My
attention, like that of many other Nigerians, was immediately arrested by TSTV,
the new pay-television service provider, which was announced for launched on 1
October. Pre-launch, social media platforms fizzed with excitement about the
salad of promises the new provider was making.
The
promises were brash, bold and extravagant. Of course, as with almost everything
on the social media, that notable sewer of the human psyche, things are never
what they really are. Knowing that, I kept my hopes in check. Not so for many
others, who felt the promises being made by TSTV, which had announced it would
start selling decoders on the launch day, represented freedom from perceived
oppression.
TSTV’s launch was grand. Government officials
were there in full force. Government support was there, notably with the
announcement of a three-year tax break for the company advertising itself as
wholly Nigerian. In these days of “buy Nigeria”, TSTV claim of being Nigerian
got many giddy. Only a few questioned why a company that is not pioneer in the
field was getting a tax vacation.
Post-launch,
however, the wheels started coming off. TSTV, which had on its
website-tstvafrica.com- a channel list displaying world famous broadcasters
like CNN, beIN and FOX, did not sell decoders as promised. This left many
prospective subscribers disillusioned.
Something
graver manifested when CNN and beIN wrote to the National Broadcasting
Commission (NBC) and Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) respectively, stating
that they have no content redistribution agreement with TSTV. In short, they
accused TSTV of attempted intellectual property theft.
In
a September 25 post on TSTV’s Facebook page, the company, responding to a
question asked by Ali Yakubu, said it will broadcast the English Premier
League, Spanish La Liga and UEFA Champions League. But when asked about the
frequency and the percentage of league games to be shown, no response was
issued. TSTV, before being exposed, claimed on its website that it will have 13
sports channels. Ten of these are beIN channels in addition to FOX Sports 1 and
2.
A poster on the TStv Facebook page called the
attention of others to the fact redistribution of sport content is
jurisdictional. beIN Max, one of the range of channels being offered airs
foreign league matches in the Middle East and North Africa to Arabic-speaking
audiences. The company pretended not to see it.
Both
beIN and CNN ordered TSTV to desist from including their channel logos on its
promotional materials or face litigation. TSTV responded limply-only on its
social media platforms-with the claim that the letters were fake. It never
produced letters showing agreements with those that issued the disclaimers.
Next up was FOX, which expressed similar displeasure, but hinted that the issue
could be resolved before TSTV would commence commercial operations on a new
date of 1 November, an indication that the new pay-television service provider
did not secure an agreement before claiming it had redistribution rights.
Shamefacedly,
TSTV removed the channel list from its website and avoided responding to media
enquiries on allegations of intellectual property theft. In apparent
desperation to save face, it hired a crop of shockingly ill-informed social
media users to start writing that DStv was behind its ordeal.
One
of such laughable articles claimed that DStv had gone to the content owners
that issued disclaimers with billions of naira in bribes to withdraw the rights
awarded to TSTV.
How
the writer, presumably a sentient being, believed that such a claim made sense
is something that has eluded me. Content owners want to sell if the terms are
right. Why they would need bribes to annul agreements they presumably signed
after being paid and with the possibility of litigation is something the writer
failed to explain. The writer proceeded with another extravagant claim that
DStv jammed the TSTV’s signal. How do you jam something that does not exist?
TSTV, clearly because of its squalid preparation and wish to run its shop with
another man’s stock despite not obtaining the owner’s permission, deferred its
roll out to 1 November.
As
it stands, the indication is that TSTV is trying to get in its excuses early in
anticipation of failure to meet the stratospheric expectations it has created.
It looks like a victim of its own success at failure.
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