It could be with a consent agreement where satcasters would agree upfront to credit paid subscribers to compensate them for having bought into "commercial-free."
The path of lesser resistance would be to make some channels commercial free (so as to deliver on earlier marketing claims) and sell spots on other channels. That way satcasters, listeners and regulators could all have it both ways - the kind of prospect that makes LAWMAKERS salivate.
In order for the service to survive you're almost going to have to resign yourself, as a satradio listener, to some commercial content. At some point there's got to be a financial "day of reckoning." The current financial performance of XM/Sirius can't be maintained indefinitely.
The path of lesser resistance would be to make some channels commercial free (so as to deliver on earlier marketing claims) and sell spots on other channels. That way satcasters, listeners and regulators could all have it both ways - the kind of prospect that makes LAWMAKERS salivate.
In order for the service to survive you're almost going to have to resign yourself, as a satradio listener, to some commercial content. At some point there's got to be a financial "day of reckoning." The current financial performance of XM/Sirius can't be maintained indefinitely.