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Title:
AUTOMATIC CENSORSHIP OF BROADCAST PROGRAMMES
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1989/011199
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A system for controlling reception or recording of television broadcasts according to censorship classifications. One or more persons monitoring broadcasts nominate a classification and cause an appropriate signal to be generated and transmitted to viewers' homes by means of a radio transmission network also used for transmission of other data signals, such as a pocket-paging system (113, 114). Means (209, 210, 212) are provided to ensure that classification signals are transmitted with priority over paging signals or other non-time-critical data.

Inventors:
VOGEL PETER SAMUEL (AU)
Application Number:
PCT/AU1989/000189
Publication Date:
November 16, 1989
Filing Date:
May 03, 1989
Export Citation:
Click for automatic bibliography generation   Help
Assignee:
VOGEL PETER S (AU)
International Classes:
H04N17/00; H04H60/47; H04N7/16; H04H60/91; (IPC1-7): H04N7/173; H04N7/16
Domestic Patent References:
WO1984003166A11984-08-16
WO1983002208A11983-06-23
Foreign References:
US4768229A1988-08-30
US4305101A1981-12-08
US4228543A1980-10-14
US4163253A1979-07-31
AU2162983A1984-05-31
EP0179001A21986-04-23
Other References:
See also references of EP 0415966A1
Download PDF:
Claims:
CLAIMS
1. An automatic censorship method capable of automatically censoring broadcast programmes, comprising the steps of: monitoring broadcasts originating from at least one source; classifying programmes according to their content; generating a message describing the current classification; conveying said message to a data message transmitting station; temporarily suspending data messages (if any) being transmitted; transmitting said classification message; receiving said classification message at a plurality of receiving stations; decoding said message; and according to functions selected by the operator at the receiving station, controlling the reception, display, audition or recording of the classified programmes.
2. An automatic censorship method according to claim 1 wherein said data message transmitting station is a paging service transmission station.
3. An automatic censorship method according to claim 1 wherein the step of classifying programmes according to their content is performed by a plurality of persons, each of whom enters a perceived classification into a comparator adapted to generate a classification output according to the classification entered by a majority of said persons.
4. Automatic broadcast programme censorship means comprising: means for monitoring broadcasts originating from at least one source; means for generating a classification message describing the classification of a programme currently being broadcast; means for conveying said message to a data message transmitting station; a controller equipped to temporarily suspend messages (if any) being transmitted by said data message transmitting station; radio transmitter means for transmitting said classification message; a receiver which receives said classification message; means to decode said message; and means for controlling the reception, display, audition or recording of the classified programmes, according to functions selected by the operator at the receiving station.
5. Automatic broadcast programme censorship means according to claim 4 wherein said data message transmitting station is a paging service transmission station.
6. Automatic broadcast programme censorship means according to claim 4 wherein said means for generating a classification message describing the classification of a programme currently being broadcast comprises: a plurality of persons, each of whom enters a perceived classification into selection means; and a comparator adapted to receive input from said selection means and to generate a classification output according to the classification entered by a majority of said persons.
7. A data transmitter comprising: modulated radio transmission means; means for receiving data signals to be transmitted to remote data message receiving terminals, said signals being of a nontimecritical nature; means for receiving a classification signal representative of a classification of a broadcast programme; means for modulating said radio transmission means according to said received data signals in the absence of received classification signals; and a controller equipped, on receipt of a classification signal, to suspend temporarily data messages (if any) being transmitted and to cause said classification signal to modulate said data message transmission means.
Description:
- 1 -

AUTOMAΗC CENSORSHIP OF BROADCAST PROGRAMMES

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to methods of, and apparatus for, automatic censorship of broadcast programmes. The term broadcast programme used hereinafter refers to broadcast television programmes, radio programmes, cable television, and other forms of mass distribution of audio and/or video programmes.

BACKGROUND ART

The need for censorship of video material is generally accepted by most societies, for the purposes of preventing the viewing of material by persons other than the target audience. Usually, such censorship takes the form of limiting access of a certain group of people, for example children, to a certain class of material, for example pornographic or violent movies. Other uses of censorship include voluntary self-censorship in cases where a recipient of a programme does not wish to be exposed to certain types of programme, for example scenes of great violence or advertisements which may be considered offensive by some people. Being the most widely distributed form of broadcasting, television is the medium in which censorship is most likely to be considered a problem. Traditionally, censorship of television takes the form of either preventing possibly offensive material from being broadcast in the first place, or voluntary self- censorship, that is, switching off the receiver when material which the viewer does not wish to experience is being broadcast. While such self-censorship offers the benefit that

programmes remain available to those who do not find them objectionable, it suffers from the inconvenience of having to anticipate the nature of broadcasts and operate the receiver appropriately. This process is tedious and error-prone, especially where the viewer wishes to suppress programme material which changes rapidly in nature, for example when the viewer desires to suppress commercial messages within an otherwise unobjectionable programme. Manual censorship is therefore not an entirely satisfactory solution. Another factor which renders manual censorship ineffective is the increasingly common use of videotape recorders for recording programmes for later replay. If an operator is present at the time of recording, unwanted programme can be suppressed by "pausing" the video recorder when appropriate, but in many cases such recording takes place unattended and at these times such manual censorship is not possible.

It is therefore desirable to provide means whereby display or recording of preselected classes of programme material can be automatically suppressed.

Arrangements for automatic censorship have been previously published, but suffer from a number of serious shortcomings. The main difficulty is that automatic means for recognising different programme classifications, for example detection of television commercials, have been complex and unreliable. One technique has been to detect television commercials by the short period of black picture and silence separating them from other programme material. A typical commercial-deleter of this type is disclosed in United States patent number 4,319,286. This system and others like it suffer from the problem that erroneous operation occurs if there is a brief period of black and silence in a broadcast at a time other than at the beginning of a commercial break, or if there is no separation between commercials and other programme material. Furthermore, such systems are unable to distinguish between resumption of desired programme and further commercials at the conclusion of a commercial. Resumption of

viewing or recording must therefore be controlled by some form of timing device, based on assumptions regarding the length of commercial breaks. If these assumptions are not correct, the system will fail in its function.

A much improved censorship means is disclosed by Von Kohorn in United States Patent number 4,520,404. This system relies on a human operator to classify broadcasts, based on observation at a monitoring station. A suitably coded message is distributed from the monitoring station to the viewer's home, at which point a suitably-equipped decoder controls the television receiver or video recorder in accordance with the classification data generated by the human operator at the monitoring station. Although this invention significantly improves upon the reliability of previous methods, it nevertheless suffers from a number of significant limitations.

The main limitation of the prior art arises from the means of distribution of classification data to the viewer's home. In the Von Kohorn patent cited above, the system relies on a special-purpose radio broadcast, a special-purpose cable connection or specially-encoded control signals accompanying the broadcast to be censored as the means of distribution of classification data. The provision of special purpose radio broadcasts presents the problems of cost and complexity of establishing suitable transmitters, which must be capable of delivering suitable signals to all users of the service, as well as the difficulty and expense of obtaining such licence as may be required by communications authorities. Distribution by cable suffers from the high cost of establishing of suitable cabling, or difficulty of securing a suitable channel within a cable network already in place. Distribution by means of encoded signals accompanying the subject broadcasts is difficult to achieve as it requires the cooperation of the broadcasters.

DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION

According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided an automatic censorship method capable of automatically censoring broadcast programmes which does not require the establishment of a special broadcasting means or the cooperation of the broadcaster from whom the programmes originate, comprising the steps of monitoring broadcasts originating from at least one source, classifying programmes according to their content, generating a message describing the classification of the current programme, conveying said message to a data message transmitting station, temporarily suspending data messages (if any) being transmitted, transmitting said classification message, receiving said classification message at a plurality of receiving stations at which the classified programmes are being viewed or recorded, decoding said message and, according to functions selected by the operator at the receiving station, controlling the reception, display, audition or recording of the classified programmes. The term "data message" as used herein refers to signals conveying information of a non-time-critical nature, that is, signals which convey information and can be interrupted for short periods, say one second, without significantly detracting from the quality or effectiveness of the transmission. Examples of such data messages include transmissions to pocket-paging receivers, teletext data or financial information being continuously transmitted to a group of subscriber stations. According to a second aspect of this inventive concept, apparatus for automatically censoring broadcast programmes is also provided, and comprises means for monitoring broadcasts originating from at least one source, means for generating a message describing the classification of the current programme according to classifications determined by an operator performing the monitoring, means for conveying said message to a data message transmitting station, a controller equipped to temporarily suspend messages (if any) being transmitted, radio

transmitter means for transmitting said classification message, receivers which receive said classification message at a plurality of receiving stations at which the classified programmes are being viewed or recorded, means to decode said message and, according to functions selected by the operator at the receiving station, for controlling the reception, display, audition or recording of the classified programmes.

The invention also consists in transmission means as defined in the previous paragraph. An important application is to a system in which monitoring of broadcasts from a plurality of sources occurs. Embodiments of the invention can readily provide such a feature.

Another further inventive feature which is used in preferred embodiments of the invention, is an arrangement by which the monitoring is performed by two or more persons each of whom independently classifies programmes according to their content; the system automatically generates a message describing the current classification according to the classification selected by a majority of the monitoring persons.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

An embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings in which:

Fig. 1 is a schematic block diagram of an embodiment of the present invention; Fig. 2 is a schematic block diagram of a suitable arrangement of the data transmitter of Fig. 1 ; and

Fig. 3 is a schematic block diagram of an alternative monitoring arrangement suitable for use with the invention.

MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION

As seen in Fig. 1, programme source 101 is a videotape recorder, television camera, television studio or other source of video programme. Classification encoder 102 is an encoder comprising a keyboard by means of which a censorship classification can be entered by the operator and encoding means which translates the entered classification into a unique digital word. Classification encoder 102 can also comprise means for inputting information defining to which channel of broadcast the entered classification data relates. In these embodiments, the data message transmitter of the invention is a paging system transmitter (referred to hereinafter as data transmitter 114), as commonly used in pocket-paging services, whereby on transmission of suitable address codes, portable receivers are activated to beep or display messages, alerting the user carrying the receiver. The output of classification encoder 102 is fed to data transmitter 114. Said transmitter is also equipped to receive data from paging terminal 113, which is a conventional paging terminal into which messages to be transmitted to remotely-located paging receivers are entered by an operator. Operation of the paging system is carried out according to any of the methods well known to the art, except that data from classification encoderl02 is interleaved with data from paging terminal 113. Interleaving of paging and classification data is performed according to a scheme which ensures that classification data does not interfere with the operation of the paging system and that paging data does not interfere with operation of the classification and censorship system. One suitable embodiment of data transmitter 114 is shown in the schematic drawing Fig. 2, described in detail below. The programme from programme source 101 is transmitted to the point of viewing or recording via programme transmission means 103. The censorship classification signal interleaved with paging signals is transmitted to the same destination via data transmission means 112. Radio receiver

115 receives both paging and classification signals and feeds the demodulated data to classification detector 106 which is equipped to ignore paging signals but to extract and process classification signals. Censorship controller 107 receives the extracted classification word, and compares it with a range of classifications previously entered by the operator using user interface 108. If the current classification matches one of those selected to be censored by the operator, censor output 109 activates control input 110 of the video tape recorder and/or control input 111 of the television receiver, causing certain automatic censorship actions to happen. In this embodiment, the desired actions are selected by the operator and can include the following examples: a) Inhibit reception of both sound and picture Example: television only receives programmes suitable for children b) Mute sound but continue displaying picture Example: remove sound during advertisements c) Blank picture but continue sound Example: Remove visual content from news programmes d) Switch to alternative programme

Example: Replace advertisements with soothing images of tropical fish, news and information items from Teletext or other source, or alternative advertisements from another source e) Pause recording of programme onto videotape Example: Remove advertisements from recorded movies f) Enable record of programme onto videotape Example: Record all advertisements for motor vehicles. In other simpler embodiments of the invention, the censorship action can be predetermined by the arrangement of the apparatus.

Where more than one channel of broadcast is available, it is desirable to permit selective operation of censorship based on which channel is being viewed or recorded. To facilitate this, classification encoder 102 can be equipped to produce channel- specific classification data at its output, and censorship

controller 107 can be equipped to activate censor output 109 only if the corresponding channel is being viewed or recorded. Information defining the currently active channel can be derived manually, via user interface 108, or automatically by connection to the broadcast reception means or by other techniques which may not require direct electrical connection. Referring now to Fig. 2, detail of data transmitter 114 of Fig. 1 can be seen. Paging data arriving at paging data input 201 is fed to the input of FIFO buffer (first in, first out buffer) 209, before being passed via data multiplexer 212 to modulation input 203 of transmitter 204. Transmitter 204 transmits a carrier, modulated accordingly, via antenna output 205. Classification data is fed via classification data input 202 directly to data multiplexer 212, as well as to an input of controller 210. Controller 210 is arranged so that when classification data arrives, FIFO buffer 209 is instructed, via FIFO control 211, to suspend its output, and data multiplexer 212 is instructed, via multiplex control 208, to select the classification data input 202 as the source of modulation for the transmitter. In this way paging data which may be en route to the transmitter at a time when classification data is to be transmitted will be temporarily suspended until transmission of the classification data has been completed. During this time, any paging data received at paging data input 201 will be stored by FIFO buffer 209 so that it is not lost. The result of this arrangement is that classification data, which is required to be transmitted urgently, will be transmitted with precedence over paging data. The small delay in completing the paging message does not materially affect the operation of the paging system.

The data interleaving function described above can conveniently be implemented by a microprocessor equipped with suitable software, or by an appropriate arrangement of electronic hardware.

Where the invention is being used to control censorship of a plurality of channels, it becomes difficult for one monitoring person to classify the programmes accurately. In this case this

embodiment of the invention can be adapted to use the arrangement of Fig. 3, whereby a plurality of monitoring persons are used to perform the classification function. As seen in Fig. 3, each monitoring person 301-30n, views a group of television monitors 311-31n, each monitor displaying the broadcast of a different television channel. Each person enters the appropriate classification for each channel, or a sub-set of channels, at their own control panel 321 -32n. The outputs of the control panels feed comparator 330, which generates at its output a signal 340 corresponding to the majority of inputs from the control panels. This output feeds the classification data input 202 of Fig. 2. An alternative arrangement is possible, whereby each monitoring person monitors only one channel, however the arrangement described above is preferable because an error made by one person will not necessarily result in incorrect censorship action at viewers' homes, since the classification transmitted reflects the classification decision of the majority of the monitoring persons. In any embodiment of the invention, a security arrangement may be provided to enable authorised persons to enable and disable the censorship of programmes. In Fig. 1 this feature may be implemented by equipping censorship controller 107 with storage means within which a "personal identification number" (PIN) is stored. By means of user interface 108, an authorised person, to whom the PIN is known, can enter the PIN, thereby enabling access to latches or other memory means within censorship controller 107, the state of which defines the classes of programmes which will be censored. In this way a responsible adult, for example, could upon entering the correct PIN, disable the censorship function so that material unsuitable for children could be viewed. Resumption of the usual censorship function can be effected by again entering the PIN, after a preset time delay, or upon conclusion of the programme.

The foregoing describes only some embodiments of the present invention and modifications, obvious to those skilled in the art, can be made without departing from the scope of the

present invention. For example, whereas the embodiment of the invention described above and the associated drawings refer to the use of a paging system as the classification message conveyance means of the invention, this is by way of example only, and any transmitter of non-time-critical data messages can be used.

Whereas the embodiment of the invention described above refers to the classification signal input to the data transmitter as originating from control panels operated by monitoring persons, it is envisaged that automated means can be applied instead of the monitoring persons without departing from the scope of the invention.

While the classification detector and censorship controller are described in these embodiments as being distinct from the television reception or recording equipment, this apparatus can be incorporated within other equipment such as a television receiver, monitor, or video tape recorder.

For the purpose of implementing the present invention without needing to modify the videotape recorder and/or television receiver, control inputs 110 and 111 of Fig. 1 can be the remote control interface of the videotape recorder and/or television receiver in cases where these are equipped with remote control. That is, the censorship controller 107 is equipped with interface means compatible with the remote control communication standard, for example an infra-red transmitter, so that pausing, muting, blanking, channel- changing, or other censorship actions can be effected using unmodified recording/receiving equipment.

In cases where great flexibility of user interface is required, a video display device can be used to display the range of available censorship categories in the form of a menu, and the operator can make selections from that menu using a small number of switches, according to techniques well known to the computer art.

Whereas the embodiments described herein refer to use of the invention for deletion of unwanted material from recording or viewing, the invention can also be adapted to provide other

useful control functions. For example, the invention can be arranged to cause only nominated types of material to be recorded. This capability can be used for compiling a recording of all the advertisements broadcast on a given day, or all the episodes of a particular programme broadcast over several nights. The invention can also be used to control recording of pre-determined programmes by starting and stopping the VCR at the actual times of commencement and termination of the desired programme, rather than relying on the clock means commonly incorporated into VCRs for this purpose. The method of control using this invention is superior in that the correct programme segment will be recorded in spite of differences between the scheduled times of programmes and their actual starting and finishing times.

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY

The invention can be used to control reception or recording of television programmes according to their censorship classification.