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98 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
98 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2363
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Title: HPR2363: Cancelling my TV licence
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2363/hpr2363.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:44:05
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---
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This in HPR episode 2,363 entitled, Canceling My TV License.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and in about 11 minutes long, and can remain an explicit flag.
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The summary is, I don't watch any TV so I don't need a license, but canceling it is unexpectedly difficult.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Hi everyone, this is Dave Morris. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm doing a quick show, I always think a quick off-not tonight because the HPRQ is quite low.
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It's about very low, frighteningly low so I'm going to rattle something off that came to mind today.
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So my show is called Canceling My TV License.
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It's probably means nothing to a proportion of the audience, but you might learn something about the weirdnesses of British TV.
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So I'm just going to read you a bit of a story, tell you a bit of a story. It's in the notes.
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The first thing was I got a letter. July this year, 2017, I got a letter from the organisation that calls themselves TV Licensing.
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And these are the people that manage the TV License.
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It costs £147 a year to be licensed to receive television.
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Quite exactly what TV is a little bit vague. It was originally BBC TV, but now it seems to have broadened somewhat.
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They said they'd be taking this money on the 1st of August. I set up a direct debit. I assume everybody has that sort of thing on their bank.
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Which allows a nominated organisation to take money from that account at some rate.
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Then we're going to take this. And of course they've been doing this for years.
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And I'd pretty much forgotten that I'd set this up. If you'd asked me I'd have said, well obviously, but I'd forgotten.
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We watched a fair bit of TV in this house when my kids were small and as they went, moved on into their teens.
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But we watched, we didn't watch cable or anything on that. We watched over the air channels.
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And then as digital TV occurred in the UK, I bought a device which set top box style things,
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except it was a PVR or DVR, which you could record stuff on.
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And it took in the digital signal from FreeView, which is a service in the UK, and turned it into analog output for my old analog TV.
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You know, the sort of thing, tibo-ish type of thing.
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I retired in 2009, watched some TV then, but was getting really fed up with it.
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By 2013, my kids were more or less left home.
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One went to university and the other one, literally this girlfriend.
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So because the quality of TV was going down and down and down, you'll hear the cat in the background because she's running up and down.
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I decided I didn't want to watch TV anymore. So from 2013, I stopped watching television entirely.
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So when this letter arrived, I realised that since then, I had been paying this TV licence without using it.
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Not been using the service at all. I've been paying for it.
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So this galvanised me into action. I don't galvanise very often, but I did this time.
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I really fed up with TV licensing and myself for being so slow.
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This old analog CRT TV, sitting in the corner of my room, and the PBR, they got chucked.
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The TV went to the recycling centre. Just a big heavy thing, my son helped me.
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The PBR, I'm going to hack for the disc, maybe, and anything else that's useful in it.
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So the next thing I did was to cancel the licence, and the letter that I'd received told me on the back what I could do.
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There were certain requirements listed. Never watch or record programmes that they, as they're being shown on TV.
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So that's one criterion. I never download or watch BBC programmes on demand, which is another thing. I don't do.
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And I don't do this on a TV, or a computer, or a laptop, or a mobile phone, or tablet, or games console, or any of the things they listed.
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So I called the number on the back of the letter, which I think was a free phone number, but I'm not sure I need to check that.
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And I was able to cancel. I simply gave them my licence number, my details, and they said, okay, fine, cancelled.
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And he said there would be a letter of confirmation coming through, and that would prove that it all happened, and that I could show to anybody you needed to know.
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I asked if they would cancel the direct debit, which is really for me to do, whether they'd stop taking money from it, whether I should just cancel it, and he said cancel it yourself.
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So I did that pretty much after I had hung up the phone.
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So a few days later, I got the confirmation letter, which is called, which I think is really odd, and I keep having to reread this.
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Your no licence needed confirmation. It's hard to know where, where to put the emphasis in there. Your no licence needed confirmation?
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Your no, anyway. The thing that I got was a thing they called the no licence needed. Very strange way.
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Anyway, it told me that my no licence was valid from July 2017 until July 2019.
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When they want you to confirm and go through the whole process again, it also said in the letter, might get a visit to confirm that a licence isn't needed, which sounds ominous.
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There was a friendly leaflet accompanying this letter that said, it had loads of questions and answers, one of which I particularly liked,
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can I be prosecuted for watching BBC programs on BBC iPlayer without a licence? That's their online service that lets you watch programs that have been live, I think, or sometimes soon after live.
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The answer was yes, you can be prosecuted from the verses September 2016, you risk prosecution and a fine of up to £1,000 plus any legal costs and or compensation you may be ordered to pay.
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So, you know, nice and friendly stuff. Then, on the 12th of August, I got a letter from TV licensing,
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Ertmarked Urgent Open Immediately, and it said them to ask me to call them urgently because my bank had declined a direct debit payment request, so they had asked the bank for money.
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So, I called them on the 14th, being Monday, told them this was a mistake, and they said, okay, you have fine, ignore the letter.
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To get there, just this is part of the irritation of this whole thing, I had to go through four menus, listen to five, three to five things before I knew which one just took number to enter,
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and then I got a robot that wanted my details, my address, my name, all that sort of stuff, license number, and then it put me through to a person who then asked for these details all over again.
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Maybe wonder if the robots there for any purpose other than to be a deterrent to call us, how many people have gone through these bloody menus, and then said, hang it on, and I've thrown the phone down.
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Anyway, that's just me being cynical. Then, today, 17th of August, I found a messenger answering machine asking me to call TV licensing.
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I did so, and with, through the four menus, and I talked to a robot, it asked me for my license number, but I reckon I don't have a license number, because I don't have a license.
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So, I gave it the reference number of my no license, and it didn't like that. Then, I asked for my post code, street name, house number, and payment details,
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said it repeated the address information back to me. I think I asked my name as well, actually, I can't remember now. I was writing this stuff down as I was listening to it, I was getting more and more angry with it.
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It confirmed the address, but when it answered to the payment details or said, don't pay, it passed me to a human.
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So, I spoke to a lady who then asked for my name, address, post code, et cetera, and I said, why? I just given this to your robot, I was trying to be polite.
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Apparently, these weren't passed through to her, because I failed, in quotes, to answer the questions, probably.
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But that's odd, because the same happened when I went through to the guy who answered my call about the direct debit before.
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So, I don't think that's true, I think this is a scam. I really think that this damn robot is really there to make you so angry that you hang up.
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Anyway, this time it turned out that the problem was that my no license that I very carefully set up, and it got a letter about, had been cancelled.
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I said, why? No reason. I asked why, if such a thing like this, that I carefully set up, and been given the expectation that it was going to stay for two years, why, when it had been cancelled, nobody told me.
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I didn't get an answer to that. So, that's the chapter of accident. So, I was so angry about this, not usually a person to get very angry, but it made me really livid that I just ran off and wrote this down.
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To share it with the HPR audience, just to give you some idea of the ridiculous bureaucracy that is running this nonsense.
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So, it seems that the TV licensing thing has got one of the worst systems for managing its quotes customers.
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Because we're not customers, we're victims, I think. It's the worst on the planet, I think. I told the representative, this was my opinion when I was on the phone.
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I also said, I hope you're recording this, and it will get passed up to your senior people, so they can do something about this rubbish system.
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So, I'm now wondering what's next in the saga. Will I now be greeted by the heavies at the door? The visitors, whatever these guys are.
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I'm not obliged to let them in without a warrant, I discovered, though many people do, I think.
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I'm going to get a legendary TV detective van outside the house. These things certainly have existed in the past, I'm not sure whether they do anymore.
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But if they do, I'd love to see one and take a picture of it. I could send it to the 2,600 guys, they would be very, very happy to see that.
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I'm going to get another spurious money demand, or we tried to take money from you, but we couldn't, and you're a very bad person.
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I'm going to get another round explained the loss of my details. They pretend that I don't have a no license.
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Anyway, although this has been very frustrating and bad, I at least it gave me something to write about and talk about for HDR, so I hope you find it interesting.
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There's a bunch of links here that point to some of the things I've mentioned here. Anyway, that's it for now. Bye-bye.
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You've been listening to Heka Public Radio at HekaPublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Heka Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club, and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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