February 1998

Communications-related Headlines for 2/27/98

Education/Universal Service
NYT: Gore Defends Program to Wire Schools
NYT: Educators Lay Out Their Requirements for Technology

Campaign Finance Reform
NYT: Deadlock In Senate Blocks Campaign Finance Reform, All But
Killing It For Year
WP: Campaign Finance Bill Dies in Senate
WSJ: Impasse on Campaign-Finance Reform May Cause Sponsors to Change
Tactics

Internet
NYT: Clinton Continues to Stumble Over the 'E' Word (Encryption)
WSJ: Clinton, as Expected, Says He'll Support Moratorium on
Taxing Internet Sales
WSJ: AOL Taps Bloomberg For Business News
WSJ: Microsoft Plans to Cut Back Web Services

Infrastructure
WSJ: Interagency Center to Protect Networks From Hackers to
Be Unveiled by Reno

Telephony
WP: FCC Chief: Phone Giants OverCharging
Current: Clinton backs DTV transition subsidy

Philanthropy/Funding
Current: CPB Aids NPR Newsmags, Weekend and Native Programming
Current: ...and TV Docs on Broadway, Scottsboro, Bunche, Kalahari Life

Merger
WP: Computer Associated Says CSC Is 'Scaring Up Issues'

** Education/Universal Service **

Title: Gore Defends Program to Wire Schools
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/cyber/articles/27education.html
Author: Jeri Clausing
Issue: Universal Service
Description: In a speech made to the Connecting All Americans conference
yesterday, Vice President Al Gore warned Congressional members who have
suggested proposals to cut financing to help rural and poor schools connect
to the Internet that they were in for a tough fight. "There are those who
would pick the money from the pockets of our poorest schools," Gore said. "I
would like to say to them loudly and clearly: Your efforts to block the
e-rate is an effort to ration information and ration education and it would
darken the future of some of our brightest students. We will not let you do it."

Title: Educators Lay Out Their Requirements for Technology
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/cyber/articles/27education-sid...
Author: Pamela Mendels
Issue: Education
Description: Wednesday evening a panel of educators gathered for a
discussion titled, "Introducing New Media Educational Content; What, How and
Whose New Projects Get into Schools?," the event was sponsored by the New
York New Media Association's Education Special Interest Group. The educators
came to the consensus that the three items at the top of their list for
technology in the classroom would be: buildings that can support computers
and cabling, better educational software, and research proving that the
gadgetry really helps students learn. Panelist, Richard A. Schultz, manager
of Internet services and technical training for the New York City Board of
Education, told the audience, "I'm very excited about the new media...and I
think teachers are extremely excited about this." Nonetheless, he and other
panelists agreed, technology still has a way to go before it is accepted and
integrated into the classroom.

** Campaign Finance Reform **

Title: Deadlock In Senate Blocks Campaign Finance Reform, All But
Killing It For Year
Source: New York Times (A1,A22)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/politics/022798congress-campaign.html
Author: Alison Mitchell
Issue: Campaign Finance Reform
Description: Yesterday, the Senate basically buried all attempts at campaign
finance overhaul for at least another year. Despite a year-long
investigation into the campaign fundraising abuses of the 1996 election, the
advocates of revising the current law could not, in the end, generate enough
support to triumph over a Republican filibuster. "Instead, in successive
votes of 51-48 and 45-54 Thursday, the Senate first failed to end debate on
the main bipartisan overhaul bill and then on a competing proposal by
Republican majority leader Trent Lott aimed only at organized labor. It
takes 60 votes to cut off Senate debate and force a vote on legislation.
With the Senate at a stalemate, Lott, a primary foe of the overhaul effort,
removed both bills from the floor to clear the way for popular pork-barrel
legislation to allot transportation projects to the states. Having cycled
through familiar debate all week, no one objected." On the lawn of the
Capitol, after the final vote, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), one of the major
architects of the campaign finance reform bill, promised to try again and
said, "We will not quit and we will prevail." (until the fall...same time,
same place)

Title: Campaign Finance Bill Dies in Senate
Source: Washington Post (A1,A17)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/27/084l-022798-idx.html
Author: Helen Dewar
Issue: Campaign Finance Reform
Description: Legislation to overhaul the country's scandal-ridden campaign
finance system was put to death yesterday in the Senate. The final vote took
with it any hope to enact major changes before November's elections. "The
bill is dead" and cannot be revised, said Sen Mitch McConnell (R-KY), a
leading foe of the legislation. "When you have 48 people dug in on an issue,
it will not pass." Several campaign finance measures are still pending in
the House. Nearly 190 members have already signed a discharge petition to
force a vote, which House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) has promised by the
end of March. If the House does approve a bill, it would still have to go
back and clear the 60-vote hurdle in the Senate. "Unfortunately, the Senate
has once again proven that the American people's cynicism about Congress's
ability to pass meaningful reform is well-founded," said Sen. Olympia Snowe
(R-ME), who played a key role in debate over the issue. "If not for the
unwillingness of the leadership to recognize the majority support in the
Senate and the nation, we might have prevailed," she added.

Title: Impasse on Campaign-Finance Reform May Cause Sponsors to Change Tactics
Source: Wall Street Journal (A20)
http://wsj.com/
Author: David Rogers
Issue: Campaign Finance Reform
Description: The Senate deadlocked again on overhauling campaign-finance
laws, an impasse that could force reformers to change tactics and seek
incremental changes over time. A slim majority supports a large-scale
overhaul, but in a final test yesterday, the reformers were still eight
votes short of the 60 needed to bring up such a bill for a vote. Common
Cause President Ann McBride, a leading reform advocate, denounced the
outcome as a "disaster for our democracy" but said she is now prepared to
consider scaled-back changes to build the case for broader ones later.

** Internet **

Title: Clinton Continues to Stumble Over the 'E' Word (Encryption)
Source: New York Times (C1)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/biztech/articles/27industry.html
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Encryption
Description: In San Francisco yesterday, President Clinton described the
economic impact of the Internet in "glowing terms" to an audience of
technology investors. But throughout his speech, he failed to touch on the
issue of encryption and the administration's policy on data scrambling -- an
issue that increasingly seems to matter most to Silicon Valley. Sharpening
an already intense debate is the fact that legislation that would restrict
unlimited use of encryption is about to be introduced on Capitol Hill. A
series of intense negotiations over a compromise have been taking place
behind the scenes, but the Clinton Administration and a small group of
high-technology executives suggest that there is no simple resolution in
sight. One Silicon Valley executive, who met with the president before his
speech on Thursday and asked not to be further identified, said, "To us this
is really important, but it's just an irritant to him. His basic message to
us was, 'Can we get this thing done?'"

Title: Clinton, as Expected, Says He'll Support Moratorium on
Taxing Internet Sales
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Jackie Calmes
Issue: Internet Commerce
Description: President Clinton sided with cyberspace retailers rather than
the nation's governors, endorsing a moratorium on new taxes on Internet
commerce. The president, as expected, told several hundred
technology-industry entrepreneurs at a conference here that he supports a
proposed Internet Tax Freedom Act in Congress for a moratorium of as long as
six years. But, reflecting the heat he's taking from governors, who just
last week took the opposite stand, Mr. Clinton called for "a national
dialogue" to find ways in the meantime for state and local governments to
collect sales taxes without choking the Internet's development.

Title: AOL Taps Bloomberg For Business News
Source: Wall Street Journal (B2)
http://wsj.com/
Issue: Online Services
Description: AOL said it will make Bloomberg LP one of the major sources of
business and market news in a three-year agreement. Terms weren't disclosed,
but executives familiar with the plan said Bloomberg is paying AOL several
million dollars in exchange for top billing in the personal-finance area of
the service. The move fill holes left by Dow Jones, which formerly had a
contract with AOL which called for the online service provider to pay the news
organization an undisclosed sum to provide AOL subscribers with financial news.

Title: Microsoft Plans to Cut Back Web Services
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: David Bank
Issue: Online Services
Description: Microsoft ended a once bally-hooed foray into entertainment
programming, announcing that the Microsoft network will eliminate production
of its remaining on-line "shows" and close World Wide Web sites dedicated to
movie and music reviews. The cutbacks at the on-line service continue the
software company's retreat from broad ambitions in the media business. The
latest cutbacks will eliminate 50 jobs in Microsoft's Interactive Media
Group, and follow layoffs at Microsoft's Sidewalk local activity guides and
the elimination of an on-line travel magazine called Mungo Park. Instead,
Microsoft is beefing up services such as free e-mail, search and directories
to other content on the Web.

** Infrastructure **

Title: Interagency Center to Protect Networks From Hackers to
Be Unveiled by Reno
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: John Simons
Issue: Infrastructure
Description: Attorney General Janet Reno is expected to unveil today an
interagency center designed to protect the nation's phone systems, electric
utilities and digital networks from cyber attacks. The unit will combine
several existing federal computer-security efforts into a single command
center here and will include computer experts from the Defense and Justice
departments as well as the Secret Service. The unit, which will also work
closely with private-sector technicians, will investigate misdeeds ranging
from digital break-ins at private-sector banks to thefts of data from
military networks. Ms. Reno plans to ask Congress for $64 million for fiscal
1999 to finance the unit, called the Nat'l Infrastructure Protection Center.

** Telephony **

Title: FCC Chief: Phone Giants OverCharging
Source: Washington Post (G1,G3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/27/062l-022798-idx.html
Author: Mike Mills
Issue: Long-Distance
Description: William E. Kennard, chairman of the Federal Communications
Commission, yesterday accused AT&T, MCI and Sprint of not passing onto
consumers savings from FCC reductions in the connection charges
long-distance companies pay to local phone companies and of overcharging
their customers for new fees ordered by the government last year. In a
letter to the three carriers, Kennard cited a "growing body of evidence that
the nation's largest long-distance companies are raising rates when their
costs of providing service are decreasing." The long-distance companies
responded angrily to Kennard's accusation. "Every MCI customer who has made
a long-distance call on Sundays in the last six months knows that
long-distance rates have gone down and access-charge savings have been
passed along," said MCI spokeswoman Jamie DePeau, referring to the company's
new 5-cent-per-minute rate on Sundays. Sprint spokeswoman Eileen Doherty
said, "Sprint's long-distance rates have historically fallen far more than
access charges." Kennard is under pressure from top Democratic and
Republican leaders, many whom blame the FCC for failing to ensure that
consumers phone bills would not increase as a result of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996.

Title: Clinton backs DTV transition subsidy
Source: Current, The Public Telecommunications Newspaper (Vol.XVII, No.3,p1)
Author: Steven Behrens
Issue: Digital TV
Description: The White House this month endorsed $450 million in federal
help for public broadcasting's transition to digital transmission --- a huge
commitment but less than the $1.7 billion estimated cost for the changeover.
Part of the sum amounts to a redirection of the longstanding Public
Telecommunications Facilities Program (PTFP). APTS, CPB, and PBS said
nevertheless that they were "delighted" with the support and called it an
"excellent start." However, the statement from NPR President Delano Lewis
said he was "concerned" that the sum fell short of the field's request. No
one knows what difference the lower subsidy will make in the digital
switch over, said APTS President David Brugger, but it may mean that some
public TV stations will lack digital production gear and will serve only as
"pass-through" outlets for national programs.

** Philanthropy/Funding **

Title: CPB Aids NPR Newsmags, Weekend and Native Programming
Source: Current, The Public Telecommunications Newspaper (Vol.XVII, No.3,p14)
Author: Jaqueline Conciatore
Issue: Philanthropy
Description: CPB's 1998 Radio Program Fund has awarded NPR about a
half-million dollars to strengthen its news-magazines and support "Morning
Edition's" shift to a 5 a.m. start. CPB announced the 22 awards, totaling
$4.5 million, Feb. 9. The fund made heavy investments in weekend shows and
Native American programming. NPR won $275,000 to help pay for Morning
Edition's January shift in start time from 6 a.m. to 5 a.m.

Title: ...and TV Docs on Broadway, Scottsboro, Bunche, Kalahari Life
Source: Current, The Public Telecommunications Newspaper (Vol.XVII, No.3,p14)
Author: Karen Everhart Bedford
Issue: Funding
Description: CPB's most recent Television Program Fund grants round provides
more than $4 million to 18 projects, including a number focused on education
or training. CPB is offering fellowships for producers to attend the Input
98 screening conference in Germany this May, backing outreach for a major
history miniseries, and providing completion funds for a videotape series on
math instruction. But most of the projects are intended for PBS distribution.

** Merger **

Title: Computer Associated Says CSC Is 'Scaring Up Issues'
Source: Washington Post (G1)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/27/058l-022798-idx.html
Author: Mark Leibovich
Issue: Merger
Description: Computer Associates International Inc. said yesterday that
officials at Computer Sciences Corp. are "scarring up issues that don't
exist" in their effort to block a hostile takeover by stating intelligence
community concerns over Computer Associates' partial foreign ownership.
"Computer Sciences is going to look under every stone, open any closet and
not leave any page unturned to discourage people from voting for this
offer," said Steve Woghin, CA's senior vice president and general counsel.
Computer Sciences' officials had no comment yesterday.
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/26/98

Arts
WP: NEA Grant Proposal Looks Like a Bomb(er)

Universal Service
TelecomAM: Commerce Secretary Urges Business Involvement
in Wiring Nation
NTIA: Connecting All Americans for the 21st Century

EdTech
NYT: ...With Liberty and Laptops For All?

Television/V-Chip
WP: Viewers' Mute Response

Internet
WP: White House Resists Taxes On Internet
NYT: Clinton: Don't Tax Internet Commerce
WSJ: Web Magazines' New Battle Cry: Charge!
NYT: Bloomberg to Supply AOL With On-Line Business Data
NYT: Bertelsmann Plans Website For Book Sales Via Internet
NYT: Amplifying Voices For Human Rights
NYT: Web TV Offers Cheap Web Access, But Consumers Are Wary

Jobs
NYT: High-Tech Executives Ask for Leeway on Foreign Workers

Newspapers
NYT: Circuits

Radio
WSJ: Korean War: Radio Is the Battleground of L.A. Broadcasters

** Arts **

Title: NEA Grant Proposal Looks Like a Bomb(er)
Source: Washington Post (A13)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/26/117l-022698-idx.html
Author: Rick Weiss
Issue: Arts
Description: The embattled National Endowment for the Arts has received a
unique proposal: the NEA Army has applied for a grant of $98 million -- the
agency's entire annual budget -- to model a section of the $2 billion B-2
Stealth bomber and carry the work around the country with a sign that simply
read "PRIORITIES." See The NEA Army: Practitioners of Stealth Art home page
http://weber.u.washington.edu/~hodin/NEAArmy/index.html]

** Universal Service **

Title: Commerce Secretary Urges Business Involvement in Wiring Nation
Source: Telecom AM -- 2/26/98
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Universal Service
Description: In remarks at a conference sponsored by the NTIA and PULP
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/connecting/index.html, Commerce Secretary William
Daley said that companies that help provide Internet access to poor and
rural areas will be "paid back through better workers and better customers."
FCC Commissioner Gloria Tristani told participants that the Commission will
soon begin a rulemaking to determine how to increase the availability of
advanced telecommunications capabilities.

Title: Connecting All Americans for the 21st Century
Source: NTIA
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/new.html
Issue: Universal Service
Description: "Connecting All Americans for the 21st Century:
Telecommunications Links in Low Income and Rural Communities. This summit,
sponsored by the Clinton Administration and PULP will address the immediate
opportunities to take full advantage of Telephone Lifeline, improve access
to new telecommunications technology for low income and rural communities,
and develop strategies to connect and network those communities." [Hear it
at http://www.ntia.doc.gov/connecting/index.html]

** EdTech **

Title: ...With Liberty and Laptops For All?
Source: New York Times (E14)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/circuits/articles/26laptop.html
Author: Mike Romano
Issue: Education
Description: This March, New York City Community School District Six will
distribute 1,000 laptops to students in 26 middle schools, expanding the
pilot program, Learning With Laptops, that was started by the Microsoft
Corporation and Toshiba USA three years ago. The venture which arranges
services and lease agreements for schools now includes AT&T, Acer and
Compaq. The majority of schools that participate in the Learning With
Laptops program lease the basic laptop package to parents for three years at
about $58 a month. District Six will split this cost evenly with the
student's families, who get to keep the computers. At a recent Microsoft
promotional meeting in Seattle, teachers participating in the program
reported improved writing and time-management skills and better attendance
among students with laptops.

** Television/V-Chip **

Title: Viewers' Mute Response
Source: Washington Post (D1,D3-2/25/98)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Paul Farhi
Issue: V-Chip
Description: Almost nothing has happened in the almost five months since the
television industry started offering on screen labels to warn viewers about
explicit program material. Given the public's underwhelming response, it is
difficult to say whether they are pleased with the new labels or mystified
by them. Bob Wright, chairman of NBC, said, "We get letters and calls about
everything that's on the air, but this has not been one of them." Jack
Valenti, head of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and who
oversaw the development of the movie and TV ratings said, "This has been a
non-event in TV homes. We were prepared for complaints but so far we haven't
received any." The MPAA has received about 800 letters, emails or phone
calls so far, but almost all of them are requesting a brochure on the new
system.

** Internet **

Title: White House Resists Taxes On Internet
Source: Washington Post (E1)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/26/161l-022698-idx.html
Author: Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Issue: Internet Regulation
Description: On Tuesday, the National Governors' Association passed a
resolution urging Congress to allow states to require Internet and
mail-order merchants to collect sales taxes for purchases that are made in
states where the merchants do not have a physical presence. But President
Clinton is backing legislation that would place a moratorium on new Internet
taxes. In an announcement expected today, the President will call for a
commission to develop a uniform approach to taxing Internet purchases.

Title: Clinton: Don't Tax Internet Commerce
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/national/022698clinton-internet.html
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Internet Commerce
Description: When President Clinton addresses a technology investor's
conference in
San Francisco today, he will speak against taxing Internet commerce, said an
administration official on Wednesday. The Administration's position, which
would bar state and local governments from enacting taxes on the Internet
until 2004, is in direct opposition to state governors. The Clinton
Administration believes that the Internet is "spurring the growth of new
industries" and that new taxes imposed by local jurisdictions would
undermine that economic impact.

Title: Web Magazines' New Battle Cry: Charge!
Source: Wall Street Journal
http://wsj.com/ (B1)
Author: Jared Sandberg
Issue: Internet Content
Description: Many online magazines are moving to charge subscribers for
their content. "Everybody wanted to get some market share by giving it away
for free," said the business development manager at the Economist. "But
that's not a model that can last forever. Their business models will evolve
into being paid." If this transition works, it could mark the opening of the
floodgates to pay-per services throughout the Internet and end the flow of
red ink that has sunk many websites. [So, how much are your Headlines worth?]

Title: Bloomberg to Supply AOL With On-Line Business Data
Source: New York Times (D2)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/biztech/articles/26bloomberg.html
Author: Lisa Napoli
Issue: Online Services
Description: Bloomberg L.P. plans to announce today that it will work with
America Online as their feature provider of business information. AOL hopes
that the addition of Bloomberg will further increase confidence in the
online consumer markets that have yet to show a profit.

Title: Bertelsmann Plans Website For Book Sales Via Internet
Source: New York Times (D4)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/biztech/articles/26book.html
Author: Doreen Carvajal
Issue: Internet Commerce/International
Description: Bertelsmann A.G., the German media conglomerate, announced
yesterday plans for a world-wide electronic bookstore. With Bertelsmann's
vast resources, publishing experience and international distribution
network, the bookstore has the potential to become the world's largest
online merchant of books.

Title: Amplifying Voices For Human Rights
Source: New York Times (E14)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/circuits/articles/26justice.html
Author: Michel Marriott
Issue: Internet Content
Description: In an effort to turn the world's attention to the gross amounts
of human suffering that continue to take place around the planet, some human
rights groups are taking their information online. Focus on Justice, an
online human rights group, brings actual accounts of current situations to
people by using video-cassette recorders, television monitors and powerful
computers, much of it donated. "What this technology allows us to do is to
have an impact that no other human rights activists have ever had before,"
said Andrew Greenblatt, co-director of Focus on Justice, which was founded
last fall. Neil V. Getnick, a senior partner in the New York law firm of
Getnick & Getnick and a major supporter of Focus on Justice, said that the
Internet's power to aid human rights is its interactivity: "You can go to a
Web site, learn something about an issue, and then, if you are motivated
about it, immediately have an opportunity to send email to the right people."

Title: Web TV Offers Cheap Web Access, But Consumers Are Wary
Source: New York Times (E6)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/circuits/articles/26webtv.html
Author: Michel Marriott
Issue: Web TV
Description: With almost every U.S. household having a television set,
unlike the only 4 out of 10 American households that have computers,
Microsoft, owner of WebTV Networks, thought that pumped-up TV sets would
quickly replace the home computer. A complete WEBTV system can be purchased
for less than $200 -- one-fifth the cost of a bargain PC. "But sales of
WebTV, the most established player in the Internet-television industry, have
proved modest." Retailers say sales are particularly disappointing when you
consider how quickly video-cassette recorders were adopted by the public.
Yet some people believe that the public will want access to the Internet via
their TV set as soon as they get use to the idea. Matthew York, who began
Smart TV, a magazine published six-times a year that focuses on the
dissolving edges that have separated computers and TV's for decades, said,
"I think the days of TV as we know them are numbered. A major paradigm
shift is taking place." Ahran Achachter, vice-president and general manager
of Datavision, a Fifth Avenue electronics superstore said, "This is not
something that can be thrown into the superstore to be bought like bread or
milk. That can be done when everyone understands what it does."

** Jobs **

Title: High-Tech Executives Ask for Leeway on Foreign Workers
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/cyber/articles/26workers.html
Author: Jeri Clausing
Issue: Jobs
Description: On Tuesday, high-tech executives came to Capitol Hill to plead
for the ability to bring more foreign workers into the United States in an
effort to fill the deficit of skilled workers available in this country. The
Clinton Administration indicated that it was willing to discuss increasing
the current cap, which now gives visas to up to 65,000 skilled foreign
workers a year. Several technology representatives said that they feared
some of the conditions that were proposed along with an increase would make
an already complex process only more burdensome.

** Newspapers **

Title: Circuits
Source: New York Times (Section E)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/circuits/index.html
Issue: Technology
Description: The New York Times introduces a new section on Technology today
called "Circuits." The new section will come out every Thursday and focus on
the "personal side of digital technology in everyday life."

** Radio **

Title: Korean War: Radio Is the Battleground of L.A. Broadcasters
Source: Wall Street Journal
http://wsj.com/ (A1)
Author: John Emshwiller
Issue: Radio
Description: Los Angeles two Korean-language radio stations are fierce
rivals. Jea Min Chang runs FM Seoul and Janghee "Jay" Lee runs Radio Korea.
The two trade barbs that would make Ted Turner and Rupert Murdoch blush. But
their latest fight has started an international incident. While reporting
from Korea, Radio Korea's news director reported "word on the street" that
Mr. Chang's family-owned media empire was in dire financial straits and
would not be able to print its newspapers the next day. Mr. Chang complained
to Korean authorities and the news director was arrested and charged with
slander.
*********
Has anyone seen my missing spell checker?

Communications-related Headlines for 2/25/98

Universal Service
Telecom AM: Irving Defends FCC Universal Service Implementation

Internet
WP: Governors Support Internet Sales Tax
NYT: Fewer Bricks Mean Higher Returns At New Internet Banks

Telephony
Telecom AM: Tauzin To Join McCain In Seeking Elimination Of Exercise Tax

Merger
WSJ: Sinclair Broadcast Agrees to Acquire Sullivan for More Than
$800 Million

** Universal Service **

Title: Irving Defends FCC Universal Service Implementation
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 25, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Universal Service
Description: The FCC's system of carrier contributions to the universal
service fund is not a tax, National Telecommunications & Infrastructure
Administration Administrator Larry Irving said. He said that the new
programs are built on "a concept that's existed for decades" and that he
hoped the session would help people "get out of the Washington mindset about
what all this means." For 70 years, "it has been this nation's policy to
give everyone basic telecom service," Irving said. He said that within the
next decade Internet access will be basic service, noting that beginning
this year it no longer will be possible to take the Graduate Record Exam
anywhere but online and students without computer and Internet experience
will be handicapped.

** Internet **

Title: Governors Support Internet Sales Tax
Source: Washington Post (C9,C12)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/25/063l-022598-idx.html
Author: David S. Broder and Rajov Chandrasekaran
Issue: Internet Regulation
Description: As Internet shopping becomes more popular, many of the nation's
governors are concerned about losing billions of dollars in tax revenue. In
reaction to this, a resolution adopted at the final session of the National
Governor's Association urged Congress to expand the ability of states to tax
commerce on the Internet. The resolution would require Internet and
catalogue merchants to collect and pay sales taxes even if they do not have
a physical presence in the state to which the goods are being shipped.
Currently, such businesses are not required to collect state sales taxes in
any destination state in which they do not operate. In return, the governors
said they would support a prohibition on taxing Internet access, and they
pledged to try to organize the current mass-variances in local sales taxes
by enacting a single rate within each state. They contend that by creating
uniform rates it would be easier for Internet and mail-order merchants to
collect and remit the taxes.

Title: Fewer Bricks Mean Higher Returns At New Internet Banks
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022598bank.html
Author: Sandeep Junnarkar
Issue: Internet Use
Description: A new breed of banking is emerging across the Internet. Instead
of providing Web access only as a convenience, these banks offer all of
their services on the Internet. They don't have any bank branches or
tellers, all checks are direct-deposited or mailed, and they are opened 24
hours-a-day, seven days-a-week for service at their Web sites. Because these
banks don't have the overhead expenses of running branch offices they are
able to parlay their reduced costs into better interest rates on money
market accounts, certificates of deposit, and they even offer interest on
checking accounts. Currently, only two such Internet banks are operational:
Security First Network Bank and Atlanta Internet Bank, but a third,
CompuBank, has been chartered.

** Telephony **

Title: Tauzin To Join McCain In Seeking Elimination Of Exercise Tax
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 25, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Telephony
Description: House Telecom Subcommittee Chairman Billy Tauzin is drafting
legislation to eliminate the 3 percent exercise tax on telecommunications.
His videotaped announcement was aired Feb. 24 at the Cellular
Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA) convention in Washington DC,
one day after Senate Committee Chairman John McCain told the same audience
that he will propose similar legislation as soon as this week. Tauzin said
he is committed to "getting rid of the tax on the First Amendment."

** Merger **

Title: Sinclair Broadcast Agrees to Acquire Sullivan for More Than $800 Million
Source: Wall Street Journal (B8)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Kyle Pope
Issue: Merger
Description: Sinclair Broadcast Group said it agreed to pay more than $800
million to buy Sullivan Broadcast Holdings, a closely held owner of 13
midsize TV stations. Sinclair will have 24 Fox affiliates after the Sullivan
deal is complete. Sinclair said the deal all but ends a TV expansion push
that has doubled the company's stable of TV stations during the past year.
Under terms of the transaction, Sinclair will pay Sullivan shareholders
about $840 million and will assume as much as $160 million in Sullivan debt.
Once the Sullivan deal closes this spring, Sinclair will own a total of 55
TV stations, up from 28 a year ago, covering about a quarter of all American
households.
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/24/98

Free Speech/First Amendment
WP: Ruling Limits Speech Rights for Teachers

Internet
TelecomAM: Internet Said To Help and Hurt Congress,
Consume Human Resources

Wireless
WSJ: Network Snags Imperil Sales Of Motorola
TelecomAM: McCain To Introduce Bill To Repeal Excise
Tax On Telecom Services
TelecomAM: Kennard Calls On Wireless Industry To Meet 'Club' Obligations

Cable
WSJ: TCI Selects At Home Corp. For Services

Regulation
NYT: European Study Paints Chilling Portrait of Technology's Uses

** Free Speech/First Amendment **

Title: Ruling Limits Speech Rights for Teachers
Source: Washington Post (B3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/24/116l-022498-idx.html
Author: Brooke Masters
Issue: Free Speech/First Amendment
Description: The 4th U.S. Circuit Court ruled that a North Carolina school
board did not violate a school teacher's First Amendment rights when it
disciplined her for putting on a controversial play. In the majority opinion
the court found that school boards by definition have control over decisions
that involve cirriculum. "Someone must fix the cirriculum of any school. In
our opinion it is far better public policy...that the makeup of the
cirriculum be entrusted to local school authorities who are in some sense
responsible rather than to the teachers who would be responsible only to the
judges." The teacher picked the play "Independence" which is controversial
because of its portrayal of a "dysfunctional family, including promiscuity
and lesbianism."

** Internet **

Title: Internet Said To Help and Hurt Congress, Consume Human Resources
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 24, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Internet
Description: The Internet can help the gov't., lobbyists and public interest
groups, but can also pose serious dangers to the institution of the
Congress, speakers said at a conference in Washington. At "Lobbying and the
Internet," Howard Marlowe, head of the Marlowe & Company lobbying firm, said
Web sites he set up for clients have been useful and efficient in
communicating information. He said lobbyists can use the Internet to win
their legislative fights and advised that simple e-mail should not be
overlooked as a means of keeping interested Net users in touch with issues.

** Wireless **

Title: Network Snags Imperil Sales Of Motorola
Source: Wall Street Journal (A3)
http://wsj.com/
Author: John J. Keller & Quentin Hardy
Issue: Networks/Wireless
Description: Motorola is struggling to correct defects in its
cellular-network equipment and software that are crippling its expansion
into new wireless systems and have already led one major customer to cancel
its order. Executives close to the company said PrimeCo Personal Comm. has
canceled its $500 million contract and will replace almost all its Motorola
gear with equipment and software from rival supplier Lucent Technologies.
Motorola's problems supplying systems for so-called personal communications
services could seriously damage its credibility as a leading provider of
network and software world-wide.

Title: McCain To Introduce Bill To Repeal Excise Tax On Telecom Services
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 24, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Wireless
Description: Senate Commerce Committee Chairman McCain will introduce a bill
"immediately" to repeal the three-percent excise tax on telecom services, he
said Feb. 23. Minutes before, the Cellular Telecommunications Industry
Assoc. President Thomas Wheeler had urged wireless carriers to detail the
costs of various taxes on bills so customers can know "what they're paying
for and why." McCain said state and local governments see the wireless
industry as "a cash cow." He said it should be protected from taxes to
sustain its growth. McCain added that he was "astounded" that the FCC
"resisted" attempts to detail taxes on phone bills.

Title: Kennard Calls On Wireless Industry To Meet 'Club' Obligations
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 24, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Wireless
Description: "Wireless has arrived" as a "full-fledged member of the telecom
club," said FCC Chairman Kennard. But as a club member, the industry has an
obligation to contribute to the universal service fund, meet E911 location
capability mandates and serve the disabled community. Kennard also said key
decisions are ahead for the industry on wireless tower siting,
interconnection and numbering. He acknowledged the different technical
issues that wireless carriers face, but said "911 calls must go through" and
called on the industry to develop callback and location capability before
the FCC's requirement goes into effect in 2001.

** Cable **

Title: TCI Selects At Home Corp. For Services
Source: Wall Street Journal (B8)
http://wsj.com/
Author: David Bank
Issue: Set-Top Boxes
Description: Tele-Communications Inc. selected At Home Corp. to provide
e-mail services to users of as many as 11 million new cable TV set-top
boxes, a potentially lucrative franchise as online advertising increases.
At Home will also help banks, travel companies and online service providers
develop software for TCI's new set-top boxes. The role will make At Home a
referee between Microsoft and Sun, which were earlier selected to provide
operating systems and other technology for the new boxes. The selection of
At Home is further evidence of the intention of cable operators to retain
control of technology in the new boxes.

** Regulation **

Title: European Study Paints Chilling Portrait of Technology's Uses
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/euro/022498euro.html
Author: Bruno Giussani
Issue: Technology Regulation
Description: A new study by the European Parliament titled "An Appraisal of
Technologies of Political Control" describes the ability of a massive
telecommunications interception network to tap into almost all international
telecommunications as well as parts of domestic phone traffic. According to
the study, written by Steve Wright, and analyst with the Omega Foundation, a
British human rights organization, on behalf of a research unit of the
European Parliament known as STOA (Scientific and Technological Operations
Assessment), the network "targets the telephone, fax and email messages of
private citizens, politicians, trade unionists and companies alike."
Apparently, the network, dubbed Echelon, is operated by intelligence
agencies without any mechanism of democratic control. According to the
report, many governments have spent huge sums of money over the past several
years to develop new technologies for their police and security forces.
While these technologies may be used for legitimate law enforcement purposes
and may be relatively harmless when accompanied by accountability mechanisms
and strong regulation, "without such democratic controls they provide
powerful tools of oppression," the report states. The fear is that with the
increased speed and complexity of technological innovation, controls of the
past are quickly weakening.
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/23/98

Universal Service
TelecomAM: Stevens Aide Tells FCC It Made Mistake Exempting ISPs
TelecomAM: Economist Says Internet Wiring Funding Will Cost $2.63 Billion

Telephony
TelecomAM: AT&T, BellSouth Criticize FCC Order On Customer Information
NYT: Technology That Tracks Cell Phone Draws Fire

Internet/Online Services
NTIA: Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses
NYT: Staying With the Pitch
WP: Services Using Web Search Engines Challenge Commercial Databases
WSJ: Computer Industry Races to Conquer the Automobile
WSJ: European Web Sites Are Found Lacking In a Recent Survey

Television
B&C: More channels, power for DTV
NYT: TV Cable Box Software May Blur Digital Signals
B&C: Granite bid makes strange bedfellows

Satellites
B&C: FCC eyes cable/DBS ownership ban
NTIA: Satellite Policy and Industry Web Page

InfoTech
WP: Protecting the Ownership Right to Copyright
WP: The Nemesis of a Slow Computer
NYT: In the Data Storage Race, Disks Are Outpacing Chips

Jobs
NYT: New Quota For Technology Workers
NYT: In The Shadow of Silicon Valley, 'Digital Coast' Appears
FCC: Telecommunications '98

** Universal Service **

Title: Stevens Aide Tells FCC It Made Mistake Exempting ISPs
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 23, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Universal Service
Description: A former aide to Sen. Ted Stevens said the FCC made a mistake
by exempting Internet Service Providers and other information services from
payments to support universal service. Earl Comstock said the Commission
undermined the universal service program while creating a system of
"regulatory favoritism" because it also exempted Internet companies from
paying access charges.

Title: Economist Says Internet Wiring Funding Will Cost $2.63 Billion
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 23, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Universal Service
Description: The FCC's use of long distance charges to fund its new
universal service programs will cost American consumers $2.63 billion in
economic inefficiency and is a regressive tax scheme, according to economist
Jerry Hausman. He said the FCC should have funded the programs to wire
schools, libraries and rural health care providers to the Internet by
increasing subscriber line charges to $4.50 from $3.50. He said such an
increase would account for inflation over the last 14 years, during
which time SLCs have not gone up.

** Telephony **

Title: AT&T, BellSouth Criticize FCC Order On Customer Information
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 23, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Privacy
Description: Complying with the FCC order on customer's proprietary phone
information will cost the telecom industry "hundreds of millions" of
dollars, said BellSouth VP Randy New. At issue is a recent ruling that
requires phone companies to get approval to sue private information about a
customer's phone service before using that information to offer new
services. "The new restriction imposes new costs on an industry already
cutting costs," he said. AT&T said it was "concerned" about a "major
anti-competitive loophole" in the order that favors Bell companies. AT&T
also said the regulations could allow a Bell company's long distance
affiliate to access private information about a customer's local phone use
if it wins the customer for long distance.

Title: Technology That Tracks Cell Phone Draws Fire
Source: New York Times (D3)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398track.html
Author: Peter Wayner
Issue: Privacy
Description: Cellular telephone companies around the world have begun to
install equipment that will allow them, or police, ambulance dispatchers,
worried parents, jealous spouses, etc, to track the location of the callers.
This new technology is being defended as public safety insurance for people
placing 911 or emergency calls. But it also offers the ability for someone
to continuously monitor a caller's position and movement -- even months after
a call was placed -- in detail, which is drawing fire from privacy advocates
and civil liberty groups. "The question is whether the telephone system is
being built for communication or surveillance," said David Banisar, a staff
attorney for an advocacy group, the Electronic Privacy Information Center.
The Federal Communications Commission will require cell phone companies to
include rough
position information when passing along a 911 call by April of this year,
and within three and a half years, they must be able to identify a caller's
location within 125 meters.

** Internet/Online Services **

Title: Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses
Source: NTIA
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/new.html
Issue: Internet
Description: "The DNS Management Proposed Rule and Request for Public
Comment http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/domainname130.htm on
Improvement of Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses was
published in the Federal Register
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/022098fedreg.txt on February
20, establishing March 23 as the deadline for public comments in this
proceeding. All comments received are posted on this site
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/130dftmail/."

Title: Staying With the Pitch
Source: New York Times (D1,D5)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398sales.html
Author: Lisa Napoli
Issue: Electronic Commerce
Description: While a large majority of businesses are racing to begin
selling their wares across the Internet, a group of the traditional
direct-sales businesses are opting to swim against the tide. "The Internet
is an information source, not a sales source," said Lawrie Hall, a
spokeswoman for Tupperware. "We see it as a wonderful way to educate people.
The Internet doesn't provide the kind of service we see as beneficial to the
consumer," she said. Other door-to-door businesses, including Amway, Mary
Kay and Electrolux, also are shunning the notion of selling their wares to
customers online, even though each company has a Web site. Officials from
the Direct Selling Association, an industry group in Washington, say that by
maintaining their traditional approach to selling they can more effectively
educate the consumer about the product by offering first-hand, personal,
service. Proponents of electronic commerce suggest that direct sellers are
holding on to their old way of doing things because the Internet could wreak
havoc with companies that are built on a pyramid of salespeople. Don
Peppers, co-author of "Enterprise 1 to 1: Tools for Competing in the
Interactive Age" said, "If you're in the business of selling
distributorships, you don't want your end users to go around the channels to
obtain that stuff."

Title: Services Using Web Search Engines Challenge Commercial Databases
Source: Washington Post (F23)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-s...te/1998-02/23/0321-022398-idx.html
Author: Margot Williams
Issue: Electronic Commerce
Description: Commercial databases, and their fees, are moving to the Web in
search of a wider consumer market. Dow Jones and Dialog have made the move.
But can they compete with the speed and power of popular search engines like
Excite and InfoSeek? In the wide-open Web market, new players are
challenging the longtime database vendors by making their own deals with
content providers and providing access through familiar Web search
technology to a similar (and growing) range of information.

Title: Computer Industry Races to Conquer the Automobile
Source: Wall Street Journal (B1)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Joseph B. White & David Bank
Issue: New Internet Technology
Description: This summer, Clarion Corp. is expected to be the first to offer
a personal computer for the car as a replacement for factory-installed
radios. The device -- with a list price of $1,299, not including a wireless
modem -- will use Microsoft's Auto PC software, which includes the company's
Windows CE operating and voice-recognition systems. Using it, a driver will
be able to retrieve e-mail or make a cell phone call without letting go of
the wheel. Drivers can also get digital directions: Auto PC's synthesized
voice will read out left and right turns. The package will include a player
for CDs and CD-ROMs. Ford Motor Co.'s Visteon unit is collaborating with
Microsoft and Intel to develop its own version of a speech-recognizing car
PC, called ICES. [So, car phone aren't distracting enough...]

Title: European Web Sites Are Found Lacking In a Recent Survey
Source: Wall Street Journal (B7B)
http://wsj.com/
Issue: Internet/International
Description: Despite newfound corporate enthusiasm for getting online,
European websites are still sorely lacking when it comes to communicating
with their audiences and implementing credible electronic-commerce
strategies. This was the conclusion of a new study, "The Missing Link," that
analyzed the Web sites of 100 multinational companies (least half of
which were European). The survey emphasized that nearly all of the companies
were found to have the same problems: difficult to use pages, little
understanding of what visitors to the sites hope to find, and undeveloped
online selling strategies.

** Television **

Title: More channels, power for DTV
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.6)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Digital TV
Description: The broadcast industry won more spectrum and UHF broadcasters
will be able to use more power according to revised rules released by the
Federal Communications Commission last week. "The real-world problems of
implementation are still with us," said one broadcaster. "The big mystery is
whether any of this is going to work," said another. Broadcasters are still
dealing with concerns around set-top antennas and finding space for
transmitters by November. [In related news, B&C reports that the FCC will
address "must carry" rules for digital broadcasts in March.]

Title: TV Cable Box Software May Blur Digital Signals
Source: New York Times (D6)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398cableboxes.html
Author: Joel Brinkley
Issue: Digital TV
Description: Microsoft has gained a small foothold in its efforts to cajole
the nation's television broadcasters into abandoning high-definition TV and
using only lower-resolution transmission formats for digital broadcasts
through the company's agreement to supply the operating system for several
million digital cable boxes being purchased by Tele-Communications Inc. This
move has angered government officials, television set makers, broadcasters
and others. During a broadcaster's convention last month, Gary Shapiro, head
of the Consumer Electronics Manufacturers Association, complained, "TCI's 14
million customers may never have a chance to see HDTV. This is a huge
tragedy for the American consumer." Leo Hindery Jr., president of
Tele-Communications replied that the associations "information is incorrect,
and it was extremely irresponsible for them to mislead the public." The main
issue in this argument is how the digital cable boxes will handle the
high-definition signals that broadcasters in the nation's 10 largest cities
plan to put on the air in six to eight months.

Title: In Atlanta, Cable TV Bolsters a Newspaper's Circulation
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/news/financial/ga-paper-media.html
Author: Iver Peterson
Issue: Cable/Newspapers
Description: The Gwinnett Daily Post in Lawrenceville, Ga. is trying to
bypass the slow job of building circulation one sale at a time in favor of a
marriage of convenience with the medium most often blamed for eroding
readership: cable TV. The papers are being paid for by the local cable TV
company for its subscribers. In exchange for increased circulation, the
paper rents a channel on the company's system and produces news and
entertainment programs. The move also shows the competitive challenge faced
by Richard Rae, publisher of The Daily Post, and Thomas Stultz, president of
the publishing div. of Gray Communications Systems. "Everybody in this
industry sits around saying that somebody, sometime, has got to do something
about declining readership or there's not going to be a newspaper industry,"
Stultz said.

Title: Granite bid makes strange bedfellows
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.15)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Ownership
Description: Promising that its application will promote minority ownership
in the broadcast industry, Granite Broadcasting is asking the FCC to let it
own stations in San Francisco and San Jose with overlapping signals.
Broadcasters are eyeing this matter thinking it may open the door to a
relaxed duopoly standard. The FCC has granted common ownership of stations
with overlapping Grade B (45-70 mile) signals. This case would be the first
to allow Grade A (within 45 miles) overlap.

** Satellites **

Title: FCC eyes cable/DBS ownership ban
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.13)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Ownership
Description: The FCC has invited the public to comment on DBC/cable
crossownerhip as part of an effort to streamline technical DBS rules. "It
should be the policy of this commission to promote competition whenever we
can," said Chairman Bill Kennard. [See
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/International/News_Releases/1998/nrin8004.html
for more info]

Title: Satellite Policy and Industry Web Page
Source: NTIA
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/new.html
Issue: Satellite/International
Description: "NTIA's Office of International Affairs (OIA) has created a
satellite policy and industry web page
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/oiahome/satellite.htm, containing links to U.S.
and overseas sites. OIA welcome your views on and suggestions for/revisions
to this new page. Also, the page of links to international telecom and
Internet policy sites http://www.ntia.doc.gov/oiahome/dianelist.html has
been expanded, including more Latin American sites."

** InfoTech **

Title: Protecting the Ownership Right to Copyright
Source: Washington Post (F05)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-s..te/1998-02/23/0161-022398-idx.html
Author: Elizabeth Corcoran
Issue: Copyright
Description: Paul Schneck, VP of MRJ Technology Solutions believes he has
come up with a technique that will enable those who create books, movies,
art and other "content" to protect their copyright in the digital world.
People who have seen Schneck's technology work are impressed. What Schneck
wants to do is turn the box that displays or prints information into the
watchdog that ensures that a consumer is following copyright rules. In his
scheme, owners/publishers would first electronically send a license to view
a work once. A consumer would electronically sign an agreement and return it
to the owner with payment. The consumer's PC, meanwhile, stores a copy of
the license, which is encrypted so that only the consumer's PC can make
sense of it.

Title: The Nemesis of a Slow Computer
Source: Washington Post (F22)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/23/029l-022398-idx.html
Author: John Burgess
Issue: Computer Technology
Description: A 10-person research team at the University of Cambridge in
England, headed by computer scientists, Simon Crosby and Ian Leslie, have
spent the past four years working on an entirely new operating system for
personal computers. Their aim is to make truly reliable machines that can
effectively deliver the video, sound and instant network communications of
the emerging multimedia world. The new system, called Nemisis, has the
division of time at its core, it allows the user to specify "how much of the
computers attention, what percentage of the millions of work cycles it is
racing through each second, will be given over to each of the tasks it's
doing." So rather than obsessing over a job that does not need to be done in
real time, Nemisis will slow down that task so the video, or other
multimedia information, will flow uninterrupted. The researchers say they
are academics that are more than happy to share their work with outside
parties. "Our aim is to show people the right way to do it, and not try to
compete" in the market ourselves, said Crosby.

Title: In the Data Storage Race, Disks Are Outpacing Chips
Source: New York Times (D1,D3)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398diskdrive.html
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Computer Technology
Description: Last year, scientists at IBM's Almaden Research Laboratory
announced they had stored more than 11.6 billion bits of data in one square
inch on the surface of a rotating magnetic disk, and last week, researchers
at Quinta, a division of Seagate Technology Inc., announced a new storage
approach that blends microscopic optical lasers with magnetic technology,
pushing the disk drive's storage capability well beyond what was previously
believed possible. Given these recent storage space accomplishments, disk
drive engineers are now considering the possibility of actually replacing
computer memory chips with tiny disk drives for devices like hand-held
computers and digital cameras. For consumers, this increase in capacity
means continued falling costs for computer data storage.

** Jobs **

Title: New Quota For Technology Workers
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398workers.html
Author: Robert Pear
Issue: Jobs
Description: The White House is seriously considering increasing the
immigration quota for computer scientists and other information-technology
workers, so that foreigners can fill the thousands of job openings in the
United States.

Title: In The Shadow of Silicon Valley, 'Digital Coast' Appears
Source: New York Times (D4)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022398coast.html
Author: Amy Harmon
Issue: How to Rival
Description: Last week, Los Angeles Mayor, Richard Riordan, announced that
the city would henceforth be known as "Digital Coast." Riordan said,
"multimedia is our ticket for success into the next century. The future is
in our hands, and we're going to win." The name came about as members of the
high-technology industry in LA formed a committee to put itself on the map.
The name was selected from a list of hundreds of suggestions made over the
past several months. However, Digital Coast is receiving little more than
"snickers and derision from its geographic rivals.' Mark Stahlman, a
co-founder of the New York New Media Association and the man who coined the
name Silicon Alley label to describe the group of Internet companies located
in lower Manhattan, sniffed at the LA's new title, saying that already
people are talking about "Digital Toast."

Title: Telecomunications '98
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Miscellaneous/Informal/fsu.html
Issue: Jobs
Description: "Fayetteville State University, Federal Communications
Commission, and the National Association of Broadcasters present,
Telecomunications '98. This conference will provide a perspective on one of
the nation's fastest growing industries and will explore opportunities and
related communications industry issues." For additional information contact:
FSU - Dr. Perry Massey,Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs or
Alfreda Cromartie, Executive Asst: 910-486-1460(v) or 910-486-1782(f)
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/20/98

Television
FCC: Free Air Time for Political Candidates

Satellite
NYT: Satellite Experiment Builds a Tribal 'Meta-University'
FCC: DBS Service Rules, Technical Rules and Ownership Limitations

Mergers
WP: CSC Refuses Attempted Takeover
NYT: Computer Services Company Vows Fight on Hostile Offer
FCC: Bell Atlantic/NYNEX Merger Performance Monitoring Reports

Internet
WSJ: Start-Up Plans Internet Search Service Tying Results to
Advertising Spending
NYT: A New Tack for Filtering Spam
NYT: Internet Transmissions Should Remain Duty Free, U.S. Tells
World Body
TelecomAM: Missouri PSC Sets March Hearings On Promoting Internet Access

Privacy/Security
WP: Phone Users' Privacy Addressed
WSJ: FCC Rules Limit the Use of People's Phone Records
TelecomAM: FCC Sets Rules For Use Of Proprietary Phone Information
FCC: Customer Privacy Provisions of 1996 Telecommunications Act

International
WP: MCI, AT&T Find Mexico a Bad Connection

Microsoft
WSJ: AOL, MCI Subpoenaed in Microsoft Case

** Television **

Title: Free Air Time for Political Candidates
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Kennard/Statements/stwek809.html
Author: Chairman Bill Kennard
Issue: Free Air Time for Political Candidates
Description: FCC Chairman William E. Kennard States Preliminary Views in
Support of FCC Authority to Require Broadcasters to Provide Free or
Reduced-Rate Air Time to Political Candidates: "The FCC has received dozens
of requests and petitions from citizens, political scientists, public
interest advocates, 55 Members of Congress and the President asking the
Commission to examine whether broadcasters should be obligated to provide
free or reduced rate air time for political candidates as a way of reducing
the demand for campaign dollars by enhancing candidates' ability to reach
the electorate. Given these calls and my conviction that improved exposure
to informed political debate would serve the public interest, I favor an FCC
rulemaking proceeding examining free or reduced-rate air time initiatives."

** Satellite **

Title: Satellite Experiment Builds a Tribal 'Meta-University'
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/nation/022098nation.html
Author: Jason Chervokas & Tom Watson
Issue: EdTech
Description: Northwest Indian College, in Bellingham, WA, is part of an
ambitious experiment in distance learning. The program, called the American
Indian Higher Education Consortium Distance Learning Network, uses a network
of satellite links spread across 30 tribally controlled community colleges
to offer audio, video and data course materials in everything from
accounting and business management to native philosophy. "The system has
two-way audio, video and data capability between schools where there are
both downlinks and uplinks, and one-way data transfer elsewhere." The
results have been mixed over the past three years since the program started,
but enrollment in virtual classes has more than doubled in each of the
years and "a 'meta-university' is developing that serves previously
unreachable groups of students where education is needed to help combat high
unemployment and poverty."

Title: DBS Service Rules, Technical Rules and Ownership Limitations
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/International/News_Releases/1998/nrin8004.html
Issue: Satellite
Description: In order to facilitate the licensing of advanced satellite
services and to promote competition in the multichannnel video programming
delivery (MVPD) market, the Commission has proposed streamlining and
consolidating its service rules governing the Direct Broadcast Satellite
(DBS) service. The Commission's proposals are consistent with its goal of
regulating services in a common-sense manner that reduces regulatory burdens
and facilitates the delivery of new services to consumers. To these ends,
the Commission proposes consolidating the DBS service rules, currently
located in Part 100, with the rules for the other satellite services,
including the Direct-to-Home Fixed-Satellite Service (DTH-FSS) in Part 25.
The Commission also proposed updating the technical rules for the DBS
service and requested comment on additional actions it could undertake to
speed the delivery of DBS service to the states of Alaska and Hawaii as well
as to non-continental United States territories and possessions. [Statements
of Commissioners Furchtgott-Roth
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Furchtgott_Roth/Statements/sthfr806.html and
Powell http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Powell/Statements/stmkp804.html]

** Mergers **

Title: CSC Refuses Attempted Takeover
Source: Washington Post (G1,G4)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/20/056l-022098-idx.html
Author: Mark Leibovich
Issue: Merger
Description: On Thursday, Computer Sciences Corp.'s board of directors
rejected an unsolicited bid from Computer Associates International. The
board said the deal would make "no business sense" and that it had no
intention of negotiating a deal with Computer Associates. In a letter to
CA's chairman, Charles Wang, Van Honeycutt, CSC'c chief executive, said,
that Computer Sciences had "moved to strengthen our protection against your
ill-considered and unwelcome attempt to force and acquisition" and that the
company would "utilize every legal means necessary to defeat your attempt."

Title: Computer Services Company Vows Fight on Hostile Offer
Source: New York Times (C3)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022098merger.html
Author: Saul Hansell
Issue: Merger
Description: Computer Sciences Corp. announced yesterday that it would fight
the hostile takeover bid made by Computer Associates International Inc. CSC
said that CA's offer of $9.8 billion, or $108 a share, was far too low and
that a merger would pose problems for its customers, employees and business
prospects. CSC's chief executive, Van Honeycutt, released a letter to
Charles Wang, CA's chief executive, that said, in part: "Charles, we
respectfully suggest that you withdraw your offer immediately and move on."
CA issued a statement saying that it would continue to fight for the merger.

Title: Bell Atlantic/NYNEX Merger Performance Monitoring Reports
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/ccb/ba_pmr/
Issue: Mergers
Description: This URL noted above provides a link to an Excel (version 4.0)
spreadsheet file which contains all of the non-proprietary data filed by
Bell Atlantic pursuant to the Bell Atlantic/NYNEX merger order, Appendices C
and D. Bell Atlantic has not requested confidential treatment for certain
data concerning its retail operations in the performance monitoring reports
for Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont. The
FCC is making the information for these jurisdictions available at this
time. The FCC has not determined if the data does or does not conform to the
merger requirements and the FCC has not audited the validity of the data. If
you have any legal questions, please call Tony Dale on (202) 418-2260. If
you have technical or engineering questions, please call Whitey Thayer on
(202) 418-0822.

** Internet **

Title: Start-Up Plans Internet Search Service Tying Results to Advertising
Spending
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Don Clark
Issue: Online Services
Description: GoTo.Com is the latest in a series of start-ups hoping to
improve on conventional technologies for finding information on the World
Wide Web. Companies such as Yahoo! and Lycos and Excite have built large
audiences, but are often criticized for returning large quantities of
irrelevant material. Bill Gross, GoTo.Com's founder, decided to let market
forces take over where technology development failed. The search service is
based on the idea of ranking answers to consumer queries according to which
advertiser will bid the most money. The concept would be controversial
because so many Web users are seeking information that doesn't necessarily
come from the largest companies. But Mr. Gross argues that the idea is much
the same as ads in the Yellow Pages, where big companies often purchase
prominent positions. "It's the stock market for attention," Mr. Gross said.
"I think it's going to change the marketplace forever."

Title: A New Tack for Filtering Spam
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022098spam-filter.html
Author: Jeri Clausing
Issue: Internet Regulation
Description: Two programmers in Florida, Jennifer Vassilev and Maurice
Valmont, have developed software that promises a simple solution to the
overabundance of spam. The program, called Mail Guard, processes an
individuals email before it gets to her/his mailbox. "Mail Guard then
automatically creates a 'blacklist' and a 'whitelist' by asking all unknown
senders to reply to a query that says they will never send unsolicited junk
email." Since the majority of spammers send in bulk, most are unlikely to
ever respond. These messages are then kept out of the user's mailbox in a
separate file and the address is added to the black list. The program user
also can physically add names to the lists.

Title: Internet Transmissions Should Remain Duty Free, U.S. Tells
World Body
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022098trade.html
Author: Bruno Giussani
Issue: Internet Use and Regulation
Description: Yesterday, the U.S. proposed to the World Trade Organization
that Internet transmissions, such as downloading software, accessing
financial information, attending a "virtual" language class over the
Internet, etc., should be kept free of customs duties. Out of the 132
countries that are members of the WTO, none of them "currently consider
electronic transmission as import items for custom duties purposes" and
therefore "no one is levying duties on them," said U.S. Representative, Rita
Hayes, to the organization's General Council gathered in Geneva. Hayes
added, that WTO members "should agree to continue this practice" and
consider the Internet a duty-free zone. The U.S. proposal was welcomed by
diplomats from industrialized countries, such as Japan, Switzerland,
Australia and the European Union. On the other hand, diplomats from
developing countries voiced suspicions over the U.S. administration's
intentions and spoke of their reluctance to give up this possible future
source of tax revenue. The Nigerian representative stressed that the
Internet is still in the early stages of development in Africa. And the
Egyptian representative expressed concern that international discrimination
would arise from the technological dominance of the U.S. and a handful of
other countries, adding, "electronic commerce and the computer industry are
not a level playing field today,"

Title: Missouri PSC Sets March Hearings On Promoting Internet Access
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 20, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Internet: Access
Description: The Missouri Public Service Commission will hold five public
hearings around the state to collect customer comments on Internet access
concerns and issues. The hearings are part of a PSC study of what changes
are needed to facilitate public access to the Internet. The PSC has asked
each intervenor and service provider in this proceeding to file a position
paper outlining the Internet access services and rates now available, and
offering specific suggestions for rule changes to improve availability of
Internet access services.

** Privacy/Security **

Title: Phone Users' Privacy Addressed
Source: Washington Post (G1,G3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/20/059l-022098-idx.html
Author: Mike Mills
Issue: Privacy
Description: The Federal Communications Commission moved to protect
consumers yesterday from having their privacy invaded by telephone companies
hoping to use customer calling information for marketing purposes.
"Consumers will now control what the phone company can do with that personal
information," said William Kennard, FCC Chairman. They "can be confident
that personal information will not be used or sold by phone companies
without their consent." Telecommunications companies will now be required to
obtain explicit permission to use data, by informing consumers, by mail or
telephone, about how they wish to use or sell the data and then ask their
permission.

Title: FCC Rules Limit the Use of People's Phone Records
Source: Wall Street Journal (B9)
http://wsj.com/
Issue: Privacy
Description: In an attempt to protect customer privacy, federal regulators
adopted rules aimed at preventing telephone, cellular and paging companies
from using customer records or calling patterns to sell other services. The
FCC agreed to require companies to obtain permission -- either written, oral
or electronic -- to use such personal information before they market new
services to those people. A 1996 telecom law says companies have to secure
permission to use personal information about customers before pitching them
new services or products. AT&T, as well as other companies wanted the FCC to
let them assume they have permission to use customers' personal information
unless customers tell them they may not. The FCC rejected this approach, and
instead put the onus on telecom companies, the FCC officials said.

Title: FCC Sets Rules For Use Of Proprietary Phone Information
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 20, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Privacy
Description: The FCC clarified rules to protect private information about
consumers' phone service that some companies say will make one-stop shopping
a bit more expensive. The Commission approved regulations defining when
phone companies can use proprietary information about a customer's service
without approval and set rules for seeking permission when it is needed.
Regulations that protect so-called customer proprietary network information
-- such as "when you call, who you call and how much you pay for the call"
-- was included in the Telecom Act, Chairman Kennard said.

Title: Customer Privacy Provisions of 1996 Telecommunications Act
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/1998/nrcc8019.html
Issue: Privacy
Description: The Commission adopted an Order that furthers the privacy
rights of telecommunications customers while promoting the convenience by
which customers may receive telecommunications service. In addition, the
Commission's action fosters fair competition among telecommunications
carriers regarding the use of customer information. This sensitive and
commercially valuable customer information includes, for example, when a
customer places a call, whom and where a customer calls, and the types of
service offerings to which a customer subscribes. The Telecommunications Act
of 1996 refers to this as "customer proprietary network information," or
CPNI. [See statement of Commissioner Susan Ness
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Ness/States/stsn806.html]

Title: Digital Information Protection Proposed
Source: Washington Post (G3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/20/060l-022098-idx.html
Author: Elizabeth Corcoran
Issue: Digital Protection
Description: Five companies, Hitachi Ltd, Intel Corp., Marsushita Electric
Industrial Co, Sony Corp and Toshiba Corp., proposed a technical framework
Thursday to hopefully prevent people from making unauthorized duplicate of
copyrighted material, such as music and movies, when it is stored in digital
form. The group hopes to see devices with the anti-copying technology in
retail stores by the end of the year.

** International **

Title: MCI, AT&T Find Mexico a Bad Connection
Source: Washington Post (G1,G4)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/20/065l-022098-idx.html
Author: John Ward Anderson
Issue: International/Telephony
Description: MCI and AT&T decided to enter the Mexican phone market when the
market became fully privatized on Jan. 1, 1997. However, these two U.S.
behemoths underestimated the strength of Telmex, Mexico's ex-monopoly phone
company, and overestimated how many customer they could steal from the
former monopoly. "The promised Clash of the Titans has degenerated into a
playground brawl, with the U.S. companies casting themselves as 90-pound
weaklings being picked on by the resident bully." Although AT&T and MCI now
offer long-distance services to Mexican consumers, they have to use Telmex's
local phone network to complete their international and domestic
long-distance calls, forcing the companies to give more than 70 percent of
their revenue to Telmex. In a letter to FCC Chairman William Kennard, asking
the FCC to intervene on MCI's behalf, MCI chief executive Gerald H. Taylor
said, "MCI knows how to compete, but we cannot do so against a heavily
subsidized Telmex, whose strategy of open discrimination and
anti-competitive abuse has been tolerated for far too long." Some
communications analyst said that the U.S. companies are victims of their own
"brash style and inflated expectations." Ray Ligouri, a telecommunications
analyst at Merrill Lynch & Co. in New York said, "This notion that Telmex is
the behemoth and poor little MCI and AT&T are getting beat up is ridiculous.
Rather than adapt to the Mexican style of negotiation and conciliation, they
have been very adversarial, especially Avantel [the MCI joint venture]. This
is a bed U.S. carriers made for themselves, and now they don't want to lie
in it."

** Microsoft **

Title: AOL, MCI Subpoenaed in Microsoft Case
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: John R. Wilke & David Bank
Issue: Antitrust
Description: The Justice Dept. sent civil subpoenas to AOL and MCI to
examine additional channels Microsoft uses to distribute its Internet
Explorer software. A Microsoft spokesman said the company doesn't know what
the department is seeking in its requests. The subpoenas appear to focus on
whether the Internet providers agreed to favor Microsoft's Internet Explorer
product over Netscape's browser program. AOL reported that the Justice Dept.
requested that AOL turn over correspondence and contracts with Microsoft.
Department officials have said they are conducting a broad examination of
Microsoft's practices beyond the pending case.
*********
Swoooosh! And we are outta here. Have a great weekend and we'll see you Monday.

Communications-related Headlines for 2/19/98

Television
FCC: DTV Decision

Access to Government Information
NYT: US Effort on Computers Criticized

Internet/Online Services
WSJ: U.S. Plans to Ask WTO Members Today To Declare Internet
a Duty-Free Area
NYT: States Keep Up Efforts On Internet Restrictions
WSJ: Web Watcher's Formula: Spicy Opinions, Few Models
WSJ: Hawaiian Firm Offers Paradise for Internet Service
NYT: Online Auctions: Like '100,000 Flea Markets in One Place'

Telephony
WSJ: Bells Seek Advanced Data Networks, As Entry Into Long-Distance
Business
WSJ: AT&T Wireless Reaches Pact
TelecomAM: Southwestern Bell Begins Long Distance Bid In Kansas

Radio
WP: Chancellor Buys 2 more DC Stations

Spectrum
TelecomAM: Court Denies Request For Delay of Feb. 18 Spectrum Auction
TelecomAM: Bliley says Virginia Tech Case Shows Flaw In LMDS Discount System

** Television **

Title: DTV Decision
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov
Issue: Digital TV
Description: FCC Adopts Final DTV Allotment Table, Policies and Rules
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/News_Releases/1998/nret80
02.html and Commission Affirms Service Rules
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Mass_Media/News_Releases/1998/nrmm8003.html
Providing for Rapid Conversion of Over-the-Air Broadcasting to Digital
Television (DTV), with Chairman Kennard
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Kennard/Statements/stwek808.html and
Commissioners Ness http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Ness/States/stsn805.html
and Furchtgott-Roth
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Furchtgott_Roth/Statements/sthfr804.html
issuing separate statements. Digital Television Channel Allotment Table
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/News_Releases/1998/et8002
a1.txt, Television Station Coordinates
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/News_Releases/1998/et8002
a2.txt. The FCC reaffirmed its service rules for the conversion by all U.S.
broadcasters to digital broadcasting services (DTV), including build-out
construction schedules, NTSC and DTV channel simulcasting, and the return of
analog channels to the government by 2006.

** Access to Government Information **

Title: US Effort on Computers Criticized
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021998government.html
Author: Associated Press
Issue: Access to Government Information
Description: A 233-page report released by the government's General
Accounting Office this week said that "despite the promise that technology
would enable agencies to re-engineer their business processes or deliver
better service at lower cost, the government's results have been
disappointing." The report said that major computer modernization projects
at the Internal Revenue Service, the Defense Dept, the Federal Aviation
Administration air traffic control system, and the National Weather Service
are not meeting cost and performance goals. Other programs also face major
management difficulties, including a similar lack of performance standards,
inadequate oversight over investment decisions, and cost overruns. "Failure
of any one of these efforts would represent a double loss: first, a loss of
investment capital spent in developing the system; and second, an
opportunity cost by not achieving the desired improvement in operational
efficiency or mission capability," the report said. House Majority Leader
Dick Armey (R-TX) said that "the management delinquencies cataloged by GAO
hold serious
consequences for the taxpayers if they aren't addressed."

** Internet/Online Services **

Title: U.S. Plans to Ask WTO Members Today To Declare Internet a Duty-Free
Area
Source: Wall Street Journal (B22)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Bhushan Bahree
Issue: Internet/Electronic Commerce
Description: The U.S. today will ask members of the World Trade Organization
to declare the Internet a duty-free area. Rita Hayes, deputy U.S. trade
representative and head of the trade mission here, will propose to the WTO's
policy-making General Council that member countries work together to codify
the current practice of not placing any customs, or border duties on
electronic transmissions sent over the Internet. The proposal is intended to
start WTO members thinking about formally committing themselves to forgoing
customs levies on electronic transmissions, U.S. officials said. They noted
that no WTO member currently levies such duties.

Title: States Keep Up Efforts On Internet Restrictions
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021998state.html
Author: Jeri Clausing
Issue: Internet Regulation
Description: Following the Supreme Court's landmark decision last summer to
strike down the Communications Decency Act, many believed that the Internet
would be free from censorship. Unfortunately, the ruling hasn't slowed down
state attempts to regulate speech and content on the world wide network.
Since last July, four states have introduced their own versions of CDA-type
laws, joining the 13 states which already have such statutes on their books.
"These state Legislatures don't seem very interested in reading Supreme
Court opinions," said Ann Beeson, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties
Union. "Unfortunately, that is often true...In other words, state
Legislatures are constantly passing laws that are clearly unconstitutional."
This year, there are four new state bills that are "particularly troublesome
to the ACLU," Beeson said. Those are in Tennessee, Rhode island, Illinois
and New Mexico.

Title: Web Watcher's Formula: Spicy Opinions, Few Models
Source: Wall Street Journal (B1)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Jon G. Auerbach
Issue: Internet: Economics
Description: Mary Modahl is a 35-year old former model turned marquee
analyst at Forrester Research who has a devoted following among the nation's
digital elite. Forrester Research is at the hot center of the industry that
profits from interpreting, dissecting, and handicapping technology for those
who sell and use it. And, unlike the legions of analysts at rival outfits,
Ms. Modahl dishes out spicy opinions and insights that rely little on
financial models. Some dismiss her brand of analysis as strong on style,
weak on substance. But subscribers pay $20,000 and upwards per year for
periodical reports from Forrester. And, though she is principally a Web
guru, Ms. Modahl's opinion carries weight throughout new media, and
companies are happy to pay her to separate the wheat from the chaff because,
as Bill Helman, a partner with venture capital firm Graylock, said, "When
Ms. Modahl pegs a company as an up-and-comer it's like the Good Housekeeping
seal of approval."

Title: Hawaiian Firm Offers Paradise for Internet Service
Source: Wall Street Journal (B20)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Don Clark
Issue: Internet Service Providers
Description: The island of Oahu is a hub for transoceanic-communications
lines, and Ron Higgin's startup, Digital Island, is exploiting the location
to help sidestep Internet traffic jams. Digital Island offers a detour by
leasing circuits on the long-distance cables that converge in Hawaii,
linking them to major Internet services in 15 countries. That creates a more
direct connection for Web users, replacing the need to pass messages among a
host of separate Internet carriers. The startup's customers store their data
on Digital Island server computers in a former bank building in Honolulu.
Pete Solvik, chief information officer of Cisco Systems Inc., said, "They
are able to offer the highest reliability and highest performance for
mission-critical work."

Title: Online Auctions: Like '100,000 Flea Markets in One Place'
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021998auction.html
Author: Kevin Jones
Issue: Lifestyle/Electronic Commerce
Description: Virtual auctions are rapidly becoming one of the fastest
growing phenomena in online retail. The auctions bring together people from
around the world to bid on everything from "used computers to signed
original Betty Boop cartoons." The largest consumer-focused auction site on
the Web, eBay Inc., auctioned off more than $25 million, almost all in
collectibles, in January alone. According to Forrester Research analyst,
Maria laTour Kadison, there are two clear reasons why consumers are flocking
to Web auctions. One, "you can often get things cheaper at an auction," and
two, "for collectibles, you can find one-of-a kind things online that you
can't find locally. It's like finding 100,000 flea markets in one place but
with more sophistication." (So cruise on over to your favorite browser and
jump on the virtual blue line special, it is time to get your obsessions (I
mean collections) in order and step up to the auction block. Any good deals
on well-aged tofu or star-wars action figures?)

** Telephony **

Title: Bells Seek Advanced Data Networks, As Entry Into Long-Distance Business
Source: Wall Street Journal (B22)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Stephanie N. Mehta
Issue: Long Distance/Infrastructure/Competition
Description: The Baby Bells are trying a new route into the long distance
business they have long coveted: advanced data networks. Some Bells are
planning sophisticated data networks based on Internet Protocol, technology
that would haul computer data over long distances. And some of the giant
regional phone companies have asked the FCC for special permission to
transmit the long-distance data traffic in their vast home regions. These
new data networks could give them a back door into the long-distance business.

Title: AT&T Wireless Reaches Pact
Source: Wall Street Journal (B22)
http://wsj.com/
Issue: Merger/Wireless
Description: Hughes Network Systems and AT&T Wireless Services reached a
strategic marketing agreement to offer a new wireless service to businesses.
Terms weren't disclosed. Under the agreement, companies will be able to
integrate an internal wireless phone system with external wireless services.
AT&T will provide wireless airtime and service, while Hughes will supply
hardware, software and a performance-management platform through its new
AIReach Office system.

Title: Southwestern Bell Begins Long Distance Bid In Kansas
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 19, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Long Distance
Description: Southwestern Bell asked state regulators in Kansas to endorse
the company's bid to enter the long distance market there. In an application
filed with the Kansas Corporation Commission, the company said it has "done
what the law requires and fully opened our markets to all competitors." The
company said it has signed interconnection agreements with more than 30 of
its 40 certified competitors. The commission has 120 days to review the
request.

** Radio **

Title: Chancellor Buys 2 more DC Stations
Source: Washington Post (E1,E5)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/19/087l-021998-idx.html
Author: Paul Farhi and Marc Fisher
Issue: Merger
Description: Yesterday, the Texas based Chancellor Media Corp., one of the
nation's biggest radio station operators, purchased Capitol Broadcasting
Co., one of the DC area's last major family-owned station operators, in a
$72 million deal. Chancellor's acquisition of Capitol, which owns rock
station WWDC-FM, known as DC-101, and big band station WWDC-AM, will make
the company the largest owner of stations in the DC market. While the deal
is subject to approval, it is considered likely since antitrust officials
with the Justice Department have only intervened to stop mergers when a
company ends up with more than 40 percent of the ad dollars in a market.
Radio stations across the nation have been swept up in a frenzy since the
passing of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, which lifted federal limits on
the number of stations a company can own.

** Spectrum **

Title: Court Denies Request For Delay of Feb. 18 Spectrum Auction
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 19, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Spectrum
Description: The FCC began its auction of local multipoint distribution
service spectrum as scheduled Feb. 18 after the U.S. Appeals court denied a
final-hour request to delay the auction. WebCel, a small wireless company,
asked the court for a stay, saying that it was unable to win the financing
to participate because the FCC did not release the final auction rules until
Feb. 11. But the court denied the motion, saying in a brief decision
released last night that WebCel's request failed to satisfy the "stringent
standards necessary" for a stay.

Title: Bliley says Virginia Tech Case Shows Flaw In LMDS Discount System
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 19, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Spectrum
Description: House Commerce Committee Chairman Tom Bliley criticized the
FCC's policy of awarding discounts in its local multipoint distribution
systems auction solely by revenues. He said the case of Virginia Tech, which
was denied the 45% discount due to endowment and tuition revenues, "goes
against the FCC's self-proclaimed goal" of bringing technology to schools.
Bliley said it is "unclear" why the FCC switched from its previous use of
both assets and revenues, and said "it may be time to review the matter."
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/18/98

Spectrum
WSJ: FCC May Alter Payment Plan For Licenses
WP: Virginia Tech Won't Get FCC Discount

FCC
FCC: Biennial Review Home Page
TelecomAM: FCC Chairman Challenges Industry To Create
Education Partnerships
FCC: Lessons from the Underground Railroad

Telephony
NYT: US West to Ask FCC Permission to Build Big Data Network

Technology
WP: High-Tech ID Cards Planned For Use on Mexican Boarder
WP: Intel Expands Pentium II Chip Line at High, Low Ends

Mergers
NYT: Hostile Offer For Computer Services Unit
WP: Computer Associates Bid For CSC Turns Hostile
WP: Illinois Company Buys Coherent Communications
WSJ: BellSouth, EDS Plan An Alliance to Offer Data Services
in Region

Microsoft
WSJ: Injunction Sought Against Microsoft Is Denied by Judge
NYT: Judge Dismisses Texas Challenge Against Microsoft

** Spectrum **

Title: FCC May Alter Payment Plan For Licenses
Source: Wall Street Journal (B2)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Bryan Gruley & Elizabeth Jensen
Issue: Spectrum
Description: Federal regulators are preparing to make small but significant
changes that would aid wireless companies that haven't been able to pay
billions of dollars for licenses they won in a government auction two years
ago. Bidders in the FCC auction offered $10.2 billion for licenses to use
the airwaves to provide a new generation of wireless phone service. But last
year, many said they couldn't pay on the FCC's installment plan, and the
commission adopted a plan letting bidders choose among four options to pay
or relinquish their licenses. Now, in response to pleas by several
companies, the FCC is considering changes that would give bidders more
flexibility in choosing an option and allow them to forfeit less of the
money they have paid the gov't., agency officials said.

Title: Virginia Tech Won't Get FCC Discount
Source: Washington Post (C13,C14)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/18/041l-021898-idx.html
Author: Mike Mills
Issue: Spectrum
Description: Bidding will begin today at a federal auction for the largest
blocks of airwaves ever to be put up for sale. An unlikely bidder among the
wireless industry giants and venture capitalists is Virginia Tech. The
university hopes to win a license covering the 7,000-square-mile area around
its Blacksburg campus. If it wins, student engineers hope to construct a
test project showing that "low-cost, high-speed Internet access to each home
and office, using small antenna, is possible in an area where mountains and
trees often cause radio interference." Yet the Federal Communications
Commission denied VA Tech's request to be classified as a bidder with no
revenue yesterday, a designation which would have given the university a 45
percent discount on the price of its license. The FCC said the reason for
its decision is because the nonprofit VA Tech Foundation, which is financing
and carrying out the project, has endowments totaling about $78 million, $3
million over the limit required for the "small business" designation. The
agency also counted the $500 million that the school receives annually from
state aid, tuition and other sources. The FCC "has not adopted any special
exemptions for not-for-profit entities," said a letter yesterday from
kathleen O'Brian Ham, chief of the FCC's wireless bureau, to Virginia Tech.
The university therefore, "does not meet the gross revenue requirements to
qualify as an entrepreneur." To make it worse, university officials say that
most of the wealthiest bidders qualified for the discounts of 25 to 45
percent because, despite their billions in assets, these companies have
little or no revenue.

** FCC **

Title: Biennial Review Home Page
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/biennial/
Issue: Regulation
Description: Section 11 of the Communications Act requires the Commission to
review all of its regulations applicable to providers of telecommunications
service in every even-numbered year, beginning in 1998, to determine whether
the regulations are no longer in the public interest due to meaningful
economic competition between providers of the service and whether such
regulations should be repealed or modified. Section 202(h) of the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 also requires the Commission to review its
broadcast ownership rules biennially as part of the review conducted
pursuant to section 11. The Commission has determined that the first
biennial regulatory review presents an excellent opportunity for a serious
top-to-bottom examination of all of the Commission's regulations, not just
those statutorily required to be reviewed.

Title: FCC Chairman Challenges Industry To Create Education Partnerships
Source: Telecom AM---feb. 18, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Education/Jobs
Description: FCC Chairman Kennard challenged the telecom industry to
establish partnerships with universities to train and prepare high-tech
workers. Kennard said studies show a lack of trained workers will result in
345,000 unfilled technology jobs this year. Kennard also said that the
Virginia High-Technology Partnership Program should be a model for the rest
of the industry. "I would be delighted to the see the FCC
related-industries... consider setting up a partnership like this one." [see
speech at http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Kennard/spwek804.html]

Title: Lessons from the Underground Railroad
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Powell/spmkp802.html
Issue: Minorities
Description: Commissioner Powell's 2/17/98 Remarks to the Douglass Policy
Institute. "Let me ...commemorate Black History month by focusing my
comments on the apt theme of this forum: 'From the Underground Railroad to
the Information Superhighway.' To be honest, when I first heard this title I
thought it a bit strained. Is there really any connection between the
underground railroad and telecommunications policy? When we asked Faye
[Anderson, Douglass Policy Institute] for a little help with what she was
getting at, she dutifully pointed out that both the underground railroad and
the information superhighway are powerful metaphors for opportunity. In a
time before Black History Month even existed, some of our ancestors rode the
Underground Railroad, risking their lives and their families to trade
slavery and degradation for freedom and at least a chance for a better life.
It dawned on me that this last part -- freedom and a chance -- is what
serves as the common ground for both our ancestors migrating from the South
and those of us who are trying to make our way onto the information
superhighway."

** Telephony **

Title: US West to Ask FCC Permission to Build Big Data Network
Source: New York Times (D4)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021798uswest.html
Author: Seth Schiesel
Issue: Telephony
Description: US West Communications Group, which provides local telephone
service in 14 western states, said Tuesday that it plans to ask federal
regulators for permission to build a large new data network. Their move
joins a new attack on rules that keep the Bell local telephone companies out
of the $80 billion long-distance market. Executives at US West said that
they intend to file a petition with the Federal Communications Commission
within a week. The company also announced yesterday agreements with six
major computer and software developers and with a company that is building a
new national fiber-optic network.

** Technology **

Title: High-Tech ID Cards Planned For Use on Mexican Boarder
Source: Washington Post (A19)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/18/059l-021898-idx.html
Author: William Branigin
Issue: Smart Cards
Description: In an effort to tighten control of the US-Mexican boarder, the
US government will soon begin replacing millions of Boarder Crossing Cards
with state-of-the-art documents that use compact-disc technology to store
information. The new cards, called"laser-visa" cards, will have security
features that will make them more difficult to counterfeit.

Title: Intel Expands Pentium II Chip Line at High, Low Ends
Source: Washington Post (C15)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/18/049l-021898-idx.html
Author: Elizabeth Corcoran
Issue: Computer Technology
Description: In an effort to better tailor its products to fit different
types of computers, the Intel Corp announced yesterday that it will
introduce two new lines of computer chips based on its Pentium II
microprocessor. Andrew Grove, chairman of Intel, told a group of software
and hardware developers that in the next few months the company will unveil
a new brand of chips intended for the sub-$1000 machines, one of the
fastest-growing segments of the computer market. The other new line will be
aimed at sophisticated workstations and servers. "One size certainly doesn't
fit all the processor business anymore," said Drew Peck, an analyst with
Cowen & Co. in Boston. With the growing enthusiasm for less expensive PCs,
Intel needed to develop another computer chip to reduce the price erosion
that has been reducing the profitability of its current mainstream chip, he
said.

** Mergers **

Title: Hostile Offer For Computer Services Unit
Source: New York Times (D1,D21)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021898merger.html
Author: Saul Hansell
Issue: Merger
Description: Computer Associates International Inc. intensified its bid to
purchase Computer Sciences Corp. yesterday by filing a formal tender offer
to buy its stock for $108 a share in cash. Merger experts say that Computer
Associates' move towards a hostile takeover will increase the chances of the
Computer Sciences Corp. being sold -- if not to Computer Associates then to
another company. "One way or another, this company is going to get sold,"
said Moshe Katri, an analyst with UBS Securities. He said that Computer
Sciences' business appeared to be slowing down making it a more attractive
time to sell. "Fundamentally, business is kind of weak for these guys,"
Katri said, "and they have a more than generous offer."

Title: Computer Associates Bid For CSC Turns Hostile
Source: Washington Post (C13,C15)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/18/046l-021898-idx.html
Author: Mark Leibovich
Issue: Merger
Description: Computer Associates International Inc. turned hostile
yesterday after the Computer Sciences Corp. did not respond to overtures to
negotiate a friendly merger. CA revised their offer from $114 a share to
$108 a share after CSC did not respond to a letter that CA President Sanjay
Kumar wrote to CSC chief executive Van B. Honeycutt over the weekend. "If
substantive negotiations have not started by Monday at 12:00 noon EST, we
will have no choice but to move ahead on a unilateral basis at a
substantially lower price than we communicated," Kumar said in the letter.
CA would not comment yesterday. CS spokesman, Bruce Plowman, said his
company would respond later this week. "Until then, Computer Associates can
do whatever it wants," Plowman said. Computer Sciences has 10 days to
respond to Computer Associates' bid.

Title: Illinois Company Buys Coherent Communications
Source: Washington Post (C15)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/18/048l-021898-idx.html
Author: Mike Mills
Issue: Merger
Description: Tellabs Inc., based in Lisle, IL, announced yesterday that it
will merge with Coherent Communications Systems Corp., based in Ashburn, VA,
in a deal valued at approximately $670 million. The deal will combine
Tellabs' strength in the US market for products that improve voice quality
over traditional and wireless telephone networks with Coherent's strong
international presence with similar voice-enhancement products for
telecommunications companies. "The combination of Tellabs and Coherent
Communications allows us to bring sophisticated echo-canceler and
speech-processing technology to customers around the world and provides us
the resources to quickly explore new uses for this technology," said Michael
Birck,Tellabs president and chief executive.

Title: BellSouth, EDS Plan An Alliance to Offer Data Services in Region
Source: Wall Street Journal (B2)
http://wsj.com/
Issue: Merger
Description: Electronic Data Systems and BellSouth said they will form an
alliance to sell data services to small and midsize businesses in the nine
southeastern states where BellSouth provides phone service. The alliance
comes six months after BellSouth, Atlanta, chose EDS, Plano, Texas, to
operate the computer systems of its telecommunications subsidiary. Execs
said the companies jointly would invest $50 million in the alliance.
Initially, the alliance will sell Internet commerce services and management
help for wide-area computer networks.

** Microsoft **

Title: Injunction Sought Against Microsoft Is Denied by Judge
Source: Wall Street Journal (B10)
http://wsj.com/
Author: David Bank
Issue: Antitrust
Description: A Texas district-court judge rejected arguments by the state's
attorney general that provisions in Microsoft's licensing agreements
interfered with the state's antitrust investigation of the company's
marketing practices. Judge Joseph Harris refused to grant an injunction
sought by Texas Attorney General Dan Morales, who challenged the
nondisclosure agreements Microsoft requires of computer makers and others
that license its software. Mr. Morales said his probe of Microsoft's
business practices has been hampered by companies' fears that they will have
to report to Microsoft about any information they share with investigators.
Microsoft said Mr. Morales produced no evidence that the nondisclosure
agreement had interfered with his investigation.

Title: Judge Dismisses Texas Challenge Against Microsoft
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021798texas.html
Author: Jeri Clausing
Issue: Antitrust
Description: Judge Joseph Hart of State district Court in Austin dismissed a
lawsuit by the state yesterday that challenged part of the licensing
agreements that the Microsoft Corp. has with computer manufacturers. Judge
Hart said that he would consider further evidence showing that the
non-disclosure provision, which require manufacturers to notify Microsoft
before releasing any information to government investigators, is hampering
the state's investigation. "We are please that the court recognized the
important role non-disclosure agreements play in protecting microsoft's
intellectual property -- out most valuable asset," said Tom Burt, associated
general counsel for Microsoft.
*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/17/98

FCC
B&C: FCC Caught In Political Crossfire
B&C: FCC in Congress's Sights
TelecomAM: Congressman Criticize FCC On House Floor At Behest Of Bells

Telephony
FCC: Report to Congress on Universal Service
B&C: AT&T Using Cable To Get Into Local Telephony

Internet
WP: The Internet Is Finding A Home on the Hill
WSJ: Cruising Web's Fast Lane via Cable

Television
B&C: DTV Debut May Suffer From FCC Delay
B&C: McCain Backs Local-into-Local

Security/Intellectual Property
WP: Trying to Keep a Lock on Company Secrets

Technology
NYT: New Company Seeks Wider Role for Old Technology
NYT: Next Electronics Breakthrough: Power-Packed Carbon Atoms
NYT: French Company Hopes to Make Its 3-D Tool A Web Standard

** FCC **

Title: FCC Caught In Political Crossfire
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.18)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Free Time for Candidates
Description: The White House wants the FCC to write new rules on free
political airtime. Congressional leaders want the commission to keep its
hands off. And both are forcing the new FCC commissioners to choose sides in
the political fray. Predictably, commissioners so far have divided on the
issue along political lines. Democrats Gloria Tristani and Susan Ness,
joined by William Kennard have voiced support for at least launching a
proposal on free or reduced-cost airtime for candidates. Kennard also
announced plans to propose a political broadcasting requirement the morning
after Pres. Clinton called for such a measure. Republican commissioners
Harold Furchtgott-Roth and Michael Powell have objected on the grounds that
the FCC lacks authority to mandate free time.

Title: FCC in Congress's Sights
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.20)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Paige Albiniak
Issue: FCC
Description: The FCC will start to slim down and speed up this year if the
House and Senate Commerce Committees will have their way. Several members of
Congress plan this year to examine whether the FCC is badly organized,
spends too much money, employs too many people and works too slowly. Last
week, Senate Comm. Subcommittee Chairman Conrad Burns said he plans
oversight hearings to examine four FCC bureaus -- Common Carrier, Wireless,
Mass Media and Cable. He also plans an oversight hearing on FCC
reauthorization. A Burns spokesman said, "One of the reasons [we are holding
this hearing] is because abuse [by the FCC] of the public interest mandate
is so flagrant that it needs to be addressed."

Title: Congressman Criticize FCC On House Floor At Behest Of Bells
Source: Telecom AM---2.17.98
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Competition/FCC
Description: At the request of BellSouth and Ameritech, a series of
Members of Congress have begun criticizing the FCC's implementation of the
Telecom
Act. The Members, many of whom do not hold telecom-related committee
posts, have disparaged the Commission's denial of Bell long distance
applications, saying that competitive local companies have refused to
provide residential services and that the FCC has imposed a much more
complicated regulatory framework than that envisioned by Congress. "Where is
the telecommunications competition that Congress promised the American
people two years ago?" Rep. Howard Jones asked. "Did the dog eat it? Is it
in the mail? Or has the FCC frittered it away with detail?"

** Telephony **

Title: Report to Congress on Universal Service
Source: FCC
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Public_Notices/1998/da980280.html
Issue: Universal Service
Description: The Federal Communications Commission will hold an En Banc on
Thursday, February 19, 1998, from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 pm, in Room 856 at 1919
M. Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. The En Banc is in connection with the
Report to Congress on Universal Service required by statute. At the En Banc,
the Commission will hear from panels of experts addressing issues regarding
various definitions in the 1996 Act, as well as the payment and receipt of
Universal Service contributions by information service providers and
telecommunications carriers. The En Banc will also be carried live on the
Internet at http://www.fcc.gov/realaudio/.

Title: AT&T Using Cable To Get Into Local Telephony
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.13)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Price Colman & John Higgins
Issue: Telephony/Competition
Description: AT&T's pending investments in ( at )Home Corp. and
Tele-Communications Inc. will pave the way for the nation's largest
long-distance provider to enter the local telephone markets --- but not in
the conventional way. Instead, AT&T is focusing on Internet Protocol
telephony as a way to tap the growing hunger among residential customers for
second lines. By capitalizing on the IP telephony trend, AT&T hoped to cut
down on the billions of dollars in access charges it pays to local exchange
companies. IP telephony also sidesteps most regulations that accompany local
"powered" telephony, including 911 requirements and network outage parameters.

** Internet **

Title: The Internet Is Finding A Home on the Hill
Source: Washington Post (A13)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/17/070l-021798-idx.html
Author: Bill McAllister
Issue: Media & Politics
Description: One of the conclusions of a recent survey -- conducted by
American's Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies -- is that a
growing number of Capitol Hill lawmakers are regularly surfing the Net.
"Republicans are proving to be more computer friendly than Democrats, and
senators are more likely to be found at their video screens than
representatives. More than 90 percent of the 270 offices surveyed reported
they used both the Internet and email message systems." The survey is slated
for release today.

Title: Cruising Web's Fast Lane via Cable
Source: Wall Street Journal (B1)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Steve Stecklow
Issue: Infrastructure
Description: Lately, there has been a lot of press about plans to offer
residential customers high-speed access to the Internet using
existing telephone lines. One new technology, ADSL, promises to offer
"lightning-fast Internet access" at "speeds up to 250 times faster than
standard modems." The telephone service side of US West plans to roll out
ADSL this year. However, at the moment, MediaOne, US West's express
service, doesn't offer remote access. As a result, some customers won't want
to use it for e-mail since they can't access it from their office or on the
road. Also, it doesn't easily let you put up your own Web pages. MediaOne
says both services will be available in the near future.

** Television **

Title: DTV Debut May Suffer From FCC Delay
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.12)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Digital TV
Description: FCC Commissioners hoped their new digital TV rollout plan would
give viewers in the top markets an early glimpse at high-definition pictures
on Nov. 1. Now officials are seeing those hopes threatened as they haggle
over their plan for matching each TV station with a channel for DTV. Some
broadcasters said last fall that they needed the final table by Jan. 2 to
make the early construction schedule. With the commission six weeks behind
that target, several broadcasters are questioning whether they will be able
to meet the Nov. 1 deadline. "There are problems," says one industry source,
pointing to both the lack of a final allotment table and continuing problems
in securing spots in some markets for a DTV transmitting antenna.

Title: McCain Backs Local-into-Local
Source: Broadcasting&Cable (p.14)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/
Author: Paige Albiniak
Issue: Satellite
Description: EchoStar Comm. last week gained another ally in its fight to
legally provide all customers -- via satellite -- with their market's local
television stations. Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain plans to
introduce legislation that would allow direct broadcast satellite providers
to offer so-called local-into-local service. McCain has broad support for
the measure among members of his panel. Before McCain can go forward in the
satellite arena, he will have to sort out jurisdictional issues with Senate
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch.

** Security/Intellectual Property **

Title: Trying to Keep a Lock on Company Secrets
Source: Washington Post (D1,D4)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/17/080l-021798-idx.html
Author: Sharon Walsh and Robert O'Harrow Jr.
Issue: Security/Intellectual Property
Description: As corporations store more vital information on computers, and
as access to computers becomes more universal, there is a growing concern
about such information becoming a prime target for international spies.
Using today's technology, companies can analyze vast amounts of data
obtained from competitor's computers to discern patterns, long-term plans,
and even analytical models of the company itself. The Justice Department has
devoted an entire section to computer crimes, called the Computer Crime and
Intellectual Property section. In addition, the Economic Espionage Act of
1996 is expected to be used to prosecute computer crime originating from
foreign sources. "Computer networks are vital to our economy and our safety,
and their security should be one of law enforcement's and industry's highest
priorities," said Mary Jo White, US attorney for the Southern District of
New York. "Certainly we are seeing more and more of this,' said William
Perez, the FBI's acting section chief for financial crimes. "There's no
doubt that's one of our greatest concerns. The Internet opens the world. You
don't have to be very sophisticated to do it. Nowadays, everything is point
and click."

** Technology **

Title: New Company Seeks Wider Role for Old Technology
Source: New York Times (D6)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021798wire.html
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Infrastructure
Description: Andrew Heller, a designer at IBM, said that on Wednesday he
will announce the formation of a new company, Innovative Network
Technologies, Inc. The company, to be based in Austin, TX, that will develop
technology that enables high-speed computer communications over telephone
lines and existing building wiring. Heller said that the technology is based
on 30-year-old research with analog communications that was all but
abandoned in the 1960s. The advancement should offer low-cost, high-speed
alternatives to today's digital networks.

Title: Next Electronics Breakthrough: Power-Packed Carbon Atoms
Source: New York Times (C1,C5)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021798molecule.html
Author: Malcolm W. Browne
Issue: New Technology
Description: Scientists predict that an elegantly geometrical molecule
called a single-walled carbon nanotube, is about to ignite a revolution in
electronics, computers, chemistry and new structural elements. Physicists
have proved that it is possible to create relatively large electronic
devices, that are currently incorporated in silicon-based chips, on an
atomic and molecular scale. "A single electron in a single-wall carbon
nanotube could function as a microminiature transistor." Nanotubes, only one
50,000th the thickness of a human hair, were discovered in 1991 by Dr. Sumio
Iijima of NEC Fundamental Research Laboratories in Tsukuba, Japan. Several
reports show that nanotubes can perform the same electronic functions as
vastly larger silicon-based devices. Thus, a computer based on nanotube
devices could be extremely fast, compact and powerful.

Title: French Company Hopes to Make Its 3-D Tool A Web Standard
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/euro/021798euro.html
Author: Bruno Guissani
Issue: Internet Technology/International
Description: Philippe Ulrich, art director and founder of Cyro Interactive,
one of the best-known European video developers, based in Paris, has been
working over the past 18 months developing a new 3-D programming language
called SCOL (Standard Cryo On Line). Ulrich said that SCOL, which was
introduced last week at Milia, a multimedia convention held in Cannes, will
allow even beginners to create 3-D sites "with ease." "The Web is about to
turn into a virtual world. It will soon become a three-dimensional parallel
world. SCOL will now let people create new 3-D online spaces where they can
invite their guests, show and sell their products, or play games," said
Ulrich. SCOL is a hybrid of the multi-platform programming language JAVA and
of Silicon Graphics' VRML, which is considered one of the best ways to
develop 3-D representations but need powerful computers driven by skilled
programmers. SCOL, on the other hand, can allow a user to develop a 3-D Web
site in 30 minutes using a normal desktop PC.
*********
Did everyone enjoy their weekend?

Communications-related Headlines for 2/13/98

Universal Service
TelecomAM: McCain Calls GAO Universal Service Report 'Serious'

Regulation
WP: Will Congress Wake Up To Its Blocking Weapon?

Television
WSJ: Seagram Completes a Spinoff to HSN Of Majority of Its Television
Business

Telephone
WSJ: Mexico's Telmex: All Alone on the Telephone

Journalism
WP: Why We Publish Leaks

Microsoft
WSJ: Microsoft May Face Battle Over 'Content'
NYT: Gates Invited to Senate Hearing

Speed Kills?
NYT: U.S. and I.B.M. Join Forces to Develop Fastest Computer
WP: IBM Gets $85 Million Contract to Build Fastest Supercomputer

** Universal Service **

Title: McCain Calls GAO Universal Service Report 'Serious'
Source: Telecom AM---Feb. 13, 1998
http://www.telecommunications.com/am/
Issue: Universal Service
Description: Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain called "serious"
a finding by the General Accounting Office (GAO) that the FCC exceeded its
authority by creating corporations to implement new universal service
programs. He said he will work to "ensure that the FCC...abides by the
spirit and intent" of the Telecom Act. McCain said he supports the goal of
hooking schools and libraries to the Internet, but does not believe
"multi-million-dollar bureaucracies" are necessary to achieve it.

** Regulation **

Title: Will Congress Wake Up To Its Blocking Weapon?
Source: Washington Post (G1,G4)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/13/158l-021398-idx.html
Author: Cindy Skrzycki
Issue: Politics
Description: The Congressional Review Act (CRA) is supposed to make Congress
more accountable for federal regulations by offering a type of regulatory
veto power for the legislative branch. Instead, members seem to lack
interest, making the law "about as effective as a popgun in removing even a
single one of the 7,408 regulations that flowed out of dozens of agencies
last year." The act gives Congress 60 legislative days to review a rule.
The president can veto Congress's action, but Congress may override the
veto. Some of the members who initially supported the act have been holding
briefings for members' staff to remind them that the law is there and how to
use it. "To date, Congress has not fully implemented this powerful new
oversight tool. Since CRA became effective, only a handful of resolutions to
disapprove a rule have been introduced, and not a single one has been
passed," said a letter to Republican members from Reps. George Gekas (R-PA),
Sue Kelly (R-NY), and David McIntosh (R-IN), members who originally
supported passage of the provision. House Republican Majority Leader Richard
K. Armey (R-TX), backed them up by urging his colleagues to attend the
briefings "and learn how to use this important and underutilized
congressional tool."

** Television **

Title: Seagram Completes a Spinoff to HSN Of Majority of Its Television
Business
Source: Wall Street Journal (A5)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Eben Shapiro
Issue: Television/Merger
Description: Seagram completed the spinoff of most of its Universal Studios
television business and USA Networks to Barry Diller's HSN, as CEO Edgar
Bronfman defended the deal against critics still puzzled over why the
company is ceding control of such a major business to another entity. In
exchange for contributing USA and Universal's domestic-television business
to HSN, Seagram received $1.2 billion in cash and 45% of HSN's stock. HSN is
changing its name to USA Networks, Inc.

** Telephone **

Title: Mexico's Telmex: All Alone on the Telephone
Source: Wall Street Journal (A15, Op-eds)
http://wsj.com/
Author: Philip Peters
Issue: International/Telephone
Description: After investing $900 million in Avantel, its Mexican joint
venture, MCI says it , may now scrub plans to invest $900 million more. The
reason: a lack of impartial regulation as reflected, for example, in rules
that divert about 70% of Avantel's international revenues to Telmex, the
dominant national carrier. But what's good for Telmex is not necessarily
good for Mexico, and regulatory failures on both sides of the Rio Grande
are denying Mexicans the benefits of a fully competitive market and could
soon lead to the telecom equivalent of a trade war.

** Journalism **

Title: Why We Publish Leaks (Op-Ed)
Source: Washington Post (A25)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/13/024l-021398-idx.html
Author: Benjamin Wittes
Issue: Public Interest
Description: The leaking of material puts the press in an uncomfortable and
conflicted position. Leaks pit the journalist's need to gather essential
information against society's desire to have a government that is capable of
keeping the details of highly sensitive investigations and certain national
security information quiet. It is difficult to argue that a culture that
prints leaks does not often have serious consequences for both individual
citizens and the functioning of government. Plain and simple fairness
requires that grand jury evidence and federal investigations be kept quiet
while "probes are pending." This material is protected to shield the
innocent people that are investigated before getting to the bad guys. While
it also is true that the government has a real interest in keeping
classified information and certain agency decisions from premature
publicity. "The disclosures of official misconduct are an important check on
overweening government power and hidden corruption." It is not the job of the
press to protect government secrets. A newspaper's function is to present
information for the public and leaks are part of that essential mission.
"Without unauthorized disclosures, the press (and the public) would be
dependent on government's self-presentation -- which is to say its propaganda."

** Microsoft **

Title: Microsoft May Face Battle Over 'Content'
Source: Wall Street Journal (B6)
http://wsj.com/
Author: David Bank
Issue: Internet Content/Antitrust
Description: Microsoft could face another challenge over its ambitious plans
to become the primary gateway for entertainment, information and commerce on
the World Wide Web. Civic subpoenas issued by the Justice Dept. suggest that
Microsoft's plans in Internet information "content" are emerging as a focus
for gov't. lawyers considering whether to develop an additional antitrust
case against the software giant. Microsoft execs insist their deals with
potential Internet partners are strictly legal. The company hoped to use
links between software and Web content as a way to compete with browser
rival Netscape. Netscape argues that the strategy has the potential to turn
the Internet into a proprietary medium shaped by Microsoft.

Title: Gates Invited to Senate Hearing
Source: New York Times (CyberTimes)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021398microsoft.html
Author: Associated Press
Issue: Antitrust
Description: Senator Slade Gorton (R-WA) and other Congress members from
Washington state have complained that Microsoft has not been given the
chance to present its views regarding the allegations of antitrust
violations by the Senate Judiciary Committee. As a result, Senator Orrin
Hatch (R-UT), the committee chairman, invited Microsoft's chairman, Bill
Gates, to testify at a hearing next month on the industry's business
practices. Gates responded that he doesn't know if he will be able to make
it. Hatch said, "This hearing will present an opportunity for industry to
educate the committee about competitive dynamics in the marketplace. This
should provide an important step in our consideration of how antitrust
policy could best serve consumers and the long-term health of the software
industry and the Internet generally." A Microsoft spokesman, Jim Cullinan,
said that Gates had a "previous long-standing commitment" and another
Microsoft senior executive might have to appear in his place.

** Speed Kills? **

Title: U.S. and I.B.M. Join Forces to Develop Fastest Computer
Source: New York Times (C4)
http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/021398ibm.html
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Computer Technology
Description: The Department of Energy announced yesterday that it had signed
an $85 million contract with the IBM Corp. to build a supercomputer capable
of 10 trillion calculations a second. IBM said the machine will be designed
on the technology that enabled the Deep Blue supercomputer to beat the chess
master Garry Kawparov last year. If the supercomputer meets its goal of 10
"teraflops," or 10 trillion mathematical operations a second, it will be the
fastest computer in the world. "To put this into context," said Secretary of
Energy, Fredrico F. Pena, "we will be able to do in less than a day all of
the calculations that were performed at the weapons laboratories in the
first 50 years of the nuclear weapons program." Randy Christensen, deputy
program manager for the Advanced Strategic Computing Initiative at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratories said,"Our program has inspired other
organizations and other governments to look hard into this area. We are
pushing the envelope."

Title: IBM Gets $85 Million Contract to Build Fastest Supercomputer
Source: Washington Post (G3)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1998-02/13/151l-021398-idx.html
Author: Los Angeles Times
Issue: Computer Technology
Description: The Energy Department has awarded an $85 million contract to
the International Business Machines Corp. on Thursday to build a
supercomputer. The contract is part of a multiyear federal program to
acquire computers that are 9,000 times more powerful than everyday PCs for
use in national defense laboratories. The machine will be used to simulate
the detonation of nuclear warheads which will allow scientist to evaluate
the aging U.S. arsenal without performing any test explosions. "The
credibility and success of the program is key to White House efforts to
demonstrate that actual nuclear tests are unnecessary and to persuade the
Senate to ratify a test ban treaty signed by President Clinton two years
ago. The U.S. has not conducted nuclear tests since Clinton announced a
moratorium in 1992." Fredrico Pena, Secretary of Energy, said, "We need new
supercomputational powers so we can certify that our weapons are safe,
secure and reliable without testing."
*********
...and we're outta here. See you Tuesday after the extended holiday weekend
-- love those presidents!