It’s free-to-air (FTA) companies looking for relevance in an age of diminishing 
interest by consumers. I don’t know many people under the age of 40 who bother 
to use FTA at all. Many simply don’t have aerials, either.

Sure, pushing FTA via the internet or via smart TV apps is one way around it, 
but consumers are spoiled for choice these days, and FTA is at the tail end of 
the wave.

iT

> On 7 Nov 2023, at 10:29 pm, Jan Whitaker <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> How stupid. I've moved the apps into the order I want. It's not that 
> difficult. Is this what is called corporate nanny state now?
> 
> Sheesh!
> 
> Jan
> 
> On 7/11/2023 9:44 pm, Stephen Loosley wrote:
>> Free-to-air networks including Nine, Seven and Ten have argued via the
>> Free TV Australia lobby that local and culturally significant content
>> including news, sport and entertainment should be given preferential
>> placement on newer television sets, so it can be easily found by users.
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