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Date: 2000-08-08

WorldSpace: Digitales SATradio gegen Zensur


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In Kombination mit der etwas neueren Satellitentechnologie
sowie der anderswo beliebten, noch neueren MP3
Kompression ist eine neue Form des guten alten Radios
entstanden, die den Zensoren nicht-demokratisch regierten
Staaten durchaus Kopfzerbrechen bereiten kann.

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A satellite radio service could help beat the censors

THE BBC last week took the first steps towards preventing
its World Service radio broadcasts being jammed or switched
off by governments or rebels that don't like its message. The
corporation has signed up to a digital satellite radio service
called WorldSpace, which will deliver a hard-to-jam signal
from space to a new generation of digital receivers.

The BBC hopes the deal will prevent a rerun of what
happened during the Kosovo conflict, when Serb troops
quickly put local World Service transmitters out of action. It
also wants to get its news programmes into countries such
as Burma and Iraq, whose governments ban local relays and
jam short-wave broadcasts from outside.

"In any coup the rebels aim for the media," says Mike
Whittaker of the World Service. "WorldSpace has such a
huge footprint that we can transmit a high- quality signal over
a wide area." World Service spokeswoman Gill Webber adds:
"We are keeping hold of the short-wave services but are
using WorldSpace because they are not under the control of
local governments."
...
Ethiopian lawyer Noah Samara, who calls the BBC deal "a
historic milestone", set up WorldSpace in 1990 with the idea
of using satellite technology to broadcast to "information-
poor" countries in the developing world. He has raised $1.1
billion for the project from unnamed investors, and has
already launched two of the three geostationary satellites the
service needs. The third is due to be launched next year.
Each satellite has three beams, and the beams all carry 96
channels of audio coded using the MP3 sound-compression
system that's used to send music over the Internet.

Voll text
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news_225056.html
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relayed by
Andrew Shen <shen@epic.org>
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edited by
published on: 2000-08-08
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