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1971: Preview of captioning at the First
National Conference on Television for the Hearing Impaired in
Nashville, Tennessee
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1972: During a test at Gallaudet University,
ABC and the National Bureau of Standards debuted closed captions
embedded within the normal broadcast of Mod Squad.
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1972: Open captioning began on PBS’s “The
French Chef”
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1976: The FCC adopted rules that provide that
line 21 of the vertical blanking interval (VBI) be used primarily for
the transmission of closed captioning
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1976: The FCC adopted a rule requiring
television licensees to transmit emergency messages in a visual format
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1979: National Captioning Institute created
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March 16, 1980: The first closed captioned
television series were broadcast for those who had bought caption
decoders
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1982: Real-time captioning debuted
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1990: Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990
was passed, requiring all television receivers with screens of 13” or
larger be able to receive and display captions by 1993
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1990: Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
enacted, requiring all federally funded public service announcements
to be closed captioned.
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1992: FCC adopted technical standards for
closed captioning on cable systems
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1993: Requirements from Television Decoder
Circuitry Act of 1990 take effect
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1996: Telecommunications Act of 1996 adds
Section 713 to the Communications Act -- requiring the FCC to
prescribe rules and implementation schedules for closed captioning of
television video programs
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1997: The FCC adopts rules that gradually
increase the amount of programming requiring closed captioning
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1998: FCC’s closed captioning rules go into
effect
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2000: The FCC adopts an Order requiring an
increasing amount of digital television programming to be captioned
and establishes a phase-in schedule for closed captioning of digital
programming
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2006: 100% of all new video programming, with
exceptions, must be closed captioned on both digital and analog
televisions (new analog programming is programming first aired
on/after January 1, 1998; new digital programming is programming first
aired on/after July 1, 2002)
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2008: 75% of all pre-rule video programming
(pre-rule analog programming is programming first aired before January
1, 1998; pre-rule digital programming is programming first aired
before July 1, 2002) must be captioned
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2010: 100% of all new analog and digital
Spanish language programs, with exceptions, must be closed captioned
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2012: 75% of all pre-rule Spanish-language
video programming must be captioned