adios!
I honestly haven't got the slightest clue what "most typical watched shows" you can "no longer" download. Are you talking about Amazon Unbox? Bittorrent files?Park84 said:Why keep on paying for Tivo when you no longer can download those most typical watched shows? Why not just pay your cable service provider @ a much lower rate for their DVR box? Why is TIVO screwing their customers? WHY? Why did I even upgrade to TIVO desktop Plus to convert to my iPod? WHY?
I'm just venting, but I am really ticked off @ Tivo for real. This copy protection really stinks and Tivo is not much better than a standard DVR box now.
I am sure I'm not the only one feeling this way so I just figured I vent here. Sorry for those who had to waste their time to read this... I just want my money back because I am getting less service from what I signed up for.
Lost a customer for sure..... Time to eBay my Tivo Box!
Thats what I want to know. So far, I have no problem downloadinf to my PC anything that I have recorded on my Tivo since T2G came out, except for the unbox stuff, but thats not an issue as I can easily redownload whenever I want.MickeS said:I honestly haven't got the slightest clue what "most typical watched shows" you can "no longer" download. Are you talking about Amazon Unbox? Bittorrent files?
What copy protection?
Even if you're just venting, you could try to make some sort of sense.
Oh, and bye.
Could the OP be talking about the issue posted on this thread? I haven't seen this crop up on our TiVo's, but it seems something might be going on.Park84 said:Why keep on paying for Tivo when you no longer can download those most typical watched shows? Why not just pay your cable service provider @ a much lower rate for their DVR box? Why is TIVO screwing their customers? WHY? Why did I even upgrade to TIVO desktop Plus to convert to my iPod? WHY?
I'm just venting, but I am really ticked off @ Tivo for real. This copy protection really stinks and Tivo is not much better than a standard DVR box now.
I am sure I'm not the only one feeling this way so I just figured I vent here. Sorry for those who had to waste their time to read this... I just want my money back because I am getting less service from what I signed up for.
Lost a customer for sure..... Time to eBay my Tivo Box!
Could be. It's kinda hard to tell.richsadams said:Could the OP be talking about the issue posted on this thread?
This may be another case of a single rant post because the person is mad(understandable) but then they never come back as they do not realize there may be an answer to be had from this fine forum.richsadams said:All true...we need more info to help this person...if they can be helped and if they ever come back..
I'd bet that some people come here thinking that they are posting to Tivo, Inc. (like that would make a difference) and don't realize that we're just other customers here.ZeoTiVo said:This may be another case of a single rant post because the person is mad(understandable) but then they never come back as they do not realize there may be an answer to be had from this fine forum.
The cable channels in general are not demanding to be protected (obvious exceptions of HBO and other premium channels). Cox has made the decision to protect those channels for (from!) you. Comcast made a corporate decision not to protect the cable channels after looking into consumer complaints so Comcast franchises mostly do not.Hate to bump an old topic from the dead but I'm finding myself in a similar situation as Park84, except I'm not cancelling my tivo any time soon. I want to be able to copy recordings that friends/relatives would want to see but probably didn't know about & missed. I recorded a barenaked ladies thing on A&E this past weekend for my cousin but it was protected.
My question is, are all cable channels demanding to be set to copy protected or is Cox (San Diego) doing this automatically in error? I could understand HBO et al (which I don't subscribe to). I don't get why Comedy Central would be. I want to at least make sure I dont have a hardware/cablecard problem. Broadcast channels are unprotected; cable channels are protected.
Did this TiVo employee happen to point out specific rules? Unless there's been some recent FCC rule making to this effect, I don't believe that's actually true. The rules used to leave it up to the cable provider's discretion. They can apply Copy One Generation protection to anything other than core basic cable (any rebroadcast of over-the-air transmission, digital or analog, have to be placed in the core basic tier, so they can never put copy protections on that stuff). They can only apply Copy Never protection to Pay-Per-View and Video On Demand; TiVo won't make a permanent recording of things marked Copy Never.According to a TiVo employee I talked to at CES this year it's actually illegal for your cable company to copy protect shows which the content provider did not specifically request to be protected. So if your cable company is blindly copy protecting every channel then a call to the local cable regulatory commission or even the FCC might be in order.
Dan
I wish that I was as trustful as you, but before I believe that I'd have to see a citation of the actual rule. We can find the cable provider rules in the FCC regulations which apparently give the cable provider discretion on the application of Copy One Generation protections, but this is the first I've heard of any rule forbidding it. If it existed, I have to believe that someone in these discussions would have found and cited it by now, so I really seriously doubt that it does exist, no matter how highly placed in TiVo the person claiming the existence of such a rule is.First off I'm not a lawyer, nor an expert on the subject. However it was my understanding that this employee was saying that that the content creator (i.e. the channel) has the option to add copy protection if they see fit (with the exception of OTA broadcasters) however it is illegal for the cable company to apply copy protection to the content without the permission of the content creator.
So the rule we have talked about here before, where it is illegal for them to protect OTA broadcasts, still applies. This is just something new I heard where apparently it's also illegal for them to protect the other channels unless they have permission from the content provider.
Now for all I know Cox makes all their content providers sign an agreement which allows them to protect the content at their own discretion. But if not then they are in violation of that rule/law and can be forced to disable the copy protection.
Also, this was a very high ranked TiVo employee and not some "booth babe", so I trust he knew what he was saying.
Dan