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- (This article is from The Lowell Sun - May 5th, 1991)
-
-
- CABLE COMPANIES GETTING READY TO "ZAP" VIDEO PIRATES !!!
-
- BOSTON (AP) - Attention, cable television pirates: The Jig could soon
- be up!
- Cable operations around New England are cracking down on people stealing
- cable television, some with the help of "electronic bullets" - computer
- programs instructing converters atop TV sets to malfunction if they have
- been altered by "black boxes" or computer chips.
- The chips descramble so-called premium channels such as NESN, Sports
- Channel, HBO and Pay-Per-View. The bullets, fired from cable company
- offices, have no affect on legitimate customers.
- "We will be instituting new security stratigies to disable illegally
- used cable eguipment and prosecute cable theft," Continental Cablevision
- announced in recent newspaper ads.
- Continental, based in Portsmouth, N.H. serves about 550,000 subscribers,
- mainly north and south of Boston.
- On March 13, American Cablevision in New York City fired a bullet at
- people stealing its service and pressed and pressed civil charges against
- 317 people who brought their their damaged boxes in for repair.
- Calls from those people effectively became evidence that could be used
- against them.
- "That's the beauty of the bullet," said Tom Steel, general counsel at
- the New England Cable Television Association in Braintree, told the Boston
- Herald.
- "It's great for court," Steel said. "There's the evidence. In essence,
- your case is made."
- Continental and New England Sports Network won a $35,000 settlement out
- of court in 1989 against three Quincy bars accused of stealing signals with
- a satellite dish.
- But the theft by residential cable customers is a tougher matter. Theft
- by residential customers cost cable companies about $3 billion a year,
- according to a national cable trade group.
- "Many people think of cable theft as a cocktail crime. It's not," said
- Charles Schueller at Cablevision of Boston. It's stealing and it costs
- regular subscribers money."
- He said Cablevision which serves about 115,000 customers in Boston and
- Brookline , plans to step up its pursuit of residential cable pirating.
- "We have been very successful in our efforts to stem theft in the
- commercial universe," Schueller said, "and we expect to be as successful
- in the residential universe."
- The cable bullet has also been used in Philadelphia. In Worcester and
- western Massachusetts, General Media fired bullets, but spokesman Richard
- Kirsche would not provide us with details.
- "It's a hard problem," said Kirsche, director of engineering at General
- Media. "You're dealing with kind of a Robin Hood factor here. It doesn't
- really work out that way. It costs people who are paying for the service
- legitimately."
- A black box or computer chip used to unscramble cable signals, which
- could cost between $200 and $400 , is ruined once the bullet is fired.
-
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-
- ( A CABLE TV PIRATES POINT OF VIEW )
-
- "BULLSHIT and BALDERDASH!"
-
- July 16, 1991
-
-
- I have had a "Pirate Cable Box" for over two years and I want to set
- the record straight on what I feel is happening in the cable TV world.
- The fact is that cable companies are out to fleece every cent out of
- every subscriber that the law will allow.
- Seven years ago when I first got cable television, my monthly bill was
- about $8.00, including HBO. Today my basic cable bill is about $17.00,
- and I no longer pay for or subscribe to HBO.
- If a person decides to subscribe to HBO, Cinemax, Showtime and The
- Movie Channel, his bill will easily run $45 - $50 a month. If a person
- is also addicted to sports, then he MUST have The New England Sports
- Network (NESN) and The Sports Channel. He is now going to pay about
- $65 a month.
- Wait! This subscriber also has children. He needs The Disney Channel
- for those kids and must now pay about another $6 a month! He will now
- be dishing out approximately $75 a month to the cable company.
- In order for the cable subscriber to keep track of what he is watching
- the cable company will sell him "Cable Guide" for one dollar more each
- month. The book is actually worth its weight in gold to a cable pirate
- because it lists every program on every premium channel and on Pay-Per-
- View for an entire month. The irony of the book is that the publisher
- of Cable Guide kicks back 50% of that $1.00 monthly charge to the cable
- company.
- The first and largest misconception of the above article is that "it
- cost the cable companies about $3 billion a year." That is bull-shit!
- The truth is that cable companies DO have about $3 billion in premium
- programs stolen a year, BUT if people had to pay for premium channels
- and Pay-Per-View programs and movies, they would NOT get them. It is
- that simple. A good example of this fact is that I watched the James
- Brown Special last month for free. If the only way that I could have
- seen that show was to pay $19.95 for it, I would have gone to bed very
- early. The Razor Rudduck Vs. Mike Tyson rematch was on Pay-Per-View
- last week, BUT again if I had to pay $30 - $40 fto view it, I would
- have been playing with my computer that evening. My local cable company
- has had no monetary loss because of what I have seen and what I will see.
- Cable companies ALWAYS exagerate their losses in order to get the law
- enforcement agencies involved in their never ending battle to increase
- corporate revenues.
- Here is an interesting little note in dollars & cents about how much
- a cable TV subscriber is worth. If a cable company wants to sell part
- or all of its subscribers to another cable company, for each cable
- running to a single television, the selling price is between $1500 -
- $2000 per subscriber. That means if you live on a street with 100
- other houses, the selling price of your street would be between
- $150,000.00 to $200,000.00 Continental Cable Company has 550,000
- subscribers. That adds up to $1,100,000,000.00. Thats over a billion
- bucks if you have a problem with big numbers.
- Pay-Per-View is the BIGGEST rip off. They charge $5.00 so you can
- watch one movie one time. If you fall asleep during the movie, tough
- luck. Pay another $5.00 the next day to see what you missed.
- The biggest rip offs that Pay-Per-View has to offer are live sports
- events such as WWF Wrestling. You get to see the likes of Hulk Hogan,
- Jake The Sake, Brutus The Barber Beefcake, and a multitude of others
- pretend that they are wrestling for a mere $35 to $40. The guy that
- really makes me sick is Rick "Nature Boy" Flair!" He looks like a God
- damn over the hill faggot.
- Can you imagine Mike Tyson being paid $40 million for fighting any
- other human being? Mike Tyson would gladly fight for $1 million if
- that was all he could get. Pay-Per-View has accelerated the overpaid
- athlete syndrome far beyond what closed circuit broadcasts had ever
- dreamed of.
- Since the conception of Pay-Per-View, a cable subscriber now has
- the opportunity to send $100 to $150 every month to his cable company.
- Those type of monthly bills are insane. Morons and millionaires are
- the only ones who would pay that much.
- The only sane alternative to battle these absurd monthly charges is
- cable TV piracy. If you decide that you are sick and tired of being
- gouged by your local cable company each month, then get your own pirate
- cable TV box.
- There are companies that sell "altered" cable TV boxes, and they
- work perfectly. They will descramble ALL the channels that your cable
- company offers. These companies are easily located by looking at
- advertisements in the back section of Popular Electronics and Popular
- Science. These companies are usually out of state, but they do have
- toll free 800 numbers. You can tell that they are not 100% legitimate
- because they will not sell a box to anyone in their own state. This is
- to avoid local prosecution and other legal ramifications. The people
- who work at these companies are a bunch of crooks so don't feel silly
- or embarrassed about calling and talking to them.
- Without going into a long technical discourse of addressable cable
- boxes, you should understand the following two paragraphs.
- It is true that cable TV companies do send out signals that tell a
- normal cable box what to do. This is called an "addressable system."
- The cable TV box atop of your television will respond to several commands
- that the cable company sends in a signal to your box. It can turn on or
- off any particular channel. It can also turn the entire box off if you
- do not pay your cable bill. There are several other commands that the
- boxes receives such as the time, but an altered cable box ignores the
- "scramble" and the "shut off" commands.
- A special chip is added to the altered boxes that you buy. This
- special chip keeps a "gate" open so all of the channels will be
- unscrambled. This extra chip also eliminates the addressable option
- so the cable company can not turn off any channels - they also can
- not shut off the box for non-payment of the cable TV bill.
- THE ELECTRONIC BULLET: As the above article explained, some cable
- tv companies are shooting "electronic bullets" at pirates in an attempt
- to burn out their pirate cable boxes.
- Gathering information on these bullets seems almost impossible
- because the cable TV companies want to keep their little weapon a
- deep dark secret.
- Unfortunately, the people who are selling the altered cable boxes
- do not understand or care about the bullet. They are very much like
- the cable companies in the respect that all they want to do is grab
- all the money they can, and they do not give a shit about you, or
- any future problems that you may encounter with their box. I called
- several of the toll-free numbers from my list of altered cable TV box
- companies in an attempt to gather some information about how to combat
- the bullet, but I received little or no help. One person told me to
- buy two FM Traps from Radio Shack and put them in line between the
- "in" cable and the altered cable box. This was a waste of time and
- money because it blocked the information signals the cable box needs
- to perform other functions.
- Every company denied that the bullet would affect their pirate box.
- They all said that their boxes were immune to the bullet. I was
- told that the bullet would only affect boxes that were owned by the
- cable TV companies that had been tampered with.
- This will not be proven to me until I read another article in the
- newspaper that my cable company has been sending out bullets and I
- see that my box did or did not burn out as the article said it would.
- The 317 people who had charges pressed against them in New York got
- exactly what they deserved. Imagine 317 people calling their cable
- company to complain that their illegal and stolen cable boxes had
- stopped working. It never ceases to amaze me about how utterly stupid
- people can be!
- This is a very unsettling situation because the cable company who
- brought charges against these 317 people did so in a Federal court.
- If you do not already realize it, the Federal Government is wants to
- have as much control over American citizens in every manner and way
- possible. Once again a Federal Magistrate and a Federal Judge have
- given themselves more power over its citizens by agreeing to hear this
- case. Each time the Feds get involved in such matters, a little bit
- more of our constitutional freedom is lost.
- To sum this article up in one sentence; "Knowing what I now know
- about cable companies, pirate cable TV boxes, the Feds involvement in
- enforcing cable company rights, and the possibility of what the bullet
- might do, if I did not already own an altered box, I would buy another
- one today!"
-