Could the TV license fee form part of council tax or income tax bill? NO! NO! NO!
According to the Daily Mail, the BBC Director General Mark Thomspon has suggested that the TV license fee could be scrapped and instead funded through council or income tax.
No, no, no, no, NO.
TV is, and always will be, a luxury item. It is not essential in the daily lives of millions of people. It is entertainment. It should not, and must not be made compulsory for those that choose not to watch TV. Taxation is there to pay for the essentials of running the community and country. Watching TV must be about choice.
The problem is that the BBC, who has produced a wonderful video on demand system through their iPlayer system, doesn't seem to know how to best get money from those of us that have done away with TV (and therefore the TV license) and have gone online to watch shows through video-on-demand systems such as the iPlayer, 4oD, ITV Catch-up, etc. Fox's Hulu is set to join the UK VoD revolution later this year too.
The BBC could (and I've said this before) restrict iPlayer to those holding a TV license - in that you have to authenticate yourself as a license player before watching programs whether it be live or not. Or perhaps they could have a separate iPlayer license. No full TV license would be required, but you'd have pay a small monthly or annual fee to gain access to watch programs (live or otherwise) through the iPlayer service only.
Either way, the BBC has got to find a better solution to the TV license system as it currently stands. But it must not involve being made compulsory through taxation. No way. And neither must the TV license be shared by commercial broadcasters such as ITV or Channel 4. If they can't raise their funding through advertising, then that's their problem. Not ours.