British Government Considers Tax on Computers 638
Jumbo Jimbo writes "A story in the UK Times talks about the UK government's proposals to tax personal computers, as a replacement for the television license currently paid by every household with a TV. These are proposals and aren't intended for a few years yet, but due to the growth of computer ownership, this would probably amount to a tax on nearly everybody. Hope it's not per computer, or those people with a pile of old 286s in the shed could be in for a shock."
Hmmm (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Informative)
If you have a tuning crystal (or equivalent) you have to pay unless you can prove it has never been used for the purpose of receiving TV programs. So, unless you live in a Faraday cage and can prove you have no way of receiving the programs, you have to pay.
Having a TV you never turn on does not exempt you. Not having an aerial does not exempt you. Using your TV for other things and never watching TV does not exempt you.
The license is for capability, not use.
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
(Wow, that sounds like paranoid ranting from an American perspective, but I understand enforcement is actually done that way in the UK).
I don't think people are about to stop watching TV in exchange for PC-based watching, so I don't see much validity in the license fee for computers.
From what I can see, the Media Center PC is still a flop.
D
No you're wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
They do hide the fact that you can do this pretty well though.
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:5, Interesting)
No, you are wrong. A friend has a TV which he only uses as a display for retro consoles and home computers. A man from TV Licensing dropped by unannounced one day, observed that the aerial lead was disconnected and all channels detuned from those frequencies in use in his region, and declared that no license fee was payable.
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:5, Interesting)
Here in the UK, the Police are not allowed to enter your property with out your permission or a warrant.
However, not many people know that certain agencies are permitted, at any time.
HM Customs & Excise can without notice, but even British Gas and the Post Office are permitted to enter your home.
I was surprised when I found out about the Post Office - gas I can understand for gas leaks etc.
There's another couple I can't remember off hand that have that permission, so I'm not sure about TV Licensing, but I'm pretty sure they can.
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:3, Interesting)
Might be worth pointing out that the House of Commons has already voted to reverse this in the Prevention of Terrorism Bill and the House of Lords will probably allow it.
http://www.spy.org.uk/spyblog/archives/2005/02/mo
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts1995/Ukpga_1
Gas Act 1995
22.--(1) Where a public gas transporter has reasonable cause to suspect--
(a) that gas conveyed by him is escaping, or may escape, in any premises; or
(b) that gas so conveyed which has escaped has entered, or may enter, any premises,
any officer authorised by the transporter may, on production of some duly authenticated document showing his authority, enter the premises
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:3, Funny)
"I'm conveying gas. May I use your bathroom? Oh, step aside, of course I may!"
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
If you don't let the inspector in, they can only gain entry to search for an illegal telly by providing evidence that you have one to a court - typically this will be done by using TV detector equipment, or observing the glow of a TV through the curtains from the street at night. Not sure if they use that one so much today seeing as it could be a PC monitor and not a telly.
However, if you don't have a telly and you don't let the inspectors in to have a look around, they will keep pestering you with letters and doorstepping until you give in. From the TV licencing people's PoV it makes sense as only something like 1% of the population genuinely don't own a TV, but it does royally piss off the people who don't and keep getting pestered.
A few years ago they ran an advertising campaign where they displayed randomly selected street signs from around the country with the slogan "we know that X households in this street are watching television illegally" but they had to drop it after complaints from the residents in those streets who felt they were being unfairly accused.
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
But the BBC says this [tvlicensing.co.uk]:
"If you use a TV or any other device to receive or record TV programmes (for example, a VCR, set-top box, DVD recorder or PC with a broadcast card) - you need a TV Licence. You are required by law to have one."
Looks like using one for a DVD player, or your old Commadore 64 would be OK without a licence, the key is "If you use", not "If you have".
You DO need one "If you use" a tuner card in your PC to watch TV, but not if you use it for digitising home movies.
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:3, Informative)
Please let me show you...
"If you use a TV or any other device to receive or record TV programmes (for example, a VCR, set-top box, DVD recorder or PC with a broadcast card) - you need a TV Licence."
http://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/information/
It's HOW you use it, not what your equipment can be used FOR.
I don't have a TV tuned it or aerialed up at ALL, so called up the TV li
Not strictly true (Score:3, Insightful)
They will pester you but if you can prove that you have rendered it incapable of receiving a broadcast, and detuning the receiver is enough, then you are not technically breaking the law.
It's hard to do on "idiot" proof sets, but it can and has been done.
Re:Not strictly true (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nope, you are wrong. (Score:3, Informative)
And the term "television receiver" is defined by Regulation 9 of The Communications (Television Licensing) Regulations 2004 [hmso.gov.uk] as:
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Good. Another 12 years before I risk trying to evade certain taxes.
I'm sorry, but on this one they can go jump. VAT already means that over a hundred quid of a decent computer goes towards absolutely nothing to do with the manufacture or sale fo the actual equipment. That's more than the cost of some of the components, and almost as much as a retail copy of Windows.
Yes, I know that governments have to get their money somewhere. It just seems wrong to me that, for example, if going for a 12" iBook with a 60GB drive, 512MB RAM and Bluetooth module the cost of the upgrades is 3GBP less than the cost of the tax incurred.
(And that's with upgrades that some people class as being overpriced compared to third-party alternatives)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Ultimately this means that for my TV License fee the BBC will have to provide internet streams of those programs in a free and open way (ala direc codec?). This is pretty good, the BBC already make most stuff available (Radio) for the week after broadcast, and have some channels internet streamed (News 24), so a license fee would likely bring more of this.
I pay for the BBC already, so expanding it to my computer (where I actually access it most) is fine by me.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe in the UK, maybe where you live -- but in Germany such a "Computer Tax" will be introduced in 2007 as an extension of the current "broadcast reception fee" which every holder of a radio or TV has to pay. No idea about the situation in the UK, but in Germany public broadcasting stations are installed by law and have to provide a so-called "bas
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Informative)
Enforcement is traditionally carried out by TV detector vans with DF detection equipment (or hand-portable versions of the same) - the flyback transformer frequency is apparently pretty easy to detect and can be spotted from the road. You don't need to know what they're watching, just that they're watching *something*. Most houses have licenses, so I suspect they'll concentrate on hous
Total conjecture (Score:5, Informative)
Hard to enforce (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hard to enforce (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Hard to enforce (Score:2)
Re:Hard to enforce (Score:2)
Not really.
I haven't had a TV for five years. They sent me lots of threatening letters for the first couple of years, and I diligently responded to them.
After a while, I got sick of ansering their increasingly aggressive letters (huge bold font "What will YOU do when we visit ELMS CLOSE?"). When I stopped answering, they stopped sending. We had 1 (one) visit from them, about three years ago. My wife was too busy with the kids and said she di
Of course they'd propose it... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Of course they'd propose it... (Score:2)
Saw this yesterday (Score:2, Informative)
Not mooted until 2017 currently. The playing field will be a lot different by then, so it may be moved forward.
I would expect the fees would be a lot lower than the £120 TV licence currently in place. PC users would not be accessing BBC content 24/7.
Re:Saw this yesterday (Score:2, Insightful)
Which will mean competing for ratings, which will mean more reality crap being flooded over the channel, which will mean an end to the BBC's quality programming. No other channel in the UK can compete with the BBC's documentaries (and dare I say it, cult comedy - QI, HIGNFY, etc).
I'm perfectly happy to pay the liscense fee, and to be fair, the license fee is actually a lot less than what people
Not convinced (Score:5, Insightful)
If you buy a television, you're pretty likely to be watching tv shows on it, and therefore the license fee seems like a good idea. With PCs, the scope of activity is pretty much unlimited, so I can't really see the connection between computers and BBC funding. Although, this may all change in the future as no-one really yet knows how television will eventually integrate with computers. All we can do is speculate.
VAT (Score:2)
If the issue is that people will one day (heh) be able to watch the telly thanks to broadband internet at home, why not have a small but compulsory licence fee on home internet connections? It's not like conventional TV where any old bit of wire can pick up the transmissions, you'd need a suitably authorised ISP and whatever to connec
That's it! (Score:2)
"Let me tell you how it will be" (Score:3, Funny)
</GEORGEHARRISON>
Moll.
A realistic option. But currently *households* (Score:2)
Some perspective (Score:5, Insightful)
TWW
Article summary (Score:2, Informative)
"THE BBC licence fee should be replaced by a tax on the ownership of a personal computer instead of a television, ministers said yesterday.
Tessa Jowell told the BBC that the licence fee would be retained for at least another ten years until 2017 in return for abolishing the Board of Governors. But the Culture Secretary conceded that technological advances would mean that a fee based on
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Random Debate, not laws in progress (Score:5, Insightful)
As an MP was rightly pointing out, there is a potential loophole where a household may not own any televisions at all, and only computers and monitors (without any tv tuner card, as thats already covered) through which they may be able to watch the increasing amount of tv programs the bbc make available over the internet, and thus avoid paying the tv license fee under the current rules.
its pretty obvious that someone is going to suggest 'tax all computers instead then' as a solution to that loop hole, it doesnt mean thats sensible or will ever be seriously considered, its just media sensationalism on an otherwise dull topic.
Not a bad idea. (Score:2)
They could just add a small percentage tax to the sale of all new computers, and use the funds raised to develop interesting projects like Westminster Wireless City [westminster.gov.uk], or to start giving us proper broadband speeds (ie 10/100 Mbs) in London (obviously they shouldn't bother with any of this stuff in the North or the countryside).
Re:Not a bad idea. (Score:2)
The problem with this is it would be sticking extra tax on computers on top of the VAT which, unless I'm very much mistaken, I'm not alone in wishing was reduced.
I always find the ex-VAT price to be pretty much what I want to pay. Granted lessening tax would probably not see an equivalent drop in prices but at least the money would be staying somewhere within the computer/sales industry. (It's the going outside that ticks me off)
I do think that retail prices would still stay kinda low to stop people fee
Re:Not a bad idea. (Score:2, Funny)
Yes, I personally can't wait to pay extra on my next computer purchase so you lot can sit by the Thames sipping shandy and downloading Olympic Bid screensavers over your free WLAN :p
Concerned, of Aberdeen
tax on windows? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:tax on windows? (Score:2, Interesting)
What does a TV licence give you? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've since emigrated to Australia and here is where you see what effect the TV licence has: the BBC stations provide a benchmark of quality that the commercial stations have to match and they generally do. Well, compared to the Australian stations, they do.
Australian commercial stations treat the audience like a numbers game. They won't make a commitment to a series unless it keeps getting great ratings, and by 'commitment', I mean that they won't keep a series in prime time long enough for it to the story to mature and to catch on (examples: Farscape got booted to beyond midnight after about 4 episodes and you should have seen the backflip with The Sopranos series 4) or they'll decide to axe a show because the station owner doesn't like what he sees (example: Packer pulling the "Michallef" show because of a comment Michallef made).
They show movies, but intersperse them with so many adverts, animated station ID's, "what's next" scrolling banners and the like that you lose any sense of the 'magic' that a good movie can bring. Maybe British TV has gone to hell since I left, but I doubt it can be as bad as commercial Australian TV.
A solution for viewing sanity is the PVR and here's where I link back to the posted topic: by taxing PCs, the British government ministers are looking to the future (2017) when TVs are computers in their own right and internet broadcasting is a much, much bigger phenomenon. Provided that the tax keeps the quality of programming high, then you can't complain - the money is going where it should and you don't end up with a crappy viewing experience.
Re:What does a TV licence give you? (Score:2)
Not only does that (by forcing ratings requirements into the equation) undermine the principle of pursuing quality and fairness above all, but it has no sensible basis as a means of raising tax*.
The Beeb should receive a block grant, possibly index linked, possibly derived from the number of recei
Elitist! (Score:3, Insightful)
Let me ask you this: who defines "quality" in TV? If no one wants to watch what you call "quality" TV, then why should they pay a tax for it? The only possible just and reasonable justification for a tax on TV would be if the results were distributed among producers based on viewer ratings. Anything else would be, at least, und
Re:What does a TV licence give you? (Score:3, Insightful)
Tax on what? (Score:2)
Self build? (Score:2)
Seriously though, they will need to ban self built computers if they wish to tax as many people as possible.
BBC programs on the net (Score:2)
Um, so who's forcing the BBC to provide content for free on the net? And how is this justification for a tax on anyone who owns a computer, whether they use it to access BBC content or not? What about companies, do they have to pay? Surely it would make more sen
Also in Belgium (Score:2)
If this proposal becomes law, I will not buy a computer in Belgium anymore. I live close enough to the German and Dutch border so I'll just buy my equipment there.
For those interested, more info can be found here: http://gee [geenpctaks.be]
Re:Also in Belgium (Score:2)
I do believe that Canadians pay a levy per blank media item.
For viewing a "television" stream over the Internet, then they can easily levy a duty on the broadband connection to cover the lost License Fees o
Re:Also in Belgium (Score:3, Informative)
Ah but unfortunately it doesn't work that way. That would still be a copyright infringement and remain illegal under the current proposal. Think about it: if the 40 euro covered whatever copyright infring
Blanket license seems silly (Score:5, Interesting)
What they can do is this. Keep the TV license as it stands. However, if you want to watch BBC TV content on the Internet, you must log into the BBC website, providing your TV license details. This shows you have a TV license, and then you can go and watch BBC TV on the Internet.
This means people with TVs only are paying and people with no TV but a computer and broadband get to support the BBC too if they are using BBC content. And people with both a TV and a computer don't end up paying twice since they supply their TV license details to the BBC website when creating their account.
BBC Radio (Score:4, Informative)
Also, I think that it is important that the BBC (especially radio) remains free to access. Personally, I'd like to see the BBC adopt a model such as Mandrake use, i.e. people who like it pay, in order to keep it free for everyone to use.
Sweden (Score:3, Informative)
The TV-license is going to transform into a "media license" and everyone with access to a computer, TV or other "media"-item is going to have to pay for the use of it.
Personally I'm not a fan of TV-licensing, and this is even less titillating to me.
Taxing OSes not PCs (Score:3, Insightful)
BBC starts from assumption that all PCs have software installed that makes it capable of displaying sound and video over the internet.
that's a fuck right up from the word go.
so let's assume that iWhacks, MAC OS/1, BeOS, FreeBSD, Atari ST500s and BBC Micros (the ones with the ARM processor) are all capable of viewing video and listening to sound, over the internet.
great. so the BBC must first fund [patent-unencumbered!] free software development of video and sound compression and broadcasting technology, in order to guarantee that the technology is available across all platforms.
that sounds good to me.
so your computer _is_ capable, your OS _is_ capable, but you choose _not_ to install capable software: will the BBC force people to pay a license fee just because your PC is _capable_ of being used to view video, listen to sound, and be connected to the internet?
mmm
Tax on Stupidity? (Score:3, Funny)
You have options! (Score:4, Funny)
There's no reason why you hard-working UK citizens should have to put up with this crap. Unplug your telly/pc/whatever, drive it right on down to the Thames or whatever your nearest waterhole is and TOSS IT IN!
Let "the man" in parliament know you ain't gonna pay no taxes what you ain't got been done voted fer yet. No more.
Hey, it worked for us!
Sincerely,
USA
I've been paying InterNet and TV tax in the US (Score:4, Insightful)
The various taxes and mandatory "fees" on my various phone lines is $132 a year.
This is about half what the Brits pay, but not insiginificant.
nope (Score:2)
Re:Wait.. hold on (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wait.. hold on (Score:3, Informative)
See, in Ireland the state sponsored broadcaster, RTÉ, is supported by funds from TV taxes, like the BBC. Unlike the BBC, they also show loads of advertising. You get the worst of both systems in Ireland.
Yep, we sure did. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:you see (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:you see (Score:3, Insightful)
Smuggling was big in England too, with the fortunes of some modern day companies being founded on smuggling, Avery being one of them.
Re:Detecting them? (Score:3, Interesting)
Try using an FM radio near a PC, and scan through the frequencies. All sorts of buzzing, shrieking, farting and so on can be picked up - some of the fun harmonics chatter and clunk as the screen updates or the hard disk is accessed.
On my old Atari ST, I could even tune into the sound chip, and listen to whatever it was play
Re:Detecting them? (Score:2)
They can indeed. Whether or not they actually do, as opposed to the singularly cheap option of just assuming everyone has a telly, is a matter of some debate.
Dave
Re:Detecting them? (Score:3, Interesting)
Fair point actually (Score:5, Insightful)
If I am to be taxed for ownership of a PC, with the grounds being that I can use this to access BBC-produced broadcasts, then I better actually had be able to access that content.
In other words, that content has to be accessible on a Mac, on Linux (any distro, my choice), on a PC, on some wondeful-but-yet-to-be-conceived-of OS that gets written in 2009...anything. If they're taxing me for it, then I must be able to receive the benefit the tax is actually on.
Incidently, I'm not opposed to the license fee (I'm in the UK). I believe my money to be well spent on the Beeb, though not necesasrily on television so much as radio and the internet.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Fair point actually (Score:2, Insightful)
1) If you want to put license fees on PCs, put them directly on the TV-cards. I'm using my computer for programming, haven't started my TV in months (although I own one) and I don't forsee mainboards with integrated TV tuners in the near future. So why should I pay this fee?
2) If BBC - or any other television station for that matter - will start making shows available for free as BitTorrents, for instance, I "could" be persuaded to pay said fee. Although it would make more s
Re:Fair point actually (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Fair point actually (Score:2)
Well, at the moment they use realplayer streams, but they are working on a replacement [bbc.co.uk] that should work on all platforms.
Re:Fair point actually (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's it! (Score:2)
LG "Internet Ready" Microwave Oven [ebuyer.com]
Mind the extra Slashdot spaces there kids ! or, if the link above doesn't work, go to www.ebuyer.co.uk [ebuyer.co.uk] and type "85801" in the search box to find it !
Don't know if you can get it to run Linux though
Re:Note for Americans (Score:5, Interesting)
British counter-example. [caliach.com]
Re:Note for Americans (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course this generalisation applies more to the left than to the right, but then the left are in power at the moment... The Tories still try to win votes with tax cuts, but interestingly these days they focus on choice. As you note, tax cuts are not as popular as they once were. I would suggest this is because people realise that taking money away from public services is hardly going to improve them, but that's just my feeling.
The public dental health issue is tricky, but for all other health areas the NHS is considering a lumbering dinosaur, but one that will still suffice for most people. Dental health is difficult because all the dentists are going private, and thus it is hard to actually find an NHS dentist. The quality of NHS dentists is considered by just about everyone to be equivalent to the quality of private, it's just the supply of them that is a problem.
The tax on PCs appears (I haven't RTFA) to be a possible replacement for the TV licence. If this is the case, it would not be a new tax - just moving an old one onto new technology.
Re:Note for Americans (Score:2, Insightful)
But what we also like is getting stuff at a reasonably price instead of paying through the nose for it. That's why we tend to support the BBC (cheaper than US-style subscription TV channels, which we also have, despite the fact that there's no adverts) and the health service (no need for all that ex
Re:Note for Americans (Score:3, Informative)
Since I suspect you pulled this out or your arse perhaps you could link to some scientific study to backup your theory. If not then your theory is no more valid than mine. Mine being that people in the UK do not like tax increases.
Re:Note for Americans (Score:2)
I've always thought it was to do with compromises. The government leaks a 'Tax On Computers' memo and all of us have that knee-jerk reaction. The media get its week's worth of stories. The media campaign to stop the new tax. They rally all the readers and tell them how they should think about the new tax. The government then leaks a compromise 'Tax On Calculators' tax memo and everyone is once again happy.
Mark parent down (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, in the UK, most people don't go the private route, even though it's avaliable for them.
A tax on PCs is probably one of the suggestions so that people go "OMG" and th
Re:Note for Americans (Score:2)
Re:Note for Americans (Score:5, Informative)
The point is that the NHS was very badly underfunded in the past, so increased funding was clearly needed. British people want free health care: the National Insurance premiums are based on your ability to pay and available to everyone.
Nobody in the UK *wants* to pay more taxes. However, people have made the logical connection between more funding and better services, so are prepared to pay higer taxes if it brings them a benefit. This happened back in 1997 when the right-wing Conservatives were thrown out after decades of heading towards a more US style small government, free market approach to government.
Our taxes are still lower than [eubusiness.com] much of Europe. On a £30,000 salary, you could expect to pay £5300 tax and £2800 National Insurance (health and state pension contributions)
There is something of a warm and fuzzy feeling about the NHS - it was founded in the socialist reforms after world war 2 that aimed to create a more equitable society out of the incredibly poor state the war left the UK in.
The NHS is good enough for most purposes: waiting times are down, staff recruitment is up. I went into my local hospital with a broken arm on a busy afternoon, was seen straight away and was on my way home within a couple of hours. The state of dental care is another matter, of course, and so is the whole MRSA/nursing staff not knowing how to wash their hands thing. I don't know many people with private health insurance.
Re:Note for Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
One interesting side effect of the NHS is that because they're not concerned about charging you for the treatment, the process of getting that treatment is vastly simplified --- no billing, no registration, no lengthy identification process to ensure that you are actually entitl
Re:Note for Americans (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Note for Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
UK taxes are not popular, but yes, increased taxes for important services like the National Health Services will be tolerated. We like public services, we recognise that taxes are necessary, but we don't like them, we don't generally* want more of them, and proposing a tax raise is always an unpopular move.
* Side note: I'd cheerfully p
Re:Note for Americans (Score:3, Insightful)
Note to Republicans: if you're going to cut taxes, how about you cut Government spending, first?
This last tax cut reminded me of quitting your job and buying everything with a credit card instead. I mean, uh, sure, you can do it, but eventually, you're going to get fucked.
Note to Democrats: Stop sm
Re:Define "computer". (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to mention stuff like internet-connected fridges - an internet connection tax, like one AC mentioned, is more likely. Except that most new mobile phones can connect to the Net, even if they can't display web
Re:Fuck off. (Score:2)
We are taxed to the hilt wherever possible, this isnt that unusual.
and the billions they get from stamp duty, tax on petrol etc. etc. dont get you anything back in those areas either.
If you bear in mind that you are supposed to pay tax on chip fat you have converted to diesel fuel then you will realise there is nothing unusually bizarre in taxing computers.
The reason the
Re:Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
In fact, even my XP desktop is lacking in a Microsoft tax since I actually bought my copy seperate from the components.
Re:Cue.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I use the railway daily; without it, I'd be totally stuffed, since I can't drive. And I will note here that the amount the UK government provides to its railways is laughably tiny compared to spending on the Continent. I have once used unemployment benefit, and it was fortunate that it existed, because otherwise I'd have been living under a bridge.
When I was a kid, I used the state education system. When I am old, I strongly expect to use old peoples' homes. If I have kids and then die horribly
Re:Cue.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, it ought to be, at least partially, and in the UK it's closer to being so than most places thanks to the BBC.
I'm fine with continuing to fund BBC in current manner, but you do derive benefit from it even if you never watch it, listen to the radio, or read the website.
The BBC justifies its cost due to its PR benefit alone. The world service enhances UK's reputation abroard and leads via circuitous routes to more money for British companies etc.
Increased obes
Re:Cue.. (Score:5, Informative)
Try the world! The BBC's TV and Radio programs are widely watched and listened to around the world by alot more people than use the service in the UK. I don't think people in the UK are quite aware of just how big an international PR medium the BBC is. Other countries can only dream of having a state controlled TV network that is watched by this kind of an international audience. Furthermore, at least in so far as news reporting is concerned, the BBC commands alot more respect internationally than the big US networks do (Althoug to be fair there is a number of notable exceptions to this rule among the latter but it is depressingly small) recent reporting scandals not withstanding.
Re:Cue.. (Score:3, Interesting)
The BBC is not state controlled! It is a chartered, independent [bbc.co.uk], publically funded body. The BBC's prime responsibility is to the UK public (not to the UK government, not to some media mogul). And the organisations' news division have a history of critical examination of the UK government.
I don't pay a british licence fee, but I *wish* I could (if it would allow to me access their digital satellite transmissions. It's encrypted but access is free to UK residents - which I'm n