FR France Info
France Info (pronounced [fʁɑ̃s ɛ̃.fo]; stylized as franceinfo:) is a French domestic rolling news channel which started broadcasting on 31 August 2016 at 6:00 p.m. on the Web.[1] TV broadcasting began on 1 September 2016 at 8:00 p.m. on most TV operators, and on the TNT (digital terrestrial television). As for TNT Sat [fr] and Canal+, it began on 6 September.[2][3]
France Info involves France Télévisions, Radio France, France Médias Monde (with France 24) and the Institut national de l’audiovisuel (INA). It shares its name with a global news service which gathers the TV channel itself, the radio channel France Info and the website www.francetvinfo.fr. France Info broadcasts from 06:00 seven days a week until 00:00 and simulcasts France 24 overnight. France Info can be watched live on YouTube (with a 12-hour rewind availability) and web. In 2001, when France’s digital terrestrial television was only a project, the government of Lionel Jospin asked the president of France Télévisions to think about a project for a wider range of public channels broadcast on DTT , So that the public service will have a prominent place in this project. The power in place perceives in TNT, the technical revolution that it had been waiting for a long time to develop and rebalance the audience and the visibility of public television in difficulty since the privatization of TF1 and the arrival of M6 in 1987. France Télévisions Proposes the creation of three new channels: France 1, a channel for continuous information, France 4, a channel devoted entirely to regions, and France 6, a channel offering a selection of France 2 and France 3 programs re-broadcast at off-shoots.