From Public Airwaves to Private Audio Streams
A company develops a new technology that broadcasts live concert audio directly to paying subscribers' specialized headphones using an encrypted signal. Previously, non-ticket holders could only listen from outside the venue, hearing the unenclosed sound for free. Using economic principles, explain how this new technology changes the nature of the live concert broadcast.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Application in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
The Unresolved Problem of Excludable Broadcasting
An early 20th-century radio station broadcast its programs over the airwaves, funded entirely by advertising, making them free for anyone with a receiver. In contrast, a modern satellite television company encrypts its signal, requiring customers to pay for a subscription and a special receiver box to watch its channels. What fundamental economic change does the satellite company's model represent compared to the early radio station's model?
A two-person household finds that one member's hourly pay is unfairly reduced. In response to this change, the household collectively decides to decrease the total number of hours they work for pay. Which statement best analyzes the combined effect of these events on the household's total purchasing power?
Shifting Business Models for Digital Content
The ability of a company to charge for a television program is a fundamental characteristic of the program itself, not a result of the delivery technology used.
From Public Airwaves to Private Audio Streams
Match each broadcasting technology with the description that best reflects its ability to restrict access to its content.
The Impact of Technology on Broadcast Media's Business Models
A startup has developed a technology to broadcast live concert audio in ultra-high fidelity, but it can only be heard through special, proprietary headphones. The company is debating two strategies: (A) selling the headphones and letting anyone listen to the broadcasts for free, funding the service through on-air advertising, or (B) encrypting the broadcast signal and charging a monthly subscription fee for both the signal and the use of the headphones. From an economic standpoint, which statement best justifies why strategy (B) might be chosen over strategy (A)?
Public Wi-Fi and Access Control
Arrange the following broadcasting methods in order from the one that is least able to restrict access to its content to the one that is most able to restrict access.