This would mean subscribers only pay for what they view and not a generally-made subscription model. A pay-per-view model isn't the only interesting introduction by the indigenous brand, there's a purported enablement for a pause in subscription. The pay-per-view model employed by TSTV is also commercially impossible as averred by the satellite broadcaster. According to them, unlike in telecomunication, broadcasters cannot offer pay television services because satellite broadcasting is a one-way system which doesn't has an enablement for broadcasters to determine when a subscriber is connected and/or watching or what channel is being viewed. Multichoice which owns DSTV while defending their stance on exempting it's brand from the widely encouraged setup explained that there is a wide difference between Pay-As-You-Go used in the telecomunication industry and the pay-per-view model. According to the popular south african satellite operator, a pay-per-view pricing system is not technically and commercially feasible in addition to being impossible presently in the industry. This uncommon payment scheme has consistently been left pending and unattempted by market leaders like DSTV. After intermittent spells of downtimes, Telecom Satellite Television, TSTV, recently announced a pay-per-view satellite service in Nigeria with prices being as low as N3 daily.
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