A row over a telco's attempt to become a TV broadcaster - by piping content
over broadband internet connections - has highlighted the confusion that results
when new technology meets old communications laws in Korea's fast moving
internet market.
Hanaro
Telecom, Korea's second-largest fixed-line carrier, is hoping to win 1.5
million subscribers by 2008 for its new HanaTV video-on-demand service.
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But cable TV operators are up in arms at what they see as an attempt to
muscle in on their already crowded market.
As television broadcasters need to be licensed by law in Korea, the
government is being asked to adjudicate in this legal grey area.
Korea's
Cable
TV Association has announced that it will ask officials to prosecute Hanaro.
In turn, the telecoms firm said that it would countersue the Cable TV
Association for libel.
The main regulatory body, the
Korean
Broadcasting Commission, has said that it could penalise Hanaro if it is
determined to have infringed broadcasting laws, the
Joongang
Daily reported today.
Hanaro has countered that it does not fall under the official definition of a
broadcaster because its programmes are transmitted on-demand, and not according
to a regular schedule.
Hanaro already has 3.6 million broadband subscribers, so the potential
revenue from its IPTV service, which costs from $13 a month plus fees of around
$1.50 per programme, is significant.
The new service has gained 20,000 subscribers in its first two weeks, and
Hanaro hopes to be making $200m a year from 1.5 million users by 2008.
The telco, which restructured last year, suffered an unexpectedly large net
loss of $6.6m in its latest quarter.
Hanaro has struggled in a uneven battle with
Korea
Telecom, the country's giant incumbent telecoms provider. Hanaro is
controlled by US-based investors at
AIG and
Newbridge
Capital.
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