The “Right to Information” and Digital Broadcasting: About Monsters, Invisible Men and the Future of European Broadcasting Regulation

Abstract

As a result of modern content management technologies, individualisation, differentiation and conditioned access step into the place of traditional models of broad-casting content. In the light of these developments, the article provides a critical analysis of the proposals that were made to revise the Television Without Frontiers Directive and to protect “the right to information” of the broadcasting audience. The article will show that instead of modernizing the European broadcasting framework the proposals are focused on maintaining the status quo of an analogue past. It will make an argument in favor of a more viewer-oriented approach.

Mediarecht

Bibtex

Article{nokey, title = {The “Right to Information” and Digital Broadcasting: About Monsters, Invisible Men and the Future of European Broadcasting Regulation}, author = {Helberger, N.}, url = {http://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/ELR_2006_2.pdf}, year = {0303}, date = {2006-03-03}, journal = {Entertainment Law Review}, number = {2}, abstract = {As a result of modern content management technologies, individualisation, differentiation and conditioned access step into the place of traditional models of broad-casting content. In the light of these developments, the article provides a critical analysis of the proposals that were made to revise the Television Without Frontiers Directive and to protect “the right to information” of the broadcasting audience. The article will show that instead of modernizing the European broadcasting framework the proposals are focused on maintaining the status quo of an analogue past. It will make an argument in favor of a more viewer-oriented approach.}, keywords = {Mediarecht}, }