Category:Subscription Television Warning Screens: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "Subscription television warning screens were common during the 1980s, when the technology for scrambling live television signals was relatively new, and sometimes basic. In th..." |
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Subscription television warning screens were common during the 1980s, when the technology for scrambling live television signals was relatively new, and sometimes basic |
Subscription television warning screens were common during the 1980s, when the technology for scrambling live television signals was relatively new, and sometimes so basic that home-made descrambler boxes could easily bypass it. |
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In the United Kingdom, many subscription television channels were not scrambled until the end of the decade, with Sky One notably remaining free-to-air until 1 September 1993: satellite channels often relied on dealers to get viewers to pay for reception. |
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[[Category:Warning Screens]] |
[[Category:Warning Screens]] |
Revision as of 16:41, 3 June 2021
Subscription television warning screens were common during the 1980s, when the technology for scrambling live television signals was relatively new, and sometimes so basic that home-made descrambler boxes could easily bypass it.
In the United Kingdom, many subscription television channels were not scrambled until the end of the decade, with Sky One notably remaining free-to-air until 1 September 1993: satellite channels often relied on dealers to get viewers to pay for reception.
Pages in category "Subscription Television Warning Screens"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.