By building multi-billion dollar delivery systems, cable and satellite deliver broadcast programming in ways that the copyright owners of those programs and the broadcasters cannot. This is not true, however, for the Internet. Parties that wish to make use of the Internet to retransmit broadcast programming do not have to build the delivery platform; it already exists. The technology is readily available and is not particularly expensive. Copyright owners of broadcast programming do not need to turn to someone else to place their content on the Internet; they can do it themselves. In fact, certain television broadcasters have already begun to place portions of their signals on the Internet, demonstrating that there is no need for a third-party packager to do it for them. See, Hearings Before the Subcomm. on Telecommunications, Trade & Consumer Protection of the House Commerce Committee, 106th Cong. (2000)(statement of Paul Karpowicz). Or, copyright owners can freely decide to license others to transmit their programming over the Internet. But it should be their choice.