Discussion:
blackbird receivers
(too old to reply)
Phineas Fogg
2004-05-23 03:13:58 UTC
Permalink
The going price is $369 US or $550 Cdn. These work well with Bell, not so well with Dish insofar as the program guide is not picked up properly. Per the Globe and Mail article below, Industry Canada and Telesat got a hold of one and tried to zap it but could not and consider it "bulletproof" at this time:-

Rogers woos signal thieves


By JACK KAPICA
Globe and Mail Update


Rogers Cable Inc. is gambling that people who were watching television from DirecTV without paying would be willing to become Rogers' paying customers.

The Toronto-based cable-TV company is following a move by U.S-based satellite-TV operator DirecTV, which is shutting down the data authorization stream to those who have used a hacked conditional access card to get their TV signal for free.

DirecTV is shutting down service activated by the so-called HU card, an older technology that was easy to hack, and replacing it with a new card, called the P4. Many Canadian customers in Ontario, New Brunswick and Newfoundland, where Rogers serves about 3.2 million customers, bought the hacked cards, and now find themselves owners of satellite dishes and set-top boxes but with no signal.

The cards, satellite dishes and set-top boxes were being sold in Canada by independent dealers. Some claimed they hacked cards are legal.

Rogers is offering to pick up the "dead" satellite equipment and trade it for Rogers Digital Cable. In exchange, customers will receive free installation and two free digital boxes.

Rogers says it intends to serve these customers within 24 hours of their order.

That way, said Rogers spokeswoman Taanta Gupta, owners of black-market receivers will have three choices: to go dark; to become legitimate paying customers or to subscribe to another satellite-based TV service, such as Bell ExpressVU, but they will have to buy all new equipment.

But does Rogers expect people who have a track record of not paying for their signals to pay for a Rogers subscription?

"We're happy to see them come over to the good side," Ms. Gupta said. "It's better than sitting in the dark."

The move comes amid a flurry of activity from makers of equipment designed to deliver TV signals for free.

The newest is a black-market set-top box that allows free access to DISH Network and Bell ExpressVU signals that has alarmed both cable and direct-to-home companies as well.

The box, called the Blackbird, is being sold for about $500 (Cdn.) on eBay and by underground Web-based retailers, and is being called legal, even though it uses the same technology used by Bell ExpressVU, says Toronto-based Cablecaster magazine.

The Blackbird made its first appearance in late February, and gained a reputation as being able to decrypt programming encoded with the Nagravision standard as well as receiving unencrypted C-band, Ku-band and DBS-band signals.

It joins another similar free-to-air device called the Silverbullet and the Silverbullet Enforcer, a pricier box that automatically finds and uses encryption keys.

The Blackbird box makes about 1,200 channels offered by DISH Network, of Englewood, Colo., a division of EchoStar Communications Corp., and Toronto-based Bell ExpressVu free.

The Blackbird is unaffected by electronic signal anti-theft measures, and it comes with no conditional access card, such as the hacked HU card. Cable and DTH companies say it cannot be disabled by current satellite company technology.

The Blackbird box does not work with DirecTV or Star Choice.

One vendor on eBay, citing his name as "yourbuddybrown" and his location only as "southwestern Ontario," advertised the box as "the best [free-to-air] receiver in North America. Fully MPEG2 & DVB compatible. ... [It] also receives other satellite channels, no card needed!"

The highest bid, with less than an hour to go, stood at $360 (U.S.)

The Blackbird is usually sold with a 38-page guide, and has both composite and S-video outputs as well as a satellite antenna input, coaxial pass-through and capacity for software updates. The manual does not mention the ability to handle the Nagravision encryption.

According to an anonymous review on the Web, the Blackbird is programmed with the frequencies of many North American satellites. But the ExpressVu listing was the most accurate and up to date, while some others were out of date. "It was quickly clear that this receiver was aimed at ExpressVu, not DISH," the anonymous poster said.

The box under review suffered many glitches when scanning satellites for signals, identifying six TV signals as radio stations. The reviewer said that a number of stations could be received - including Animal Planet, HBO-East, TECH TV, FUSE, Court TV - but HBO-E remained unavailable. Hundreds of invalid radio stations "polluted the radio side with duplicate names of TP 2 TV channels and had to be deleted," the review said.

Since none of these problems occurred with ExpressVu, the reviewer concluded that the Blackbird is incompatible with the electronic program guide information from the DISH data stream.

Up to four dishes could be tied into the box, Cablecaster magazine said. With seven DISH Network and ExpressVu satellites to choose from, a signal thief could get about 1,200 channels on one television through this box.

Both Rogers Cable and Bell ExpressVU are aware of the Blackbird and are working on ways to fight it. Ottawa has proposed legislation called Bill 2, Bill C-2 passed, which will which is designed to impose tough measures against satellite signal thieves.

Industry Canada and Telesat recently conducted a test of the box in Ottawa and found that it appears bullet-proof and is a serious threat to satellite signal security, Cablecaster reported.

Cablecaster also said that the technology probably originated in Israel, and the hardware appears to be made in Taiwan.
They only cost $369.00
N
2004-05-23 16:06:33 UTC
Permalink
and what happens to this bulletproof equipment when Nagra 2 hits?
yes I know, know one knows 100% WHEN Nagra 2 hits, I am just saying,
what does happen WHEN it does?
Post by Phineas Fogg
The going price is $369 US or $550 Cdn. These work well with Bell, not
so well with Dish insofar as the program guide is not picked up
properly. Per the Globe and Mail article below, Industry Canada and
Telesat got a hold of one and tried to zap it but could not and
consider it "bulletproof" at this time:-
Rogers woos signal thieves
By JACK KAPICA
Globe and Mail Update
Rogers Cable Inc. is gambling that people who were watching television
from DirecTV without paying would be willing to become Rogers' paying
customers.
The Toronto-based cable-TV company is following a move by U.S-based
satellite-TV operator DirecTV, which is shutting down the data
authorization stream to those who have used a hacked conditional
access card to get their TV signal for free.
DirecTV is shutting down service activated by the so-called HU card,
an older technology that was easy to hack, and replacing it with a new
card, called the P4. Many Canadian customers in Ontario, New Brunswick
and Newfoundland, where Rogers serves about 3.2 million customers,
bought the hacked cards, and now find themselves owners of satellite
dishes and set-top boxes but with no signal.
The cards, satellite dishes and set-top boxes were being sold in
Canada by independent dealers. Some claimed they hacked cards are
legal.
Rogers is offering to pick up the "dead" satellite equipment and trade
it for Rogers Digital Cable. In exchange, customers will receive free
installation and two free digital boxes.
Rogers says it intends to serve these customers within 24 hours of their order.
That way, said Rogers spokeswoman Taanta Gupta, owners of black-market
receivers will have three choices: to go dark; to become legitimate
paying customers or to subscribe to another satellite-based TV
service, such as Bell ExpressVU, but they will have to buy all new
equipment.
But does Rogers expect people who have a track record of not paying
for their signals to pay for a Rogers subscription?
"We're happy to see them come over to the good side," Ms. Gupta said.
"It's better than sitting in the dark."
The move comes amid a flurry of activity from makers of equipment
designed to deliver TV signals for free.
The newest is a black-market set-top box that allows free access to
DISH Network and Bell ExpressVU signals that has alarmed both cable
and direct-to-home companies as well.
The box, called the Blackbird, is being sold for about $500 (Cdn.) on
eBay and by underground Web-based retailers, and is being called
legal, even though it uses the same technology used by Bell ExpressVU,
says Toronto-based Cablecaster magazine.
The Blackbird made its first appearance in late February, and gained a
reputation as being able to decrypt programming encoded with the
Nagravision standard as well as receiving unencrypted C-band, Ku-band
and DBS-band signals.
It joins another similar free-to-air device called the Silverbullet
and the Silverbullet Enforcer, a pricier box that automatically finds
and uses encryption keys.
The Blackbird box makes about 1,200 channels offered by DISH Network,
of Englewood, Colo., a division of EchoStar Communications Corp., and
Toronto-based Bell ExpressVu free.
The Blackbird is unaffected by electronic signal anti-theft measures,
and it comes with no conditional access card, such as the hacked HU
card. Cable and DTH companies say it cannot be disabled by current
satellite company technology.
The Blackbird box does not work with DirecTV or Star Choice.
One vendor on eBay, citing his name as "yourbuddybrown" and his
location only as "southwestern Ontario," advertised the box as "the
best [free-to-air] receiver in North America. Fully MPEG2 & DVB
compatible. ... [It] also receives other satellite channels, no card
needed!"
The highest bid, with less than an hour to go, stood at $360 (U.S.)
The Blackbird is usually sold with a 38-page guide, and has both
composite and S-video outputs as well as a satellite antenna input,
coaxial pass-through and capacity for software updates. The manual
does not mention the ability to handle the Nagravision encryption.
According to an anonymous review on the Web, the Blackbird is
programmed with the frequencies of many North American satellites. But
the ExpressVu listing was the most accurate and up to date, while some
others were out of date. "It was quickly clear that this receiver was
aimed at ExpressVu, not DISH," the anonymous poster said.
The box under review suffered many glitches when scanning satellites
for signals, identifying six TV signals as radio stations. The
reviewer said that a number of stations could be received - including
Animal Planet, HBO-East, TECH TV, FUSE, Court TV - but HBO-E remained
unavailable. Hundreds of invalid radio stations "polluted the radio
side with duplicate names of TP 2 TV channels and had to be deleted,"
the review said.
Since none of these problems occurred with ExpressVu, the reviewer
concluded that the Blackbird is incompatible with the electronic
program guide information from the DISH data stream.
Up to four dishes could be tied into the box, Cablecaster magazine
said. With seven DISH Network and ExpressVu satellites to choose from,
a signal thief could get about 1,200 channels on one television
through this box.
Both Rogers Cable and Bell ExpressVU are aware of the Blackbird and
are working on ways to fight it. Ottawa has proposed legislation
called Bill 2, Bill C-2 passed, which will which is designed to impose
tough measures against satellite signal thieves.
Industry Canada and Telesat recently conducted a test of the box in
Ottawa and found that it appears bullet-proof and is a serious threat
to satellite signal security, Cablecaster reported.
Cablecaster also said that the technology probably originated in
Israel, and the hardware appears to be made in Taiwan.
They only cost $369.00
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<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
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<BODY>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>The going</FONT> price is $369 US or $550
Cdn. These work well with Bell, not so well with Dish insofar as
the&nbsp;program guide&nbsp;is not picked up properly. Per the Globe
and Mail article below, Industry Canada and Telesat got a hold of one
and tried to zap it but could not and consider it "bulletproof" at
this time:-</DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV id=storyTopSpacer>
<P>
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0>
<TBODY>
<TR>
<TD class=bnTitle colSpan=2>
<P><STRONG><FONT color=#0000ff size=4>Rogers woos signal
thieves</FONT></STRONG></P></TD></TR>
<TR>
<TD class=bnByline width=300><BR>By&nbsp;JACK KAPICA<BR>Globe and
Mail
Update </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></P>
<P>Rogers Cable Inc. is gambling that people who were watching
television from DirecTV without paying would be willing to become
Rogers' paying customers.</P> <P>The Toronto-based cable-TV company is
following a move by U.S-based satellite-TV operator DirecTV, which is
shutting down the data authorization stream to those who have used a
hacked conditional access card to get their TV signal for free.</P>
<P>DirecTV is shutting down service activated by the so-called HU
card, an older technology that was easy to hack, and replacing it with
a new card, called the P4. Many Canadian customers in Ontario, New
Brunswick and Newfoundland, where Rogers serves about 3.2 million
customers, bought the hacked cards, and now find themselves owners of
satellite dishes and set-top boxes but with no signal.</P> <P>The
cards, satellite dishes and set-top boxes were being sold in Canada by
independent dealers. Some claimed they hacked cards are legal.</P>
<P>Rogers is offering to pick up the "dead" satellite equipment and
trade it for Rogers Digital Cable. In exchange, customers will receive
free installation and two free digital boxes.</P>
<P>Rogers says it intends to serve these customers within 24 hours of
their order.</P>
<P>That way, said Rogers spokeswoman Taanta Gupta, owners of
black-market receivers will have three choices: to go dark; to become
legitimate paying customers or to subscribe to another satellite-based
TV service, such as Bell ExpressVU, but they will have to buy all new
equipment.</P> <P>But does Rogers expect people who have a track
record of not paying for their signals to pay for a Rogers
subscription?</P> <P>"We're happy to see them come over to the good
side," Ms. Gupta said. "It's better than sitting in the dark."</P>
<P>The move comes amid a flurry of activity from makers of equipment
designed to deliver TV signals for free.</P>
<P>The newest is a black-market set-top box that allows free access to
DISH Network and Bell ExpressVU signals that has alarmed both cable
and direct-to-home companies as well.</P>
<P>The box, called the Blackbird, is being sold for about $500 (Cdn.)
on eBay and by underground Web-based retailers, and is being called
legal, even though it uses the same technology used by Bell ExpressVU,
says Toronto-based Cablecaster magazine.</P>
<P>The Blackbird made its first appearance in late February, and
gained a reputation as being able to decrypt programming encoded with
the Nagravision standard as well as receiving unencrypted C-band,
Ku-band and DBS-band signals.</P>
<P>It joins another similar free-to-air device called the Silverbullet
and the Silverbullet Enforcer, a pricier box that automatically finds
and uses encryption keys.</P>
<P>The Blackbird box makes about 1,200 channels offered by DISH
Network, of Englewood, Colo., a division of EchoStar Communications
Corp., and Toronto-based Bell ExpressVu free.</P>
<P>The Blackbird is unaffected by electronic signal anti-theft
measures, and it comes with no conditional access card, such as the
hacked HU card. Cable and DTH companies say it cannot be disabled by
current satellite company technology.</P> <P>The Blackbird box does
not work with DirecTV or Star Choice.</P> <P>One vendor on eBay,
citing his name as "yourbuddybrown" and his location only as
"southwestern Ontario," advertised the box as "the best [free-to-air]
receiver in North America. Fully MPEG2 &amp; DVB compatible. ... [It]
also receives other satellite channels, no card needed!"</P>
<P>The highest bid, with less than an hour to go, stood at $360
(U.S.)</P> <P>The Blackbird is usually sold with a 38-page guide, and
has both composite and S-video outputs as well as a satellite antenna
input, coaxial pass-through and capacity for software updates. The
manual does not mention the ability to handle the Nagravision
encryption.</P> <P>According to an anonymous review on the Web, the
Blackbird is programmed with the frequencies of many North American
satellites. But the ExpressVu listing was the most accurate and up to
date, while some others were out of date. "It was quickly clear that
this receiver was aimed at ExpressVu, not DISH," the anonymous poster
said.</P> <P>The box under review suffered many glitches when scanning
satellites for signals, identifying six TV signals as radio stations.
The reviewer said that a number of stations could be received —
including Animal Planet, HBO-East, TECH TV, FUSE, Court TV — but HBO-E
remained unavailable. Hundreds of invalid radio stations "polluted the
radio side with duplicate names of TP 2 TV channels and had to be
deleted," the review said.</P> <P>Since none of these problems
occurred with ExpressVu, the reviewer concluded that the Blackbird is
incompatible with the electronic program guide information from the
DISH data stream.</P> <P>Up to four dishes could be tied into the box,
Cablecaster magazine said. With seven DISH Network and ExpressVu
satellites to choose from, a signal thief could get about 1,200
channels on one television through this box.</P> <P>Both Rogers Cable
and Bell ExpressVU are aware of the Blackbird and are working on ways
to fight it. Ottawa has proposed legislation called Bill 2, Bill C-2
passed, which will which is designed to impose tough measures against
satellite signal thieves.</P>
<P>Industry Canada and Telesat recently conducted a test of the box in
Ottawa and found that it appears bullet-proof and is a serious threat
to satellite signal security, Cablecaster reported.</P>
<P>Cablecaster also said that the technology probably originated in
Israel, and the hardware appears to be made in Taiwan.</P></DIV><!--
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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>"daytona" &lt;</FONT><A
in message </FONT><A
------=_NextPart_000_0023_01C44052.95FD7C10--
Great Dane
2004-05-23 17:05:13 UTC
Permalink
why worry about it....??? you might also get run over by a Bus...unless you
stay in bed all day....LOL
Post by N
and what happens to this bulletproof equipment when Nagra 2 hits?
yes I know, know one knows 100% WHEN Nagra 2 hits, I am just saying,
what does happen WHEN it does?
Post by Phineas Fogg
The going price is $369 US or $550 Cdn. These work well with Bell, not
so well with Dish insofar as the program guide is not picked up
properly. Per the Globe and Mail article below, Industry Canada and
Telesat got a hold of one and tried to zap it but could not and
consider it "bulletproof" at this time:-
Rogers woos signal thieves
By JACK KAPICA
Globe and Mail Update
Rogers Cable Inc. is gambling that people who were watching television
from DirecTV without paying would be willing to become Rogers' paying
customers.
The Toronto-based cable-TV company is following a move by U.S-based
satellite-TV operator DirecTV, which is shutting down the data
authorization stream to those who have used a hacked conditional
access card to get their TV signal for free.
DirecTV is shutting down service activated by the so-called HU card,
an older technology that was easy to hack, and replacing it with a new
card, called the P4. Many Canadian customers in Ontario, New Brunswick
and Newfoundland, where Rogers serves about 3.2 million customers,
bought the hacked cards, and now find themselves owners of satellite
dishes and set-top boxes but with no signal.
The cards, satellite dishes and set-top boxes were being sold in
Canada by independent dealers. Some claimed they hacked cards are
legal.
Rogers is offering to pick up the "dead" satellite equipment and trade
it for Rogers Digital Cable. In exchange, customers will receive free
installation and two free digital boxes.
Rogers says it intends to serve these customers within 24 hours of their order.
That way, said Rogers spokeswoman Taanta Gupta, owners of black-market
receivers will have three choices: to go dark; to become legitimate
paying customers or to subscribe to another satellite-based TV
service, such as Bell ExpressVU, but they will have to buy all new
equipment.
But does Rogers expect people who have a track record of not paying
for their signals to pay for a Rogers subscription?
"We're happy to see them come over to the good side," Ms. Gupta said.
"It's better than sitting in the dark."
The move comes amid a flurry of activity from makers of equipment
designed to deliver TV signals for free.
The newest is a black-market set-top box that allows free access to
DISH Network and Bell ExpressVU signals that has alarmed both cable
and direct-to-home companies as well.
The box, called the Blackbird, is being sold for about $500 (Cdn.) on
eBay and by underground Web-based retailers, and is being called
legal, even though it uses the same technology used by Bell ExpressVU,
says Toronto-based Cablecaster magazine.
The Blackbird made its first appearance in late February, and gained a
reputation as being able to decrypt programming encoded with the
Nagravision standard as well as receiving unencrypted C-band, Ku-band
and DBS-band signals.
It joins another similar free-to-air device called the Silverbullet
and the Silverbullet Enforcer, a pricier box that automatically finds
and uses encryption keys.
The Blackbird box makes about 1,200 channels offered by DISH Network,
of Englewood, Colo., a division of EchoStar Communications Corp., and
Toronto-based Bell ExpressVu free.
The Blackbird is unaffected by electronic signal anti-theft measures,
and it comes with no conditional access card, such as the hacked HU
card. Cable and DTH companies say it cannot be disabled by current
satellite company technology.
The Blackbird box does not work with DirecTV or Star Choice.
One vendor on eBay, citing his name as "yourbuddybrown" and his
location only as "southwestern Ontario," advertised the box as "the
best [free-to-air] receiver in North America. Fully MPEG2 & DVB
compatible. ... [It] also receives other satellite channels, no card
needed!"
The highest bid, with less than an hour to go, stood at $360 (U.S.)
The Blackbird is usually sold with a 38-page guide, and has both
composite and S-video outputs as well as a satellite antenna input,
coaxial pass-through and capacity for software updates. The manual
does not mention the ability to handle the Nagravision encryption.
According to an anonymous review on the Web, the Blackbird is
programmed with the frequencies of many North American satellites. But
the ExpressVu listing was the most accurate and up to date, while some
others were out of date. "It was quickly clear that this receiver was
aimed at ExpressVu, not DISH," the anonymous poster said.
The box under review suffered many glitches when scanning satellites
for signals, identifying six TV signals as radio stations. The
reviewer said that a number of stations could be received - including
Animal Planet, HBO-East, TECH TV, FUSE, Court TV - but HBO-E remained
unavailable. Hundreds of invalid radio stations "polluted the radio
side with duplicate names of TP 2 TV channels and had to be deleted,"
the review said.
Since none of these problems occurred with ExpressVu, the reviewer
concluded that the Blackbird is incompatible with the electronic
program guide information from the DISH data stream.
Up to four dishes could be tied into the box, Cablecaster magazine
said. With seven DISH Network and ExpressVu satellites to choose from,
a signal thief could get about 1,200 channels on one television
through this box.
Both Rogers Cable and Bell ExpressVU are aware of the Blackbird and
are working on ways to fight it. Ottawa has proposed legislation
called Bill 2, Bill C-2 passed, which will which is designed to impose
tough measures against satellite signal thieves.
Industry Canada and Telesat recently conducted a test of the box in
Ottawa and found that it appears bullet-proof and is a serious threat
to satellite signal security, Cablecaster reported.
Cablecaster also said that the technology probably originated in
Israel, and the hardware appears to be made in Taiwan.
They only cost $369.00
------=_NextPart_000_0023_01C44052.95FD7C10
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<HTML><HEAD>
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<BODY>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>The going</FONT> price is $369 US or $550
Cdn. These work well with Bell, not so well with Dish insofar as
the&nbsp;program guide&nbsp;is not picked up properly. Per the Globe
and Mail article below, Industry Canada and Telesat got a hold of one
and tried to zap it but could not and consider it "bulletproof" at
this time:-</DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV id=storyTopSpacer>
<P>
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0>
<TBODY>
<TR>
<TD class=bnTitle colSpan=2>
<P><STRONG><FONT color=#0000ff size=4>Rogers woos signal
thieves</FONT></STRONG></P></TD></TR>
<TR>
<TD class=bnByline width=300><BR>By&nbsp;JACK KAPICA<BR>Globe and
Mail
Update </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></P>
<P>Rogers Cable Inc. is gambling that people who were watching
television from DirecTV without paying would be willing to become
Rogers' paying customers.</P> <P>The Toronto-based cable-TV company is
following a move by U.S-based satellite-TV operator DirecTV, which is
shutting down the data authorization stream to those who have used a
hacked conditional access card to get their TV signal for free.</P>
<P>DirecTV is shutting down service activated by the so-called HU
card, an older technology that was easy to hack, and replacing it with
a new card, called the P4. Many Canadian customers in Ontario, New
Brunswick and Newfoundland, where Rogers serves about 3.2 million
customers, bought the hacked cards, and now find themselves owners of
satellite dishes and set-top boxes but with no signal.</P> <P>The
cards, satellite dishes and set-top boxes were being sold in Canada by
independent dealers. Some claimed they hacked cards are legal.</P>
<P>Rogers is offering to pick up the "dead" satellite equipment and
trade it for Rogers Digital Cable. In exchange, customers will receive
free installation and two free digital boxes.</P>
<P>Rogers says it intends to serve these customers within 24 hours of
their order.</P>
<P>That way, said Rogers spokeswoman Taanta Gupta, owners of
black-market receivers will have three choices: to go dark; to become
legitimate paying customers or to subscribe to another satellite-based
TV service, such as Bell ExpressVU, but they will have to buy all new
equipment.</P> <P>But does Rogers expect people who have a track
record of not paying for their signals to pay for a Rogers
subscription?</P> <P>"We're happy to see them come over to the good
side," Ms. Gupta said. "It's better than sitting in the dark."</P>
<P>The move comes amid a flurry of activity from makers of equipment
designed to deliver TV signals for free.</P>
<P>The newest is a black-market set-top box that allows free access to
DISH Network and Bell ExpressVU signals that has alarmed both cable
and direct-to-home companies as well.</P>
<P>The box, called the Blackbird, is being sold for about $500 (Cdn.)
on eBay and by underground Web-based retailers, and is being called
legal, even though it uses the same technology used by Bell ExpressVU,
says Toronto-based Cablecaster magazine.</P>
<P>The Blackbird made its first appearance in late February, and
gained a reputation as being able to decrypt programming encoded with
the Nagravision standard as well as receiving unencrypted C-band,
Ku-band and DBS-band signals.</P>
<P>It joins another similar free-to-air device called the Silverbullet
and the Silverbullet Enforcer, a pricier box that automatically finds
and uses encryption keys.</P>
<P>The Blackbird box makes about 1,200 channels offered by DISH
Network, of Englewood, Colo., a division of EchoStar Communications
Corp., and Toronto-based Bell ExpressVu free.</P>
<P>The Blackbird is unaffected by electronic signal anti-theft
measures, and it comes with no conditional access card, such as the
hacked HU card. Cable and DTH companies say it cannot be disabled by
current satellite company technology.</P> <P>The Blackbird box does
not work with DirecTV or Star Choice.</P> <P>One vendor on eBay,
citing his name as "yourbuddybrown" and his location only as
"southwestern Ontario," advertised the box as "the best [free-to-air]
receiver in North America. Fully MPEG2 &amp; DVB compatible. ... [It]
also receives other satellite channels, no card needed!"</P>
<P>The highest bid, with less than an hour to go, stood at $360
(U.S.)</P> <P>The Blackbird is usually sold with a 38-page guide, and
has both composite and S-video outputs as well as a satellite antenna
input, coaxial pass-through and capacity for software updates. The
manual does not mention the ability to handle the Nagravision
encryption.</P> <P>According to an anonymous review on the Web, the
Blackbird is programmed with the frequencies of many North American
satellites. But the ExpressVu listing was the most accurate and up to
date, while some others were out of date. "It was quickly clear that
this receiver was aimed at ExpressVu, not DISH," the anonymous poster
said.</P> <P>The box under review suffered many glitches when scanning
satellites for signals, identifying six TV signals as radio stations.
The reviewer said that a number of stations could be received -
including Animal Planet, HBO-East, TECH TV, FUSE, Court TV - but HBO-E
remained unavailable. Hundreds of invalid radio stations "polluted the
radio side with duplicate names of TP 2 TV channels and had to be
deleted," the review said.</P> <P>Since none of these problems
occurred with ExpressVu, the reviewer concluded that the Blackbird is
incompatible with the electronic program guide information from the
DISH data stream.</P> <P>Up to four dishes could be tied into the box,
Cablecaster magazine said. With seven DISH Network and ExpressVu
satellites to choose from, a signal thief could get about 1,200
channels on one television through this box.</P> <P>Both Rogers Cable
and Bell ExpressVU are aware of the Blackbird and are working on ways
to fight it. Ottawa has proposed legislation called Bill 2, Bill C-2
passed, which will which is designed to impose tough measures against
satellite signal thieves.</P>
<P>Industry Canada and Telesat recently conducted a test of the box in
Ottawa and found that it appears bullet-proof and is a serious threat
to satellite signal security, Cablecaster reported.</P>
<P>Cablecaster also said that the technology probably originated in
Israel, and the hardware appears to be made in Taiwan.</P></DIV><!--
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