Set TV to watch Freeview (& Other Free Channels) Only

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Hi,

Medion TV

I do not want to buy TV Licence.

I want to set up to watch only Freeview & other Free channels.

However, I have noticed this > Setup > Once complete, your TV will display available Freeview channels, including BBC, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5.

But, BBC, ITV etc. are not free. Can anyone advise me, please?.

Thank you.
 
AFAIK, if you are watching free to air channels (in real time) you need a licence.

You might be better off with Prime stick or Roku.

I am not sure though. Hopefully someone more knowledgeable will be along soon.
 
If you want to watch any live TV, any channel, or catchup on Iplayer - you need a licence. If you watch any other streaming service, you do not.
 
If you want to watch any live TV, any channel, or catchup on Iplayer - you need a licence. If you watch any other streaming service, you do not.

I thought than catch on iPlayer was legal? That said, from memory, when you sign up you have to confirm that you have a licence.

I am glad that we have the BBC, I appreciate that other people here will disagree with me.
 
Hi,

Medion TV

I do not want to buy TV Licence.

I want to set up to watch only Freeview & other Free channels.

However, I have noticed this > Setup > Once complete, your TV will display available Freeview channels, including BBC, ITV, Channel 4, and Channel 5.

But, BBC, ITV etc. are not free. Can anyone advise me, please?.

Thank you.

If you don't want to pay for a TV licence, then you must abandon any way of watching live TV. This means no TV aerial, no satellite dish+receiver, no cable TV box (Virgin), and being very careful with internet-supplied TV.

Anything you watch from the same channels that are on Freeview / Freesat / Freely where you select "watch LIVE" needs you to have a TV licence. People refer to catch-up TV and say or write "Oh, I watch via catch-up so I don't need a TV licence". That might have been the case when these apps only had a library of programmes that had been broadcast days or weeks earlier, but the watch Live option changes this. It's no longer just catch-up.

As long as you're not watching something delivered via the Internet (what people call Wi-Fi, but it's not really) that is also being broadcast live, (and it's not a BBC channel) then you're okay.

So, what about the BBC's content? Well, that's all off limits. Everything. You can watch no BBC iPlayer programmes at all legally unless you have a TV licence.
 

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