Business Day

Department confirms set-top boxes will not be encrypted

• Minister’s policy position at odds with her predecesso­r and the ANC

- Bekezela Phakathi Parliament­ary Writer phakathib@businessli­ve.co.za

The Department of Communicat­ions has confirmed that statespons­ored set-top boxes will not be encrypted.

This is despite a long-standing ANC policy position that supports encryption.

“The current government policy is nonencrypt­ion. Thus far, 1.5-million set-top boxes have been ordered and approximat­ely 850,000 were delivered,” said Ireen Magwai, who speaks on behalf of Communicat­ions Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane.

Set-top boxes are needed to decode the digital signal for television sets that do not have digital capabiliti­es. Conditiona­l access and encryption is crucial for pay-TV broadcaste­rs, as it allows them to control who has access to their content.

Kubayi-Ngubane’s position effectivel­y reverses previous communicat­ions minister Ayanda Dlodlo’s policy position, which sought to ensure that settop boxes are encrypted — as per ANC resolution.

In December, Jackson Mthembu, who heads the ANC’s communicat­ions subcommitt­ee, reiterated that encryption remained the party’s policy.

ANC alliance partner the South African Communist Party also backs encryption.

Dlodlo dumped the policy position of her predecesso­r, Faith Muthambi, who supported the nonencrypt­ion of set-top boxes in defiance of the governing party’s policy position. The position that Muthambi took on nonencrypt­ion was supported by pay-TV company MultiChoic­e and the SABC.

In 2013, the ANC adopted a policy that supported the use of encrypted set-top boxes for digital migration.

Kubayi-Ngubane told Parliament recently that her department had requested a legal opinion on the Constituti­onal Court ruling on the set-top box matter, which was handed

GOVERNMENT POLICY IS NONENCRYPT­ION. THUS FAR, 1.5-MILLION SET-TOP BOXES HAVE BEEN ORDERED

down late in 2017.

The ruling made it clear that policy making was the government’s prerogativ­e, meaning the Department of Communicat­ions was well within its rights to decide whether set-top boxes would be encrypted or not.

Kubayi- Ngubane pointed out that the court had cautioned the government not to utilise public funds to the benefit of private commercial interests.

Broadcaste­r e.tv, which challenged Muthambi’s policy, had argued that encryption was needed in free-to-air set-top boxes to allow other broadcaste­rs to compete with MultiChoic­e and challenge its monopoly on pay-TV.

MultiChoic­e, which owns MNet and DStv, stated that encrypted digital set-top boxes risked being expensive for the government and would dis- advantage the poor. Bickering over the issue delayed SA’s plans to migrate from analogue to digital. Allegation­s, including a copy of minutes of a meeting held between MultiChoic­e and SABC executives in 2013, emerged in 2017, suggesting the pay-TV operator would proceed with its multimilli­on-rand deal with the public broadcaste­r to include the SABC News Channel on the DStv bouquet only if the government supported nonencrypt­ion.

The ANC could reached for comment.

THE COURT HAD CAUTIONED NOT TO UTILISE PUBLIC FUNDS TO BENEFIT PRIVATE INTERESTS

not be

 ?? /File picture ?? Behind the scene: Communicat­ions Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane told Parliament recently that the Constituti­onal Court ruling on the set-top box matter, which was handed down late in 2017, made it clear that policy making was government’s prerogativ­e.
/File picture Behind the scene: Communicat­ions Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane told Parliament recently that the Constituti­onal Court ruling on the set-top box matter, which was handed down late in 2017, made it clear that policy making was government’s prerogativ­e.

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