ACC Network, ESPN3, and ACCNExtra aren't really TV. Those are streamable, but they aren't live TV that anyone with a basic cable package can watch. Also, why would ESPN need to do that? They are the ones paying the money, they have no interest in fairness to leagues. They are all about the bottom line.
Who is it a problem for? Us, because we don't like it? I'm sure the SEC isn't interested in giving up their time slots, so it's not a problem for them. Here's the problem. We expect the same results that teams with 80,000+ capacity stadiums, that are full every Saturday, and who pour money into their programs hand over fist because they have large, loyal, rabid fan bases, yet we don't do our part to bridge the gap. The ACC has exactly 3 programs on a par with the SEC in fanbase and two when it comes to attendance. Clemson and FSU draw 90k plus every Saturday and travel well. Miami suffers from its stadium problem, but draws TV viewers out the wazoo. VT is getting there. No other ACC program is even close. IF GT games drew viewers at the same clip that SEC teams did, we'd have the more coveted time slots.
This would be great. If the ACC were in the position of the B1G or SECC to negotiate from a position of strength, then we could probably have done something similar. However, since we came to the table as the weakest TV draw of all 5 major conferences (In terms of team support, not media markets), we took what we could get, and it was widely speculated that our TV deal wasn't really all that great compared to the other conferences.
That being said, I consider it fortunate when we are on live, non-streamed TV even if it means a noon kickoff.