February 2002

Communications-related Headlines for 2/28/02

LEGISLATION
House Passes Internet Legislation (WP)
Senate Panel to Discuss Copyright Protections (NB)

INTERNET
For Those With A Disability, The Word Made Digital (NYT)
UN Report on Internet Drug Dealing

MEDIA & GOVERNMENT
Pentagon Stumbles Attempting To Manage War News (USA)
Military Supports Media (USA)

LEGISLATION

HOUSE PASSES INTERNET LEGISLATION
Issue: Broadband
In a 273 to 157 vote, the House approved legislation yesterday that would
make it easier for regional Bell telephone companies to enter the high-speed
broadband market. Supporters of the bill (known as the Tauzin-Dingell bill)
predict that it would help modernize the nation's communication systems and
spur economic growth. Opponents argue that the bill would allow the Bell
companies to crush competition. "This is not a fight between Democrats and
Republicans," said Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), a bill opponent. "It's
between competition and monopoly." The bill, at least in its current form,
is not expected to pass through the Senate where opposition to the bill is
strong. Currently, only 10 percent of Americans have broadband access. About
68 percent of them get it through cable modems, while 28 percent use DSL
access.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Juliet Eilperin and Yuki Noguchi]
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14006-2002Feb27.html)

SENATE PANEL TO DISCUSS COPYRIGHT PROTECTIONS
Issue: Intellectual Property
Today, the Senate Commerce Committee will examine whether digital content is
being adequately protected in the electronic world. The full committee
hearing will feature testimony from Disney Chairman Michael Eisner, Intel
Corp. Executive Vice president Leslie Vadasz and others. Commerce Committee
Chairman Ernest "Fritz" Hollings (D-S.C.) has proposed legislation,
supported by many entertainment companies, that would require computer and
consumer electronics manufacturers to include copyright protection
technology on their products. The Association for Computing Machinery,
however, has told Hollings that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
already provides adequate copyright protection and that the proposed
legislation places an unfair burden of copyright protection on hardware
manufacturers.
[SOURCE: Newsbytes]
(http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174828.html)

INTERNET

FOR THOSE WITH A DISABILITY, THE WORLD MADE DIGITAL
Issue: Accessibility
A new Web site, Bookshare.org, developed by a California nonprofit,
Benetech, offers electronic texts of ever 7,500 books to readers with a
visual or reading disability. The Web site is using an exemption in
copyright law that allows people with impairments to share electronic copies
of texts without purchasing them or obtaining permission. Users of the site
must send in a disability form approved by a medical professional, pay a $25
sign-up fee, and a $50 annual subscription fee. The electronic texts are
particularly useful to blind users who can feed the texts into
text-to-speech software.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Lisa Guernsey]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/28/technology/circuits/28GEE2.html)

UN REPORT ON INTERNET DRUG DEALING
Issue: Internet
In its annual report, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) urged
governments to take stronger action against narcotics trade on the Internet.
The INCB, an independent control organization for the implementation of
United Nations drug treaties, says that criminals have embraced the Internet
because it's fast and efficient. Drug rings use encryption to conceal
activity, launder money through electronic funds transfer, and wage
information warfare on authorities. Anonymity provides protection from the
law for cybercriminals. Traffickers use prepaid phone cards, broadband radio
frequencies, private chat rooms and satellite telephony to conduct global
crimes. The board recommends the establishment of new laws, procedures and
inter-agency drug units worldwide to fight online drug dealing.
[SOURCE: Newsbytes, AUTHOR: Dick Kelsey]
(http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174827.html)

MEDIA & GOVERNMENT

PENTAGON STUMBLES ATTEMPTING TO MANAGE WAR NEWS
Issue: Media & Government
[Editorial] According to a USA Today editorial, the decision to close the
Pentagon's Office of Strategic Influence highlighted how the Defense
Department is hurting rather than helping the war effort. Outrage over
classified proposals suggesting that the Office of Strategic Influence plant
false information resulted in the closure of the office this week. The
editorial details several other examples where the Pentagon has attempted to
hide mistakes, or denied civilian casualties both in Afghanistan and how the
strategy was used in the Gulf War. The editorial maintains that the
Pentagon's best strategy to ensure it is perceived as a credible source, is
to follow the standard Secretary Rumsfield set last week, and "tell the
world the truth" as "soon and fully as possible."
[SOURCE: USA Today, AUTHOR: Editorial]
(http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20020228/3901195s.htm)

MILITARY SUPPORTS MEDIA
Issue: Media & Government
[Op-Ed] In a rebuttal to the USA Today editorial, Victoria Clarke, the
assistant secretary of the Defense for Public Affairs, asserts that the
Defense Department has made every effort to respond to media inquiries, and
has posted large amounts of information concerning all phases of the
conflict. Contradicting the view that the press has been restricted, she
states that nearly 500 reporters are working with Special Forces and other
units involved in operations. She maintains that Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
has admitted to any mistakes and withholds information only when it could
jeopardize national security.
[SOURCE: USA Today, AUTHOR: Victoria Clarke (assistant secretary of Defense
for Public Affairs)]
(http://www.usatoday.com/news/comment/2002/02/28/ncoppf.htm)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/27/02

DIGITAL DIVIDE
White House Spurns Tech Programs (WSJ)
Clinton Links Net To Terror, Digital Divide Policies (WP)
A Lesson in Computer Literacy from India's Poorest Kids (BW)

TELEVISION
Beyond the Box: How Will Television Evolve? (HBS)

BROADBAND
A Contest Of Connections (WP)

MEDIA & GOVERNEMENT
Pentagon Buttons Propaganda Office's Lips (USA)

DIGITAL DIVIDE

WHITE HOUSE SPURNS TECH PROGRAMS LEFT OVER FROM CLINTON PRESIDENCY
Issue: Digital Divide
Despite Bush Administration acknowledgements of the success of several
popular technology initiatives, officials have been moving to dismantle
Clinton-era programs devoted to ending the digital divide. This has included
opposition to tax incentives for companies bringing broadband Internet
access to rural and poor areas as well as the "e-rate" program credited for
wiring thousands of inner-city schools and libraries. The most recent and
controversial cut is the Technology Opportunities Program (TOP). The program
was created to fund innovative uses of technology and provided matching
grants for technology projects at schools, libraries and other public
facilities. The Administration has created block grants that could be used
to fund TOP programs, but there are concerns that that state and local
officials will bypass technology programs and use the funds for other
purposes.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Yochi J. Dreazen]
(http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,4287,SB1014760589610593200,00.html)
(requires subscription)

A LESSON IN COMPUTER LITERACY FROM INDIA'S POOREST KIDS
Issue: Digital Divide
Sugata Mitra, head of research efforts at New Delhi's NIIT, a fast-growing
software and education company, conducted an experiment providing PC and
Internet access poor New Delhi children. He discovered that with days, and
with out assistance, the kids had taught themselves to draw on the computer
and to browse the Net. As a result of his experiment, Mitra is convinced
that 500 million children could achieve basic computer literacy over the
next five years, if the Indian government put 100,000 Net-connected PCs in
schools and trained teachers in some basic "noninvasive" teaching techniques
for guiding children in using them. An interview with Mitra appears at URL
below.
[SOURCE: Business Week, AUTHOR: Thane Peterson]
(http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/mar2000/nf00302b.htm)

CLINTON LINKS NET TO TERROR, DIGITAL DIVIDE POLICIES
Issue: Digital Divide
Former U.S. president Bill Clinton on Tuesday called on the global
information technology industry and governments to consider the ways in
which technology can develop globalization into a force toward a more
integrated world. Speaking on the first day of the World Congress on IT,
Clinton said that in addition to the money being earmarked for defense
spending, a healthy proportion should be set aside to "spread the benefits,
using technology, so there are fewer terrorists." He called for a new round
of debt relief for developing nations so more remote places in the world can
access a computer or the Net, get education and health information, and
expand their choices. "Distance education may be the only route to higher
education in some parts of developing countries," Clinton added.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Adam Creed]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/regulation/15378-1.html)

TELEVISION

BEYOND THE BOX: HOW WILL TELEVISION EVOLVE?
Issue: Television
The idea that television and the PC will converge in one device is over
rated, said James Ackerman, CEO of OpenTV, but they are becoming "cousins"
in more and more homes. Speaking at a Cyberposium 2002 panel on technology
and change in the entertainment and media industry, experts predicted a
gradual consumer movement from linear to on-demand programming. Panelists
indicated that the growth of on-demand, commercial-free television will
require the industry to develop new economic models. "The cost of creating
new programs isn't coming down. We need to find new economic models for
consumers to pay for content," said Ackerman "If you want to see the future
of television, go out and buy a TiVo," agreed Thomas McGrath, executive vice
president of the Viacom Entertainment Group. "Over 80 percent of consumers
with TiVo never watch a commercial at all." That trend will have dramatic
economic consequences for the industry, he added, since networks won't be
able to produce new programs without advertising revenue.
[SOURCE: Harvard Business School Bulletin, AUTHOR: Julia Hanna]
(http://hbsworkingknowledge.hbs.edu/pubitem.jhtml?id=2789&sid=-1&t=special_r
eports_cyber2002)

BROADBAND

A CONTEST OF CONNECTIONS
Issue: Broadband
The AT&T Corp., Sprint Corp., WorldCom and a coalition of ISP and local
phone companies have spent over $10 million dollars on a campaign to block
the Tauzin-Dingell bill expected to pass the House this week. The bill would
free regional telephone companies from regulations that require they give
competitors access to their local networks at wholesale prices. Staunch
supporters of the bill, the Baby Bells argue that they need the new
incentives to make it worthwhile to lay fiber-optic cable. Rivals of the
bill believe the Bells are more interested in casting off regulations and
rewriting the Telecommunications Act of 1996 that required they provide
access to their local networks before offering long-distance data and
telephone service. The bill is expected to experience a tough battle in the
Senate.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Juliet Eilperin]
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7677-2002Feb26.html)

MEDIA & GOVERNEMENT

PENTAGON BUTTONS PROPAGANDA OFFICE'S LIPS
Issue: Media & Government
The Pentagon will close the Office of Strategic Influence created
post-September 11 to communicate the United State's point-of-view on the
U.S. war on terrorism. The office fell under harsh criticism last week when
it was reported to have proposed the spreading false information to foreign
journalists.
[SOURCE: USA Today, AUTHOR: Associated Press]
(http://www.usatoday.com/news/washdc/2002/02/26/propaganda-office-closing.ht
m)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/26/02

EDTECH
Report Cites Religious Bias In School Web Filters (eSchools)
Pennsylvania Cyber Classrooms Get a Rocky Start (WP)

INTERNET
City Draws Up Net solution (CT)
If ICANN Can't, Who Should? (Wired)
Can The World Be Copyrighted? (Wired)

OWNERSHIP
Protecting Media Diversity (NYT)
Jackson Champions Minority Businesses (SJM)

EDTECH

REPORT CITES RELIGIOUS BIAS IN SCHOOL WEB FILTERS
Issue: EdTech
A recent report from the Responsible Netizen Project of the University of
Oregon's Center for Advanced Technology in Education draws attention to
links between conservative religious groups and the Internet filtering tools
being used in several public schools. The report, titled "Filtering
Software: The Religious Connection," looks at 8 companies who are either
connected to conservative Christian organizations or who have expressed
conservative religious philosophies. Several of the companies profiled in
the report have used the Children's internet Protection Act (CIPA) as a way
to target public schools looking for technology solutions that will bar
students from seeing inappropriate online material. The report surmises that
there has been some conservative bias in the material that has been selected
to be blocked from students.
[SOURCE: eSchools, AUTHOR: Dennis Pierce]
(http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStory.cfm?ArticleID=3537)

PENNSYLVANIA CYBER CLASSROOMS GET ROCKY START
Issue: EdTech
5,100 Pennsylvania students are enrolled in "cyber charter schools," which
are home schools funded by tax dollars and supervised by far-flung public
school systems. The schools hold the potential for providing new educational
options to underserved students and home schoolers. Unfortunately, the cyber
charter movement is stuck in lawsuits and bureaucratic battles. School
districts have refused to pay cyber charter schools whose costs are unclear
and whose performance can not be monitored. "We don't oppose distance
education. But there is no law, in our opinion, that authorizes formation of
these schools," said Thomas J. Gentzel, executive director of the
Pennsylvania School Boards Association. "In a sense, cyber schools have been
shoehorned into our charter school law and we don't think they belong
there." Cyber charter schools in Pennsylvania, and in 12 other states, raise
a number of difficult questions. How should such schools be monitored? How
much funding is appropriate? How much profit should private firms be able to
earn from these ventures?
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Michael Fletcher]
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1935-2002Feb25.html)

INTERNET

IF ICANN CAN'T, WHO SHOULD?
Issue: Internet
From its inception in 1998, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN) has struggled to fulfill its mission: preserving the
stability of the Internet's domain name system. Until recently, suggestions
for accomplishing this mission included more public participation, greater
transparency and new processes for adding top-level domains. Now, ICANN's
president, M. Stuart Lynn, has proposed radical reforms that quite possibly
could cut the public out of the process. Critics of Lynn's call for
increased government and corporate control worry that the public interest
will not be served. "This is closing the door, clamming upand being more
non-responsive to the public," says Karl Auerbach, ICANN board member and
sometime critic. Adds Alan Davidson, staff counsel for the Center for
Democracy and Technology, "So far there's nothing in (the proposal) to make
us comfortable that ICANN's activities are going to be properly constrained
and properly representative of the public's interest."
[SOURCE: Wired, AUTHOR: Declan McCullagh]
(http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,50670,00.html)

CITY DRAWS UP NET SOLUTION
Issue: Broadband
The Chicago municipality is receiving bids from telecom companies interested
in winning a 10-year contract to provide the city's voice and data services.
The project, called CivicNet is an unprecedented effort by the local
government to extend high-speed Internet connections to businesses and
residents without entering the telecom business itself. The project would
include wiring approximately 2,000 city-owned sites including schools,
libraries, housing projects, firehouses and police stations and provide $31
million annually to the winner of the bid. In an effort to maintain an open
market, Chicago will ask that the winning company keep the completed network
open to competitors. However, the 1996 deregulation of the telecom industry
has demonstrated that the controlling companies do not always make it easy
for others to share the network.
[SOURCE: Chicago Tribune, AUTHOR: Rob Kaiser]
(http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0202250017feb25.story?coll=chi
%2Dbusiness%2Dhed)

CAN THE WORLD BE COPYRIGHTED?
Issue: Intellectual Property
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) has announced two
treaties that would extend America copyright legislation to computer
programs, movies and music. The treaties were originally worked out in 1996
and formed the basis for the first legislation designed to protect Internet
intellectual property, the America's Millennium Copyright Act. While 30
countries have ratified the treaties, many of the biggest economies, such as
Japan and China as well as the European Union, have not agreed to the
copyright framework. Several public interest groups have criticized the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act for giving control of digital media
distribution to media conglomerates and copyright holders.
[SOURCE: Wired, AUTHOR: Brad King]
(http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,50658,00.html)
See Also:
SENATE CHAIRMAN ANNOUNCES HEARING ON DIGITAL CONTENT COPYRIGTH PROTECTION,
BROADBAND AND DIGITAL TV TRANSITION
[SOURCE: U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation]
(http://www.senate.gov/~commerce/press/107-159.html)

OWNERSHIP

JACKSON CHAMPIONS MINORITY BUSINESSES
Issue: Ownership
Jesse Jackson has made numerous stops in Silicon valley since he and his
group, the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, opened an office in Palo Alto in 2000 to
help close the so-called digital divide. An important aid in closing the
divide, Jackson recently told a group of small and minority business owners,
is getting big companies to spend more of their procurement dollars with
women and minority-owned suppliers -- the vast pool of vendors that bigger
companies turn to for everything from document shredding services to
Internet gear. ``There is not a talent deficit, there is an opportunity
deficit,'' Jackson said at the short seminar sponsored by the Northern
California Supplier Development Council. The Rainbow/PUSH Coalition is
holding its third annual ``Digital Connections'' conference in Mountain View
and San Jose on April 24-25.
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury, AUTHOR: Jennifer Bjorhus]
(http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/living/2733054.htm)

PROTECTING MEDIA DIVERSITY
Issue: Ownership
[Editorial] The past few years have seen the gradual dismantling of many of
the media ownership rules aimed at preserving competition and diversity. The
nullification of the FCC's cross-ownership limitations is the most recent
blow to a diverse and competitive information marketplace. A new debate
needs to take place about where, and how, to draw limits on media
concentration in this country. Americans do not want to wake up one day to
find that they have only two or three corporations providing all their
entertainment and news. Powerful economic interests that monopolize
information outlets are detrimental to the health of a democracy. Currently,
our path of deregulation is disjointed and leaves a large amount of
uncertainty in the marketplace. Sensible deregulation would entail a more
holistic restructuring of the regulatory system to ensure fairness and
protect the public interest. The FCC and Congress have an obligation and the
opportunity to take a fresh look at the issue and manage deregulation in a
way that preserves the diversity of news, opinion and entertainment.
[SOURCE: The New York Times]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/23/opinion/_23SAT1.html)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/25/02

INTERNET
Internet Oversight Board's Leader Proposes Large Government Role
(WSJ)
Mexico's E-Revolution (WIRED)

OWNERSHIP
Oligopolies Are On The Rise (WSJ)
Clear Channel Uses High-Tech Gear To Perfect The Art Of Sounding
Local (WSJ)

INTELECTUAL PROPERTY
Napster Wins One Round In Music Case (NYT)
Movies Get Framed (WP)
Online Group to Give Advice Regarding Copyrights (NYT)

INTELECTUAL PROPERTY

NAPSTER WINS ONE ROUND IN MUSIC CASE
Issue: Intellectual Property
In a ruling in the Napster case, Judge Marilyn Patel wrote that while the
evidence before the court has been limited, she was concerned that the five
major record labels have created joint ventures to distribute music over the
Internet. Judge Patel, of Federal District Court in Northern California, is
therefore allowing Napster to seek evidence that the record companies
colluded to monopolize the digital music market. If Napster is able to show
illegal collusion, it could invalidate the record companies' lawsuit. As
part of its defense, Napster has asserted that the record companies, hoping
to maintain a dominant market position, have colluded to prevent alternative
methods of distribution, and have offered anticompetitive licensing terms to
would-be Internet competitors. The record companies maintained that Napster
abetted copyright infringement, a position supported by Judge Patel's order
for Napster to stop the wholesale exchange of information it had no
permission to distribute.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Matt Richtel]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/23/technology/23MUSI.html)
(requires registration)

MOVIES GET FRAMED
Issue: Intellectual Property
[Editorial] Jack Valenti responds to accusations that the movie industry is
deliberately withholding exhibition of movies over the Internet and stifling
digital innovation through enforcement of copyright ownership. Valenti
argues that, given the financial fragility of the film industry, every
producer longs to use the Internet as a distribution channel. As yet,
though, there is little way to assure fair rent or sale prices over the
Internet. Valenti rejects the idea that copyright owners are stifling
innovation. He suggests that the critics' definition of 'innovation' is
legalizing the breaking of protection codes, without which there is no
protection for creative work. While Valenti admits that broadband's
popularity is limited by unavailability of movies over the Internet, he also
suggests that the film industry will remain hesitant to release movies
unless strong protection for copyrighted material is implemented for
Internet exhibitions.
[SOURCE: Wahington Post, AUTHOR: Jack Valenti (chairman and CEO of the
Motion Picture Association)]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/media/15327-1.html)

ONLINE GROUP TO GIVE ADVICE REGARDING COPYRIGHTS
Issue: Intellectual Property
Concerned that corporations are using cease-and-desist orders to intimidate
sites whose content may be protected by the First Amendment, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation and several law schools have created a searchable
cease-and-desist database to inform recipients of their rights. These
notices typically accuse Web publisher of copyright or trademark violations
and warning that "your conduct may result in legal action against you."
"People get these letters and wonder, `Does this mean I have to take
everything down and go home?' " said Wendy Seltzer, a fellow with the
Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School. "What we try
to do with this site is to clarify what it is they have to worry about and
what's more likely to just be someone blowing hot air."
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Amy Harmon]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/25/technology/ebusiness/25CHIL.html)
(requires registration)

OWNERSHIP

OLIGOPOLIES ARE ON THE RISE
Issue: Ownership
Easing government regulations and economic rewards are pushing American
industries to consolidate into oligopolies. A ruling last week by a federal
appeals court striking down regulations barring cable operators from owning
television stations is just one of many vanishing rules that are resulting
in a flurry of mergers. For example, the thousands of family-operated cable
television companies that operated twenty years ago have been replaced by
the current possibility of three companies owning two-thirds of the market.
While a certain amount of consolidation is thought to improve efficiencies
and bring down consumer costs, oligopolies can destroy competition vital to
preventing companies from pushing prices above costs.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Yochi J. Dreazen, Greg Ip and Nicholas
Kulish]
(http://online.wsj.com/article/0,4286,SB1014589181477203560,00.html?mod=Page
%20One)
(requires subscription)
See Also:
IMPATIENT COURT PRESSES THE F.C.C. TO DEREGULATE
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Amy Harmon]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/25/business/media/25REGS.html)

CLEAR CHANNEL USES HIGH-TECH GEAR TO PERFECT THE ART OF SOUNDING LOCAL
Issue: Ownership
Radio giant Clear Channel is using the power of technology and it's national
reach to bring DJs from large markets into smaller communities, thus cutting
staff costs and expanding their national brand. Operating over 1200 U.S.
stations, Clear Channel grew from a single FM station by taking advantage of
a 1996 law that struck down a nationwide ownership cap of 40 stations and
allowed companies to own 8 stations in the largest markets. Now stations in
the Clear Channel family share DJs via a practice called, "voice-tracking".
Popular voice personalities record customized programs to make it sound as
if they are local residents of various smaller communities. This practice
enables a small station in Boise to pay $4000 to $6000 a year for an on-air
personality instead of having a local DJ on staff. The result is the
creation of multiple identities for many DJs who live in one city and do
"local" shows in several other markets.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anna Wilde Matthews]
(http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1014589283422253080,00.html?mod=todays%5
Fus%5Fpageone%5Fhs)
(requires subscription)

INTERNET

INTERNET OVERSIGHT BOARD'S LEADER PROPOSES LARGE GOVERNMENTAL ROLE
Issue: Internet
A major restructuring was recommended by the president of the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) calling for governments
to nominate one-third of the board and eliminating participation by the
general Internet community. Currently the general Internet community elects
5 of the 19 board members. The new proposal would reduce the number of board
members to 15 with one third nominated by governments, one third through a
committee process and the rest appointed by four policy and technical
groups. ICANN has long been criticized for being beholden to corporate
interests and the proposal is expected to draw criticism from public
interest groups.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Associated Press]
(http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1014605787304403400,00.html?mod=technolo
gy_main_whats_news)
(requires subscription)

MEXICO'S E-REVOLUTION
Issue: Digital Divide
When Mexico launched an e-gov revolution last year, the goals were lofty:
free e-mail accounts for every Mexican, online educational, health and
government services. But the initiative had no funding in 2001 and received
only $73 million for 2002. It remains unclear how the cash-strapped
government will pay for the thousands of computers needed to network 10,000
communities by 2006. Under the plan, computers with Internet connections
will be available through library, school and office kiosks allowing access
to 85 percent of the Mexican population. Currently, only 6 percent of the
population has Internet access. The initiative remains a priority for the
government as e-government transactions are considered to be far less
corruptible than direct interactions.
[SOURCE: Wired, AUTHOR: Julia Scheeres]
(http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,50622,00.html)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/22/02

DIGITAL DIVIDE
Russian Schools to Get PCs and Internet (MT)
Worldwide Internet Growth is Slowing (NewsBytes)
Study Shows An Increase of Web Usage Among Asian Women (NewsBytes)

OWNERSHIP
Media Buying, Selling Might See Massive Increase (USA)

SECURITY
Cheney: Bush Budget to Boost High-Tech (CNET)

DIGITAL DIVIDE

RUSSIAN SCHOOLS TO GET PCS AND INTERNET
Issue: EdTech
The Russian Education Ministry is attempting to provide access to personal
computers and the Internet for every child in every school in every village
in the country. This effort is the second part of a nationwide project known
as Children of Russia. The first stage saw the installation of 56,500
computers and 9,000 printers in 30,700 village schools in all federal
districts. Now the rest of the nation's schools are to be accommodated.
Unlike the first stage, where schools only received one or two computers,
the second stage strives to provide schools with enough computers to
organize entire classes. The Education Ministry hopes to complete this
second stage by October 2002.
[SOURCE: The Moscow Times, AUTHOR: Pavel Nefyodov]
(http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2002/02/20/052.html)

WORLDWIDE INTERNET GROWTH IS SLOWING
Issue: Internet
A new study from Probe Research has reported that while millions of new
Internet users are logging on each year, the growth rate is slowing in
developed countries. After the triple digit growth of the last few years,
the United States is now showing only incremental growth in new users. In
terms of connectivity, competition and lower costs have helped DSL
technologies spread over cable modems throughout Japan, Germany and France.
The study noted that markets in Asia and South America are still poised for
strong growth in the next three years. Probe Research projects that
Internet use in South America will grow from 6.8 million to 17.96 million by
the end of 2005. Internet use in Asia hit 52.2 million and is projected to
rise to 145 million by the end of 2005.
[SOURCE: NewsBytes, AUTHOR: Michael Bartlett]
(http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174687.html)

STUDY SHOWS AN INCREASE OF WEB USAGE AMONG ASIAN WOMEN
Issue: Digital Divide
According to Internet measurement company NetValue, many indicators jumped
in the last quarter of 2001 for various Asian countries. "Towards the end of
2001, women were definitely interested in keeping in touch with people over
the Internet," said Jack Loo, president of NetValue. For example, the
proportion of women in Hong Kong using Webmail increased by 104.7 percent in
the last quarter. Korean women dominate the chat scene: in the same time
period, the number of female Koreans visiting chat sites or Internet relay
chat (IRC) jumped by 17.5 percentage points. While Korea leads the chat
category, Singapore's chat sites saw a 440 percent growth in women users.
[SOURCE: Newsbytes, AUTHOR: Adam Creed]
(http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174659.html)

OWNERSHIP

MEDIA BUYING, SELLING MIGHT SEE MASSIVE INCREASE
Issue: Ownership
This week's court ruling against limits on broadcast and cable TV ownership
''makes everybody a buyer or a seller,'' says a top executive of Sinclair
Broadcasting, one of the two largest independent owners of local TV
stations. A U.S. appeals court ordered the Federal Communications Commission
to justify its ban on a TV broadcaster owning stations that reach more than
35% of U.S. households. FCC Chairman Michael Powell, has expressed doubts
about the limit and the agency is expected to at least dramatically relax
the cap. The court also struck a rule barring ownership of a cable system
and TV station in the same market. The lifting of the cable-broadcast
cross-ownership will likely prompt megamergers that spawn cable-broadcast
behemoths. AOL Time Warner, for example, might want to buy local affiliates,
as well as a network, such as NBC, analysts say. While there is no
indication that any deals actually are about to take place, media analyst
Tom Wolzien of Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. says, ''Things have a tendency to
happen once they're allowed.''
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Paul Davidson]
(http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20020222/3886088s.htm)

SECURITY

CHENEY: BUSH BUDGET TO BOOST HIGH-TECH
Issue: Security
Speaking at the Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, vice president Dick
Cheney called on technology industry leaders to support an increased budget
for defense and homeland security, saying it could help lead the high-tech
sector out of recession. Cheney explained that the Bush administration's
request for a $48 billion increase in the US budget for defense and a $38
billion budget for homeland security will actually help the tech industry.
Money would support a range of research and development programs, said
Cheney. He suggested that Silicon Valley companies in need of a new mission
could conduct much of this new work.
[SOURCE: CNET, AUTHOR: Reuters Limited]
(http://news.com.com/2102-1017-842615.html)

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Communications-related Headlines for 2/21/02

DIGITAL DIVIDE
The Digital Dividend (MIT)
Jamaican Jails Going Online (WIRED)

RADIO/TELEVISION
Ownership Ruling Is Latest Boon to Industry Once Seen as Doomed
(NYT)
Copyright Arbitration Panel Sets Royalty Fees For Internet Radio
Broadcasts (WP)

DIGITAL DIVIDE

THE DIGITAL DIVIDEND
Issue: Digital Divide
[Commentary] Stuart Brotman argues that it is the business community, not
the government, who should lead efforts to close the digital divide.
Brotman refers to "digital dividends", which are possible outcomes that can
be achieved by the private sector through widespread penetration and use of
digital technologies. Within companies the "digital dividend" would
translate into better-trained employees, increased global sales and
marketing opportunities, and a more diverse supply chain. While the
government would not be expected to lead the effort, it would be critical
for the business community to work closely with policymakers. The government
would be relied on to offer tax incentives and attractive regulations to
support the business community underwriting expansion of digital
technologies.
[SOURCE: Technology Review, AUTHOR: Stuart N. Brotman]
(http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/brotman0302.asp)

JAMAICAN JAILS GOING ONLINE
Issue: Digital Divide
Maximum security prisoners in Jamaica may soon have access to the Internet.
As part of a rehabilitation program, Reverence for Life, the government is
considering adding an Internet component to give participants much needed
social, vocational and cognitive training. The program is the brain-child of
Camella Rhone, director general of Jamaica's Ministry of Industry, Commerce
and Technology. Initial hi-tech expertise and training will be provided by
Harvard University's Berkman Centre for Internet & Society, but the cost of
hardware, software and Internet access falls on the Jamaican government. A
country with a population of only 2.6 million, Rhone says that Jamaica can
not afford to give up on any adults, even prisoners. The country's prisons
will also serve as a perfect laboratory for the Berkman Centre.
[SOURCE: Wired News, AUTHOR: Mark Baard]
(http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,50403,00.html)

RADIO/TELEVISION

OWNERSHIP RULING IS LATEST BOON TO INDUSTRY ONCE SEEN AS DOOMED
Issue: Ownership
A recent decision by the Federal appeals court has given large television
networks new opportunities to increase profits and expand their reach. Heavy
lobbying has resulted in nearly a decade of loosening of regulatory
conditions that have allowed networks to own the programs they broadcast and
own more local television stations around the country. This week's ruling
would allow the large networks to own and operate cable systems. This
cross-ownership will give the networks increased negotiating power when
buying syndicated programs and increase their ability to cross-promote
programs. While the recent ruling may be a boon for the major networks, The
National Affiliated Stations Alliance has voiced fears that it will damage
local news coverage and hopes Congress or the FCC will step in to keep the
current limits on station ownership.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Bill Carter]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/21/business/media/21NETW.html)

COPYRIGHT ARBITRATION PANEL SETS ROYALTY FEES FOR INTERNET RADIO BROADCASTS
Issue: Intellectual Property
A panel assigned by the US Copyright Office recommended that Webcasters pay
record companies 0.14 cents for each song streamed to Internet listeners.
Traditional radio stations should pay 0.07 cents for each tune that is
simulcast online from their AM/FM transmissions. The panel suggested rates
are approximately 10 times higher than what Webcasters proposed, but still
well below what the recording industry requested. The rate recommendation,
which still must receive official endorsement from the librarian of
Congress, also includes special rates for non-commercial Webcasting of
recorded music: 0.05 cents for each all-Internet play or 0.02 cents for
radio simulcasts.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Steven Bonisteel]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/media/15268-1.html)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/20/02

JOURNALISM
Managing the News (NYT)

OWNERSHIP
Appellate Court Eases Limitations for Media Giants (NYT)
Americans Facing Greater Loss of Independent Local Media Outlets,
Study Reveals (CDD)
Internet Concerns Drop Plans to Merge on FTC's Opposition (NYT)

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
High Court To Hear Case On Copyright (WP)

JOURNALISM

MANAGING THE NEWS
Issue: Journalism
[Editorial] The war against global terrorism has spread from the military
arena to the realm of news and information. A new Pentagon office plans to
use a mix of truthful news and fabricated stories to help sway foreign
public opinion. The New York Times argues that the Office of Strategic
Influence plans to plant false stories in the foreign press would undermine
rather than reinforce the government's broader efforts to build
international support. While the paper recognizes the need to spread
America's message abroad through foreign language radio broadcasts and the
overseas libraries, it suggests that "The value of the new White House
effort will be directly proportional to the reputation it earns for telling
the truth."
[SOURCE: New York Times]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/20/opinion/_20WED2.html)
(requires registration)

OWNERSHIP

APPELLATE COURT EASES LIMITATIONS FOR MEDIA GIANTS
Issue: Ownership
A federal appeals court struck down a regulation that restricted cable
operators from owning television stations. The court also ruled that the
government reconsider limits on the number of stations owned by a television
network. A victory for the large television networks and cable operators,
the ruling could allow companies such as AOL Time Warner and Viacom to
pursue a new wave of megamergers. Consumer groups and smaller broadcast
owners expressed alarm at the ruling, fearing it will limit diversity in
media ownership and result in higher consumer prices for video programming.
The decision is one of a series of actions taken by the courts and FCC in
the last year that have eliminated decades-old ownership restrictions
created to control expansion of the largest television, cable and telephone
companies.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stephen Labaton]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/20/business/media/20BROA.html?pagewanted=pri
nt)

AMERICANS FACING GREATER LOSS OF INDEPENDENT LOCAL MEDIA OUTLETS, STUDY
REVEALS
Issue: Ownership
A coalition of consumer and media advocacy organizations, including
Consumers Union, Consumer Federation of America, Media Access Project,
Center for Digital Democracy, and the Civil Rights Forum, filed a response
to a recent federal ruling that relaxes regulations on newspaper broadcast
cross-ownership. The 140-page filing explains how joint ownership of local
newspapers and broadcast television outlets violates the constitutional
requirement that "the widest possible dissemination of information from
diverse and antagonistic sources is essential to the welfare of the people."
Along with concerns that the ruling would trigger new mergers thus reducing
the number of independent media owners, the filing also presented evidence
of declining journalistic standards in markets with cross-ownership.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy]
(http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/crossownerfiling.html)

INTERNET CONCERNS DROP PLANS TO MERGE ON F.T.C'S OPPOSITION ISSUE
Issue: Merger
Responding to government pressure, NetRatings and Jupiter Media Metrix, the
two largest companies that measure Internet audiences will not pursue a
merger. Yesterday the Federal Trade Commission informed the two companies
that it would oppose the merger on the grounds that it would result in the
combined company owning a huge majority of the Internet ratings market. The
FTC has also blocked an agreement between the two companies that would loan
the cash-strapped Jupiter money before the merger closed.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Saul Hansell]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/20/technology/20JUPI.html?pagewanted=print)

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

HIGH COURT TO HEAR CASE ON COPYRIGHT
Issue: Intellectual Property
The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the constitutionality of a 1998 law
that extended existing copyrights from 50 years after the death of the
creator to 70 years. The decision could affect content availability on the
Internet and cost movie studios, record companies, and publishers billions
of dollars. Many highly valuable copyrights including Walt Disney's Mickey
Mouse would have expired had the law not been changed. Motion picture and
recording industries support the law and the right of Congress to set and
extend copyright terms. A coalition of small publishers and businesses
specializing in distribution of works with expired copyrights argue that
Congress is undermining the vision of the framers of the Constitution who
believed copyrights should only last for a limited time.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jonathan Krim]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/regulation/15241-1.html)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/19/02

RADIO
A Sixth Low-Power FM Radio Station Premiers (WP)
Arbitration Panel To Rule On Internet Radio Royalties (NYT)

INTERNET
Cable TV Lobby, Including Comcast, Tells FCC: Give Us A "Closed"
Broadband 'Net (CDD)
Grid Project to Wed Web Services(NYT)

ANTITRUST
Judge Tells Microsoft to Share Code (NYT)

RADIO

A SIXTH LOW-POWER FM RADIO STATION PREMIERS
Issue: Radio
WRYR (97.5 FM) made its inaugural broadcast on February 18. It is only the
sixth low-power FM station to begin broadcasting since the FCC began issuing
licenses two years ago. Low-power station licenses were offered to promote
the notion that airwaves are public property. Under a torrent of
applications, Congress was pressed by existing broadcasters to tighten
restrictions on low-power stations. In December 2000, Congress laid down
rules that effectively pushed low-power FM out of urban areas and into rural
areas. Although more than 3,400 licenses have been issued, most stations
have remained little more than dreams. WRYR is run by an environmental group
in Marlyand's Chesapeake Bay. Its founder, Michael Shay has taped bluegrass
ensembles, lined up feeds from environmental groups, contacted black
watermen and visited with gospel groups. He says his station will celebrate
the Chesapeake's diversity.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Manuel Roig-Franzia]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/media/15226-1.html)

ARBITRATION PANEL TO RULE ON INTERNET RADIO ROYALTIES
Issue: Radio/ Internet
This week an arbitration panel will rule on the royalties an Internet
company must pay companies for songs played online. Internet radio operators
and radio stations that stream their music via the Web are concerned that
high fees will prohibit the growth of Internet radio into a full-fledged
business. While resolving the royalty issue will be a major factor in the
success of online broadcasters, they must also deal with regulatory fights,
lack of interest by advertisers and rising costs.
[SOURCE:NY Times, AUTHOR: Bob Tedeschi]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/18/technology/ebusiness/18ECOM.html?pagewant
ed=print)

INTERNET

CABLE TV LOBBY,INCLUDING COMCAST, TELLS FCC: GIVE US A "CLOSED" BROADBAND
'NET
Issue: Broadband
The cable industry is pressing the FCC to classify the cable modem business
as an "information service". Comcast and the National Cable
Telecommunications Association have told the FCC that they oppose policies
supporting "forced access" requirements, meaning open-access provisions that
would favor an open marketplace. Public interest advocates and cable's
Internet competitors are calling for an open access policy similar to the
current policy governing telephone-based Internet service. Those policies
force large cable and telephone companies to interconnect with local
telephone and broadband Internet providers on a nondiscriminatory basis. In
addition to the "closed access agenda", cable lobbyists are asking that the
FCC prevent local governments and communities from requesting that a certain
portion of bandwidth be set aside for "public, educational and governmental"
(PEG) use.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy, AUTHOR:CDD]
(http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/washingtonwatch/cableletter.html)

GRID PROJECT TO WED WEB SERVICES
Issue: Internet
In a paper presented yesterday at a conference in Toronto, four computer
scientists laid out a plan for marrying Web services with grid technology.
Grid technology is a worldwide computing project that hopes to bring
supercomputing to individuals. Web services promise a new level of computer
automation and convenience to consumers over the Internet. The long-range
goal for marrying these two technologies is to transform computing by
allowing large scale sharing of resources, concepts and infrastructures.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Steve Lohr]
(http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/19/technology/19GRID.html?pagewanted=print)

ANTITRUST

JUDGE TELLS MICROSOFT TO SHARE CODE
Issue: Antitrust
Federal judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly has ruled that Microsoft must give nine
states that are seeking tougher sanctions against the company access to the
software code for its flagship Windows operating system. Kollar-Kotelly made
the order during a conference call late on Friday with lawyers representing
Microsoft and the nine states that object to the government's settlement
with the company. Microsoft has long maintained that its Internet Explorer
browser is an integrated feature of Windows and could not be removed without
damaging the operating system. Last week, the dissenting states asked to be
able to inspect the code for Windows. "It seems to me that if your side has
access to it, then the other side, frankly, should have access to it," the
judge said to Microsoft's lawyers, according to a transcript of a conference
call released later.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Steve Lohr]
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/19/technology/19SOFT.html
(requires registration)

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/15/02

BROADBAND
FCC Proposes Regulations for Broadband (WP)
FCC Approves Limited Use of Ultra-Wideband (USA)

DIGITAL DIVIDE
Nigeria Embraces New Technology (BBC)
FCC Takes Next Step To Reform Universal Service Fund Contribution
System (FCC)

BROADBAND

FCC PROPOSES REGULATIONS FOR BROADBAND
Issue: Broadband
Yesterday, the FCC proposed that highspeed Internet access provided by
telephone companies not be governed by the same regulations for basic
telephone service. If adopted, the rules would not require large telephone
companies to offer access of their highspeed lines to competitors. FCC Chief
Michael Powell and his supporters argue that competition within each type of
broadband service (DSL, cable networks or satellite) is difficult due to the
high cost of building networks. Rather, the FCC claims that sufficient
competition will comes from the different types of service available.
Consumer groups and independent Internet access providers, however, are
concerned that this policy shift will reduce competition in the market and
result in decreased customer choice. "If you don't have competition within
each platform, then you will spend all this effort to end up with a duopoly
or an oligopoly," said David Baker, policy director for EarthLink Inc., the
nation's second-largest Internet access provider.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jonathan Krim]
(http://www.washtech.com/news/regulation/15192-1.html)
See Also:
FCC LAUNCHES PROCEEDING TO PROMOTE WIDESPREAD DEPLOYMENT OF HIGH-SPEED
BROADBAND INTERNET ACCESS SERVICES
[SOURCE: FCC]
(http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/2002/nrcc0202.html)

FCC APPROVES LIMITED USE OF ULTRA-WIDEBAND
Issue: Broadband
Regulators at the FCC approved a wireless technology expected to transform
consumer electronics and increase public safety. The approval comes with
restrictions based on Bush Administration concerns that the technology may
interfere with existing technologies such as Global Positioning Systems used
by airplanes and the military. FCC officials claim the ultra-wideband (UWB)
technology emits the same amount of energy as a laptop and is unlikely to
interfere, but compromised by moderately limiting the power levels and
frequency bands in which UWB can operate. Possible applications for UWB
include creating wireless home networks, helping cars avoid collisions by
determining the location and speed of oncoming vehicles and finding objects
concealed in caves or underground rooms.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Paul Davidson]
(http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20020215/3862812s.htm)
See Also:
NEW PUBLIC SAGETY APPLICATIONS AND BROADBAND APPLICATIONS ENVISIONED FOR
ULTRA-WIDEBAND TECHNOLOGY
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
(http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/News_Releases/2002/nret02
03.html)

DIGITAL DIVIDE

NIGERIA EMBRACES NEW TECHNOLOGY
Issue: Digital Divide
Although Nigeria is a relative newcomer to GSM (Global system for Mobile
Communications) networks, the demand for GSM mobile services has been
explosive. Networks were only installed six months ago and already
subscriptions are near 1 million, twice the number of subscribers for
standard landlines. Internet use, on the other hand, lags well behind mobile
phone use with only 20,000 - 30,000 users estimated. Internet connections
are almost non-existent for those who live outside of urban areas. Even
though the percentage of Nigerians with Internet access is very small,
Nigeria is still one of only 11 African nations with more than 20,000
subscribers.
[SOURCE: BBC]
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1820000/1820815.stm)

FCC TAKES NEXT STEP TO REFORM UNIVERSAL SERVICE FUND CONTRIBUTION SYSTEM
Issue: Telephony
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has taken additional steps
toward reforming the collection of universal service fund (USF)
contributions. The FCC had previously sought comments to how to ensure that
providers of telecommunications services continue to contribute to the USF
on an equitable and nondiscriminatory basis. The USF helps ensure that high
quality, affordable telecommunications service is available to all
Americans.
[SOURCE: FCC]
(http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/2002/nrcc0203.html

--------------------------------------------------------------

Communications-related Headlines for 2/14/02

BROADBAND
Highspeed Internet Spreads Slowly (WP)
FCC Action Threatens Openness Of Internet And Communications
Networks (CDD)

POLITICAL DISCOURSE
House Clears Campaign Finance Bill; Senate Opponents Threaten
Filibuster (WSJ)

INTERNET
'.us' Addresses Available to American Public

BROADBAND

HIGHSPEED INTERNET SPREADS SLOWLY
Issue: Broadband
According to a recent Federal Communications Commission study, the digital
divide between those with highspeed Internet access and those without is
slowly narrowing. About 96 percent of the nation's most wealthy Zip codes
have high-speed Internet access, while the study found high-speed customers
in only 59 percent of the poorest Zip codes. The contrast between rural and
urban areas was even greater. The FCC found that 98 percent of the most
densely populated Zip codes have at least one high-speed Internet customer.
In contrast, less than 40 percent of rural Zip codes have even a single
high-speed subscriber. The report raises concerns about the fact that the
U.S. trails Korea, Canada and Sweden in the deployment of highspeed Internet
access.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Christopher Stern]
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7801-2002Feb13.html)

FCC ACTION THREATENS OPENESS OF INTERNET AND COMMUNICATIONS NETWORKS
Issue: Broadband
The Federal Communications Commission is currently considering The Notice of
Proposed Rule Making (NPRM), a framework that will redefine how broadband
services are delivered over telephone networks. The current framework,
governed by open access rules, has forced large cable and telephone
companies to interconnect with local telephone and broadband Internet
providers on a nondiscriminatory basis. The NPRM could remove these access
requirements and give more control of the growing DSL broadband industry to
major cable and telephone companies.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy (CDD)]
(http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/fccThreatensNet.html)

POLITICAL DISCOURSE

HOUSE CLEARS CAMPAIGN FINANCE BILL; SENATE OPPONENTS THREATEN FILIBUSTER
Issue: Broadcasting
After a 15 hour debate the House passed the Shays-Meehan campaign finance
bill with a bipartisan vote of 240-189. If passed by the Senate, the bill
would bring about the most sweeping overhaul of campaign-spending rules
since the Watergate scandal a generation ago. The House bill would ban
unlimited "soft money" donations to the national political parties,
typically large donations made by corporations, unions and individuals. A
requirement that would have tightened a current law that broadcasters give
campaigning politicians their lowest advertising rates was stripped from the
bill.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Associate Press]
(http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1013674630218867440,00.html?mod=home_wha
ts_news_us)
(requires subscription)

INTERENT

'.US' ADDRESSES AVAILABLE TO AMERICAN PUBLIC
Issue: Internet
Beginning April 24, the ".us" Internet domain name will be available to
Americans. NeuStar Inc., a Washington-based company, says that only
companies, organizations and individuals with a physical presence in the
United States will be allowed to register .us addresses. Unlike England's
".uk," or Japan's ".jp," which are heavily used in their respective nations,
.us has long remained a relatively underpopulated Internet neighborhood.,
because it was not available to the general public until now.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: David McGuire ]
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7786-2002Feb13.html

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