FEATURED FTA TODAY:
 |
The Coolsat 8000 HD FTA receiver provides standard and high definition free to air satellite reception for the USA, Canadian, and Caribbean markets.
Features include an incredible 128MB of SDRAM for an amazing on-screen user interface and channel guide, universal remote to control your TV and other products in one, HDMI output to new flat panel TV's, Dolby digital optical output, and more. |
|
|
|
|
Welcome to FTA CLINIC.Com
|
The doctor is in! here at FTA CLINIC.Com, We can help you find necessary bins, softwares and manuals that can help you maintain, diagnose, and fix your FTA Satellite equipments.
We will also provide you with the latest information on FTA receviers that are now being sold in the market, This way we can help you choose what receivers you can buy.
WELCOME to FTA CLINIC >> We are the doctors of FTA problems!!! |
| |
LATEST NEWS
|
EchoStar News from the Courts
Not long ago, EchoStar notified its authorized dealer chain to refrain from selling free-to-air receivers because the act violates company policy. Undoubtedly the move comes as a response to its current legal battle with FTA receiver distributor Viewtech.
This week, EchoStar asked that a federal judge in San Diego throw out Viewtech's request to have the satellite company's lawsuit against it dismissed. EchoStar's suit, filed earlier this year, claims Viewtech knowingly designs, manufactures and distributes FTA receivers to purposely allow users to steal DISH Network TV service - a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
EchoStar said Viewtech developed software that users can download that transforms the otherwise legal receivers into signal piracy tools. In Viewtech's request to have the original lawsuit thrown out, the technology firm claimed EchoStar does not own the copyrights to the programming DISH Network distributes. EchoStar asked the court to reject that notion as well.
In other EchoStar legal news, the satellite company added more names to its list of end users it has sued for allegedly pirating DISH Network's signals. The company filed a lawsuit against Florida resident Miguel Garcia and two Illinois residents Andrew and Beth McSkimming alleging the unauthorized customers used modified receivers to steal DISH programming.
According to reports, EchoStar decided to pursue both cases after Garcia and the McSkimmings returned receivers to the company and it found them to be altered. The lawsuits claim the consumers also violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Communications Act of 1934. |
| |
TOP DOWNLOADS
|
|
|
|
| Fill up fields and join our Newsletter! |
|
|