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More dominant in their inactivity: consumer response and the adoption of digital TV in Australia

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conference contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Niranjala Weerakkody
After much hesitation, discussion, and power brokering, Australia adopted digital TV for its Free-to air broadcasting on January 1, 2001. However, by December 2002, only a few thousand homes had adopted the technology. This paper examines the implementation and regulation of digital TV in Australia from the point of view of the ‘established base’ the new technology will replace, theories on diffusion and innovation of new technologies, and the Justification Model, which sees technology choice as social gambling. It then evaluates the various protectionist regulations and limitations imposed on the technology to safeguard the various stakeholders, the implementation strategies used, lack of digital content, marketing efforts, negative media coverage, and the economic realities of the technology, and argues that if consumers reject the technology altogether, it would lead to Australia missing the future applications of digital technology and the opportunity to address the issue of the ‘digital divide’ in the 21st century.

History

Pagination

1019 - 1029

Location

Pori, Finland

Open access

  • Yes

Start date

2003-06-24

End date

2003-06-27

ISSN

1547-5840

eISSN

1547-5859

Language

eng

Notes

Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

E Cohen