The article discusses the quality of live streams provided by German public broadcasters ARD and ZDF during the FIFA World Cup, highlighting their low video resolution compared to private provider MagentaTV. While ARD and ZDF offer free access to matches through their media libraries, the streaming quality is significantly lower, with bitrates ranging between 3.2 and 5.5 Mbit/s, resulting in pixelated images. In contrast, MagentaTV provides Full HD streams at over 6 Mbit/s and even offers 4K content at around 20 Mbit/s. The author criticizes the high cost of licensing fees paid by ARD and ZDF—approximately 152 million euros—to show World Cup matches, arguing that this money could have been better spent on improving broadcast quality. The article references the Media State Treaty (§13 MStV), which requires public broadcasters to make matches of significant social importance freely available but does not mandate showing all games. It suggests that important matches could be streamed directly by private providers like MagentaTV in higher quality without paywalls.
Lectura del sesgo (Centro): The article focuses on technical aspects of sports broadcasting and critiques the quality of streaming services without taking a political stance or favoring any particular ideological perspective.
Por qué estas puntuaciones (Veracidad 85 · Objetividad 65): The article accurately reports on the technical quality of ARD/ZDF streams compared to MagentaTV, citing specific bitrates and mentioning the 152 million euro payment to Telekom. It provides factual data but uses somewhat critical language ('Krümelfußball', 'Pixelbrei') which introduces bias. The co



