1989 "TV Without Frontiers" directive will allow more advertising and product placement making the audiovisual market in the EU more competitive.
As part of the new directive viewers will be informed when product placement takes place.

The directive continues to prohibit product placement in children's and news programmes.

Under the directive broadcasters are subject to the regulations of their home country, even if their programmes are transmitted in other nations with differing rules, known as the country-of-origin principle.

The new legislation, The Audiovisual Media Services Directive, is scheduled to come into force by the end of the year having received the backing of the European Commission, the European Parliament and the member states' governments.

While broadcasters will have to remain limited to 12 minutes of advertising per hour the new directive removes the current limit of three hours per day of advertising.

Viviane Reding, EU Media Commissioner said: "[the directive] brings Europe's audiovisual policies into the 21st Century, providing a welcome shot in the arm to industry. It promises less regulation, better financing for European content and higher visibility to Europe's key values, cultural diversity and the protection of minors."
Link to this news article using the url below:

http://www.pulsewebhosting.com/news/new-rules-for-on-demand-tv-and-videos/98/

Published Date: 2007-05-29 13:14:51

Subscribe to our RSS News feed:
The web hosting rss feed Web Hosting RSS

Completely free trial of our power plus hosting package

Free web builder, create pages, insert images with ease

Your account

Latest News

(RSS)

Floppy disks dropped by superstore

31/01/07 - The computing giant PC World has said it will no longer sell floppy disks in its stores. After more than two decades they are now deemed surplus to requirements, Email, CDs and USB memory sticks have replaced them as storage devices.

Intel to be investigated

The world's biggest computer chip-maker, is under investigation by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo as it has allegedly broken anti-trust laws. Claims have been made that Intel stopped customers from dealing with rival Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Copying CDs to be made legal?

Copying music from a CD to a home computer could be made legal according to new government proposals up for public consultation on 8 April. Millions of listeners already "rip" music to their computers and transfer the files to MP3 players, although the process is technically against copyright law. But the Intellectual Property Minister Lord Triesman claimed the law should be changed to "keeps up with the times".