Oh yeah, the BBC rake in tons of cash alright. Every household in Britain (with a few exceptions) has to pay a Netflix Premium sized subscription every month even if they don't use the BBC services (although, once again there are very few who don't use them). It's this guaranteed funding that has the competition here in the UK up in arms. "How can we compete", they ask "when The Beeb gets millions no matter how many folk watch, and we have to scrape around for advertisers?". The solution is that the Government restricts what the BBC can do. The BBC could give away all their content on free streams to anyone who wants them, and use that dominance to flatten all competition, but they are not allowed to, hence these restrictions.
So rather than this being a monopoly trying to extract more revenue (no one pays extra to use the BBC sounds app for example, on which all these streams can be got for free as long as you are in the UK), it a actually a potential monopoly being forced to curtail it's provision to give space for the competition to thrive. That said, the "competition" in this case is other large commercial broadcasters, and most of those get assistance of some sort too.
There is something to be said for the NPR/PBS funding model, they of course have a good reason to get their streams listened to by as many people as possible (more listeners = more potential donors). There are some really innovative (and hyper local) offerings on US Public Radio that there isn't much space for here in the UK. There are local independent broadcasters, but no where the scale and reach that you get over the pond.
Of course, this whole debate is moot now since some clever folks have worked out new URLs that work (I suspect they work because the Akamai magic allows the BBC to show they have control over who's using them).
(10-29-2023, 03:29 PM)Tim Curtis Wrote: Sounds a lot like the moOde funding model ;-)
That would be the no-profit raking in tons of cash model?