"Most BBC radio stations to become unavailable for international users"

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  • Forget It (U2079353)
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 140

    #31
    This move kind of explains the transfer of drama and speech off Radio 3 and onto Radio 4
    - see the other thread.
    Drama and speech has much less music rights cost and so can remain accessible overseas.
    By the way will Ireland count as international or as "UK" in this context?

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    • Ein Heldenleben
      Full Member
      • Apr 2014
      • 7284

      #32
      Originally posted by Forget It (U2079353) View Post
      This move kind of explains the transfer of drama and speech off Radio 3 and onto Radio 4
      - see the other thread.
      Drama and speech has much less music rights cost and so can remain accessible overseas.
      By the way will Ireland count as international or as "UK" in this context?
      That’s a very good question- I’m pretty sure it doesn’t count as UK for rights reasons but would come under the EU TV Region . In practice it’s impossible to prevent people in the Republic picking up BBC services and there are very good historical reasons for allowing them to do so. At one point I think BBC TV was rebroadcast “unofficially” through land based retransmission . Now it’s recognised that it’s not practical to prevent digital reception . But I’m pretty sure the iPlayer is not available in the Republic. I’m told there are quite a few RTÉ viewers in the North but I’ve never seen any figures.

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      • Retune
        Full Member
        • Feb 2022
        • 340

        #33
        Terrible decision on top of the existing cuts to the World Service (not to mention the brutal slashing of our overseas aid budget - Brexit Britain, it seems, continues to withdraw into its own shell). On a purely selfish note, I suppose this means having the poorly designed BBC Sounds app shoved further down my throat. I don't want to 'explore deeper context and analysis on select topics, gaining a richer understanding of the issues that matter most—all without leaving the platform', I just want to go straight to the live stream without all that nonsense. Even as it is, I seem to have to find a new streaming URL every other week to continue listening to R3 on my preferred radio app, but soon that may not be an option. Perhaps they'll kill off the remaining RSS feeds for BBC podcasts too, and everything will be forced through Sounds.

        Comment

        • Hadrian_Bolt
          Full Member
          • Mar 2025
          • 2

          #34
          Oh, how we wish this was the only awful decision made by the BBC in recent years. From rigged Blue Peter votes and competitions to the Jimmy Saville embarrassment. Sometimes it seems like they have a death-wish.

          But back to the current topic. I was enjoying listening to BBC stations (in the UK) on "Yamaha" kit which received internet streams. That is until mid-2023 when the BBC decided to discontinue their "shoutcast" streams. Presumably to stop overseas listeners from enjoying them (World Service does remain on shoutcast). Result for me was that I had to buy and fit some aerials, and buy a tuner for the dining room where there was no existing FM or DAB option.
          What a great way of alienating the licence-payer !

          I still don't regret having the Yamaha kit (with streaming capability) in three rooms. Especially because of France Musique which offers an ever-growing number of great music streams to which I find myself listening more and more. No commercials, I assume the French taxpayer pays for it. I'm grateful.

          I do understand the "broadcast rights" issues, satellite broadcasting tries to enforce this by having satellite aerials which "target" only the territories for which the transmission is intended. But with a big enough dish that could always be circumvented. And now with the internet, "dodgy" workarounds for territorial limits abound. The net result of the BBC's decision is that the rest of the world will listen to BBC stations (if they still want to) using "pirate" streams.

          Comment

          • Roger Webb
            Full Member
            • Feb 2024
            • 1093

            #35
            Originally posted by Hadrian_Bolt View Post

            But back to the current topic. I was enjoying listening to BBC stations (in the UK) on "Yamaha" kit which received internet streams. That is until mid-2023 when the BBC decided to discontinue their "shoutcast" streams. Presumably to stop overseas listeners from enjoying them (World Service does remain on shoutcast). Result for me was that I had to buy and fit some aerials, and buy a tuner for the dining room where there was no existing FM or DAB option.
            What a great way of alienating the licence-payer !

            I still don't regret having the Yamaha kit (with streaming capability) in three rooms. Especially because of France Musique which offers an ever-growing number of great music streams to which I find myself listening more and more. No commercials, I assume the French taxpayer pays for it. I'm grateful.

            .
            Welcome to the forum.

            I agree with you about Radio 3 disappearing from the aggregators of internet radio....I assume as a Yamaha owner you use the MusicCast app. which was using airable - I had thought that airable had done a deal and you could still get the BBC stations on it.

            There is a thread called 'Classical music stations ONLINE' that may be of interest...a lot of us now listen to stations such as the Helsinki based YLE. I use WDR3, NPO4, BR Klassik, SWR2 and RBB3, mainly for evening concerts. An easy way is to use the Vradio app. I find, but you need to get it from your device to the streamer as it's not native to any of the control apps.

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