February 2004

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/27/04

* As expected, Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX) is the new chairman of the House=20
Energy and Commerce Committee. "I am honored to follow in the footsteps of=
=20
the only other Texan to serve in this post, the honorable Sam Rayburn," Rep=
=20
Barton said. "This is a big new job, and I am mindful of the fact that=20
everything I am, I owe to the people of the Sixth District of Texas."

BROADCASTING
Broadcast Decency Hearing
Coonrod Testifies Before Congress

BROADBAND
Speech: Disruptive Technology...Disruptive Regulation
Speech: Preserving the Public Interest in a Dynamic Telecommunications=20
Industry

SPECTRUM
Verizon Fights Nextel on Spectrum

BROADCASTING

BROADCAST DECENCY HEARING
The House Commerce Committee held a hearing on broadcast decency=20
enforcement yesterday. Some Members worry about increasing fines for=20
broadcast stations, when offending content may come from networks with no=20
time to preview/evaluate that content. One Member has suggested an=20
amendment to a bill moving through the Committee that would make local=20
stations responsible for just 10% of fines when airing network programming.=
=20
V-chip advocate Rep Ed Markey (D-MA) heard broadcasters promise they will=20
do more to educate parents about the technology that allows them to block=20
programming that is inappropriate for children. Although there was some=20
praise for what broadcasters are doing now to rein in indecency -- V-chip=20
education and adopting "zero tolerance" policies -- some wondered about the=
=20
timing and whether they would continue these good works without legislation=
=20
on the table. Rep John Dingell (D-MI) suggested an annual report from the=20
FCC to Congress on decency enforcement. Incoming House Committee Chairman=20
Joe Barton (R-TX) said, =93Something that I am troubled by is that in terms=
=20
of public standards on the public airwaves we still have the issue of cable=
=20
and satellite. There are clear differences between over-the-air issues and=
=20
cable and satellite issues. But to the average individual, if they don't=20
purchase premium channels, they don't see that there is a difference and=20
there is a difference, that is something we need to investigate further.=20
Perhaps not in this legislation.=94
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)
Links to prepared testimony.
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/Hearings/02262004hearing1216/hearing...
See Also:
CONGRESS GRILLS BROADCASTERS ON PROGRAMMING
Executives from Clear Channel and General Electric's NBC network voiced=20
support for the bill to curb indecency. But threatening to revoke licenses=
=20
"will force us to contest any allegation of indecency by the [Federal=20
Communications] Commission because the stakes will be so high," said the=20
president of Clear Channel.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Mark Wigfield at=20
mark.wigfield( at )dowjones.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107782011305940121,00.html?mod=3Dmm%5...
ia%5Fmarketing%5Fhs%5Fleft
(requires subscription)
BROADCASTERS PROMISE TO CURTAIL INDECENCY
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Griff Witte]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A10505-2004Feb26.html
(requires registration)
TV EXECS: BIGGER FINES WON'T KEEP CRUDE CONTENT OFF THE AIR
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Paul Davidson]
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040227/5962809s.htm

COONROD TESTIFIES BEFORE CONGRESS
Robert Coonrod, President and CEO of the Corporation for Public=20
Broadcasting, testified on February 25, 2004 before the Subcommittee on=20
Labor-HHS-Education of the House Appropriations Committee. Ralph Regula,=20
Chairman of the Subcommittee, presided. In his opening statement, Mr.=20
Coonrod spoke about the continuing importance of public broadcasting and=20
provided an overview of local station services. CPB is requesting $410=20
million in advance appropriations for FY 2007 to support the work of well=20
over 1,000 public broadcasting stations that serve virtually every=20
community in the country. In addition, we request $50 million in FY05 to=20
assist the stations=92 transition to digital technology and $115 million for=
=20
the next phase of public TV=92s interconnection, which CPB, by law, is=20
required to fund. An in-depth description of CPB=92s budget request =AD=20
including requests for funding the transition to digital technology and for=
=20
replacing public television=92s interconnection system =AD is available at=
the=20
URL below.
[SOURCE: Corporation for Public Broadcasting]
http://www.cpb.org/featured_news/exec/0402_hearing.html
http://www.cpb.org/about/reports/appropriation/fy05_fy07/

BROADBAND

SPEECH: DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY...DISRUPTIVE REGULATION
FCC Commissioner Copps spoke to a symposium audience in Washington, DC this=
=20
week on broadband -- *the* infrastructure challenge of our day, as he calls=
=20
it. Although deployment of broadband will be driven mostly by the private=20
sector, Commissioner Copps is concerned because industry executives tell=20
him that they will not reach 10-20% of American -- roughly 29 or 58 million=
=20
people. Such a "Broadband Chasm" would deny many Americans the tools of=20
opportunity and deny our country of critically needed economic growth.=20
Section 706 of the Telecommunications Act directs the Commission to=20
encourage the deployment of advanced telecommunications=20
capability-broadband-to all Americans. If the Commission finds that this=20
is not being accomplished in a reasonable and timely fashion, Congress=20
directs us to take action to accelerate such deployment. For over two=20
years, the FCC has been considering a study of broadband deployment.=20
Commissioner Copps offered suggestions of how to approach the broadband=20
study. 1) Since nearly all of the industrialized countries, except the=20
United States, have national plans for broadband deployment, examine what=20
they are doing to ensure that their consumers get attractive broadband=20
services at attractive prices. 2) When measuring deployment, use a current,=
=20
acceptable definition of what data rates constitute "broadband." 3) Look at=
=20
what many towns and municipalities have done to deploy broadband=20
themselves, issuing bonds and taxing themselves to get the job done.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-244356A1.pdf

SPEECH: PRESERVING THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN A DYNAMIC TELECOMMUNICATIONS=
INDUSTRY
This week, FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein addressed the National=20
Governors Association meeting and discussed the role of state regulation of=
=20
telecommunications as more and more services move onto broadband pipes.=20
States, Commissioner Adelstein said, "are very concerned about this push=20
for federalization for at least one big reason - the future of a state's=20
economy can depend on the quality of its communications=20
infrastructure. They are concerned about losing control over something so=
=20
central to their economy." States may feel pressure to ensure a smooth=20
rollout of broadband in urban and rural areas. Commissioner Adelstein=20
stressed the importance of federal-state regulatory partnerships as lines=20
blur between interstate and intrastate communications, between voice and=20
data, and, indeed, between our computers and our phones.
[SOURCE: FCC]
(http://www.fcc.gov)

SPECTRUM

VERIZON FIGHTS NEXTEL ON SPECTRUM
The radio spectrum is a scarce resource. Nextel's two-way walkie-talkie=20
service interferes with public safety communications and would like new=20
licences from the FCC so it can resolve the problem. Hold on, say Nextel's=
=20
competitors, the spectrum Nextel is asking for is worth more than $5=20
billion and should be auctioned. Further complicating the matter, the Dept=
=20
of Justice is investigating Nextel for antitrust violations. The FCC is to=
=20
decide on the matter soon.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker at=
jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107783907488640567,00.html?mod=3Dtele...
unications%5Fprimary%5Fhs
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------
...and we are outta here. Have a great weekend...see you March 1.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/26/04

MORE TALK OF INDECENCY
Hearing Today: H.R. 3717, the 'Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act of 2004
FCC's Martin Ponders Indecency on Pay TV, Radio
Stevens: Keep Heat on Broadcasters

POLICYMAKERS
Key Legislators Talk Telecom Policy
Norquist Taking the Heat on Broadband

PUBLIC BROADCASTING
Public Broadcasting Faces Crucial Year in Congress
PBS HD Channel to Launch March 1

QUICK HITS
Hearing: Reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act
Voluntary Collective Licensing
Lifting the Curtain on E-Voting
Bundles of Trouble: The FCC's Telephone Competition Rules
Study Says Media Usage is Double Current Measures

MORE TALK OF INDECENCY

HEARING: H.R. 3717, BROADCAST DECENCY ENFORCEMENT ACT OF 2004
Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet (Commerce)
Today, February 26, 2004 at 09:30 AM (eastern) 2123 Rayburn House Office
Building
To testify: ABC TV President Alex Wallau; Alan Wurtzel, NBC; Gail Berman,
Fox Broadcasting; Bud Paxson, Paxson Communications; Harry Pappas, Pappas
Telecasting; John Hogan, Clear Channel. Find link to Webcast at URL below.
[SOURCE: House of Representatives]
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/Hearings/02262004hearing1216/hearing...

FCC'S MARTIN PONDERS INDECENCY ON PAY TV, RADIO
Speaking to the Reuters Technology, Media and Telecommunications Summit,
FCC Commissioner Kevin Martin noted that regulators are considering if
television and radio signals delivered via satellite and cable should
adhere to the same indecency standards as broadcast stations. Satellite
radio and television providers are licensed by the FCC, which could
potentially hold them accountable, Commissioner Martin said. But he
conceded that companies like Sirius Satellite Radio could argue that since
consumers pay for their products, they would not have to comply.
Commissioner Martin would like to see the FCC affirm local television
stations' right to offer alternative programing if they object to a show
and for cable companies to allow customers to block channels they find
offensive and not have to pay for them.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Jeremy Pelofsky]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=reutersEdge&storyID=4439539

STEVENS: KEEP HEAT ON BROADCASTERS
In a related story, the likely Senate Commerce Committee chairman, Ted
Stevens (R-AK), told the Quello Symposium on communications policy that the
bill moving through the House to increase indecency fines by tenfold does
not go far enough, given what broadcasters make selling ads. Sen Stevens
said Congress needs to look at indecency and TV violence, and to consider
mandating a family hour.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA386262?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
In a related story...
HOWARD STERN SHOW SUSPENDED ON CLEAR CHANNEL
Clear Channel announced that it will not air the Howard Stern show on
stations in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Rochester, N.Y.; Orlando, Fla.; San
Diego; Pittsburgh; and Louisville, Ky., until the company is "assured that
his show will conform to acceptable standards of responsible broadcasting."
[SOURCE: wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107776280485639689,00.html?mod=mm%5Fm...

POLICYMAKERS

KEY LEGISLATORS TALK TELECOM POLICY
Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain (R-AZ) spoke to a Media
Center Forum on a wide range of issues including media ownership, the
transition to digital TV and public television. 1) Concerning media
ownership, Sen McCain said "there are many who believe that what happened
with Clear Channel is a miner's canary for the rest of the broadcasting
industry." Although a self-called "de-regulator" and small government
advocate, Sen McCain said regulation of how American receive their
information and knowledge is a special category. He would like to see the
consolidation trend slowed noting that the FCC's relaxation of ownership
rules went too far. For example, in Los Angeles, one corporation could own
three TV stations, eight radio stations, one Internet service and "several
other media outlets." In Sen McCain's home state, USAToday publisher
Gannett owns both the Arizona Republic and Ch. 12 which he finds nothing
wrong with. But if the corporation were to be allowed to own two or three
more stations, "I think that would have dangerous implications." Sen McCain
said, "once consolidation takes place, I don't think there's any way you
can force anybody to unload their property, and I wouldn't be in favor of
that as well. So before that happens, we at least should have far more
careful scrutiny" of media consolidation "than the FCC has given it."
Concerning the proposed Comcast-Disney merger, Sen McCain said he's "very
worried about vertical integration." 2) The senator blamed the National
Association of Broadcasters for the slow pace of the digital television
transition, although he saw some hope with the costs of DTV sets falling
from unaffordable to very expensive. "I would think it will be another 3
or 4 or 5 years before we could start getting some of that analog spectrum
back," he said adding that it will be long overdue. 3) Sen McCain said he
has "always been skeptical" of public TV, conceding "I'm not the greatest
fan." Nevertheless, he said he thinks PTV "is fine," but said he hopes one
day "they can get enough donors to support themselves."
House Telecom Subcommittee Chairman Fred Upton (R-MI) spoke to members of
the Association of Public Television Stations about the transition to
digital TV, reauthorization of public broadcasting, the next budget for
public broadcasting, indecency and reform of the Telecommunications Act of
1996. 1) On digital
transition, public TV came in for praise for being "leaders in
multicasting." Concerning the APTS plan to return analog spectrum early,
Rep Upton said, "We want to help you return the analog... and that's
something we want all broadcasters be able to do." The Congressman is
planning a roundtable discussion on DTV in the spring and will invite PTV
leaders. 2) A General Accounting Office report expected in April may set
the groundwork for a reauthorization of public broadcasting in 2005 -- the
last time that was done was 1989. 3) Public broadcasting may suffer
appropriations cuts because difficulties with the budget. 4) Rep Upton
saluted public TV stations for an "unblemished" record of broadcast
"decency and thoughtfulness." 5) Telecom Act reform is very unlikely in
2004, but Rep Upton plans to begin hearings in order to set the groundwork
for a re-write of the Act by the next Congress.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Paul Gluckman & Dinesh Kumar]
(Not available online)

NORQUIST TAKING HEAT ON BROADBAND
The presidents of the Progress and Freedom Foundation, the Pacific Research
Institute and the Competitive Enterprise Institute as well as scholars at
the Hoover Institution and the Manhattan Institute have all signed a letter
to White House informal advisor Grover Norquist accusing him of being
pro-regulatory when it comes to broadband policy. "Your position on
telecommunications deregulation is contrary to the views of the vast
majority of free-market economists and policy analysts," the letter states.
"Your continuing advocacy of the pro-regulation position is destructive to
the cause of limited government. To the extent your efforts are successful,
the effect will be to reduce capital formation, slow job creation, impede
productivity growth and stifle individual liberty and economic freedom."
Norquist said he remains a proponent of deregulating telecom. If the
scholars who wrote yesterday's letter have a proposal for a national
broadband policy that they want him to support, he said, "that's news to me."
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Griff Witte]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6925-2004Feb25.html

PUBLIC BROADCASTING

PUBLIC BROADCASTING FACES CRUCIAL YEAR IN CONGRESS
Public broadcasting and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) face
a crucial year in Congress. Through its recent appointments to the CPB
board and its budget proposals, the Bush Administration has sent signals
that it wants to limit the editorial independence of public broadcasting.
Some Members of Congress, too, have criticized certain public broadcasting
programs as biased and have called for more government oversight. This
criticism makes public broadcasting all the more vulnerable in a year when
the CPB faces congressional reauthorization. A reauthorization bill gives
opponents of public broadcasting forums for their attacks and legislative
avenues for making public broadcasting less about serving the public
interest and more about avoiding controversy. "The editorial independence
of public broadcasting must be saved," said Common Cause President and CEO
Chellie Pingree. "With media consolidation so pervasive, in some
communities the only locally owned media outlet is the public television
station and radio station. Public broadcasting remains our last, best hope
of informing citizens about issues vital to our democracy as it does not
depend on commercial revenues and ratings for its existence.
There's much more at the URLs below.
[SOURCE: Common Cause Edit Memo]
http://www.commoncause.org/news/default.cfm?ArtID=284
http://www.commoncause.org/publications/022404_PBS_Edit_Memo.pdf
The House Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education
(Appropriations) held a hearing on CPB funding yesterday.
http://appropriations.house.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=AboutTheCommittee.S...

PBS HD CHANNEL TO LAUNCH MARCH 1
PBS will become on March 1 the first broadcaster to provide a fully
packaged 24/7 channel consisting entirely of High Definition and Widescreen
content. The PBS HD Channel will be available from local PBS stations that
have transitioned to digital broadcasting, as well as through local digital
cable systems that have agreed to retransmit the digital signal of their
local public television station. There are currently 236 local PBS stations
on the air with digital signals, reaching more than 85 percent of U.S. TV
households. The PBS HD Channel joins a suite of PBS digital services,
including PBS KIDS Channel and PBS YOU ("Your Own University") and the VOD
cable package,
"PBS KIDS on Demand."
[SOURCE: PBS Press Release]
http://www.pbs.org

QUICK HITS

HEARING: REAUTHORIZATION OF THE SATELLITE HOME VIEWER IMPROVEMENT ACT
On Tuesday Rep Lamar Smith (R-TX), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Courts,
the Internet, and Intellectual Property (Judiciary), said of renewal of the
Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA), "there are some areas I
think we can agree on. Inevitably, I think we are moving towards
reauthorization, perhaps for 5 years, and we can talk about more of the
details later on." Satellite operators are looking for expanded rights to
offer distant network signals into some local markets, arguing that it
could help speed the transition to digital television.
[SOURCE: House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary and
Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Jeanene Timberlake]
http://boss.streamos.com/real-live/hjudiciary/4749/100_hjudiciary-live_0...

VOLUNTARY COLLECTIVE LICENSING
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) announced the release of a report
outlining its favored solution to the music file-sharing controversy. The
EFF white paper recommends that the music industry adopt a model similar to
that used by radio stations today, known as voluntary collective licensing.
The proposal suggests a way that artists and copyright holders can get paid
and music fans can share music freely at a reasonable charge without
feeling like criminals. "Voluntary collective licensing aligns the
interests of the music industry with music fans," said EFF Senior
Intellectual Property Attorney Fred von Lohmann, "The more people share
music, the more artists and copyright holders should receive compensation
for their creations."
The report, entitled "A Better Way Forward: Voluntary Collective Licensing
of Music File Sharing," is part of the organization's "Let the Music Play"
campaign.
[SOURCE: Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Advisory]
http://www.eff.org/share/20040224_eff_pr.php

LIFTING THE CURTAIN ON E-VOTING
On March 2, primary voters in California, Georgia and Ohio will use
e-voting systems for the first time and will be a precursor to the expected
50 million voters who will cast electronic ballots for president this
November. But there has been very little media coverage of the inherent
problems with these systems by traditional outlets. Online news magazine
Salon contributor Farhad Manjoo demonstrated how a moderately knowledgeable
techie could hack into Diebold machines and tamper with election results.
"If you've got a copy of Access and can get physical access to the county
machine -- or, some activists say, if you discover the county's number and
call into the machine over a phone line -- the vote is yours to steal,"
Manjoo wrote. Because of the threat to democracy, substantial debate on
e-voting's effects on the democratic process is still required,
Lewellen-Biddle Taylor write, and the broadcast media, in keeping with
their FCC license obligations, has a duty to provide it.
[SOURCE: Media Channel, AUTHOR: Mark Lewellen-Biddle and Danielle Taylor]
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert147.shtml

BUNDLES OF TROUBLE: THE FCC'S TELEPHONE COMPETITION RULES
A Heritage WebMemo on FCC rules on unbundled network elements (UNEs) that
have been challenged in court. The rules, the result of provisions in the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, aimed to increase competition in the local
telephone service market. But the rules get it wrong, argues Gattuso: 1)
Rather than fostering real competition, the rules undercut it by allowing
competitors to lease facilities at artificially low prices. 2) The FCC
erred in relying on state-by-state regulation in this case; federal
regulation is appropriate because telecommunications service is a key part
of interstate commerce. Whatever the court decide, Gattuso concludes, the
FCC should review UNE rules to reflect real competition from wireless and
Internet telephony.
[SOURCE: Heritage Foundation, AUTHOR: James L. Gattuso]
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Regulation/wm432.cfm

STUDY SAYS MEDIA USAGE IS DOUBLE CURRENT MEASURES
Ball State University Professors Michael Holmes and Bob Papper have written
Middletown Media Studies, a new report on how media usage is measured. The
researchers find that phone surveys and diaries grossly underestimate media
consumption. When comparing reports of media use by phone, by diary entry
and by actual observation, the researchers found that people underestimate
the hours they watch TV by one-half. They also found that people spend up
to one-fourth media-use time using more than one medium simultaneously.
Nielsen Media Research dismissed the study pointing out that in 55 markets,
People Meters are activated as soon as someone turns on the TV. The study
was funded the university's $20 million grant from the Lilly Endowment.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA386366?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/25/04

KIDS AND MEDIA
A Report on Childhood Obesity

BROADCASTING
White House Pushes Fines, Fees on Broadcasters

VoIP
Senate Panel Hears VoIP Arguments

PRIVACY
Covering Tracks: New Privacy Hope for P2P

QUICK HITS
Study: HDTV Will Be Cable's Defense vs. DBS
Qwest To Offer DSL Separate From Phone
Microsoft to Launch Plan to Control Spam
Publication: Toward Equality of Access

KIDS AND MEDIA

A REPORT ON CHILDHOOD OBESITY
The Kaiser Family Foundation released a report Tuesday that suggests links
between obesity in children and exposure to television, video games and
movies. One of the main contributors to obesity may be food advertising
targeted at kids. Some of the most compelling evidence summarized in the
report came from studies that reduced children's exposure to media, said
Vicky Rideout, vice president and director at the program for the study of
entertainment media and health at the Kaiser Foundation. "What's really
powerful are the interventions that have succeeded in reducing children's
weight problems by reducing the time spent with media," Ms Rideout said.
"If you find that something is succeeding, you don't necessarily have to
wait for 100 percent proof explaining why it's succeeding." Childrens'
cable channel Nickelodeon is already responding with a "Let's just play"
campaign that encourages physical activity and restricting commercials to
the beginning and end of shows [hey, just like PBS]. But advertising
executives are not ready to accept all the blame and endorse changes in
their industry. They prefer expansion of public education programs to
promote healthy eating and exercise [what we need is more advertising!].
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Nat Ives]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/25/business/media/25adco.html
(requires registration)

BROADCASTING

WHITE HOUSE PUSHES FINES, FEES ON BROADCASTERS
National Telecommunications and Information Administration head Michael
Gallagher told the Media Institute that the Administration wants to see
pending decency enforcement legislation toughened so stations pay the
highest possible fines when they air indecent programming during kids'
shows and shows rated suitable for children such as the Super Bowl. The
White House may ask bill sponsor House Telecom Subcommittee Chairman Fred
Upton (R-MI) to amend the bill with the specific language concerning
children. Additionally, the Administration is proposing fees for spectrum
users that would include digital TV broadcasters. The White House is
proposing a user fee on unauctioned spectrum that would begin in 2005 and
generate $3.1 billion over the first 10 years. The White House is also
asking Congress for fees on analog spectrum that would begin in 2007 and
expire when a station went all-digital and returned the analog channel for
auction. The analog spectrum fee has been proposed for a number of years
without success; it is not expected to pass in this year's budget
legislation either.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA386123?display=Breaking+News

VoIP

SENATE PANEL HEARS VoIP ARGUMENTS
The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing on Internet telephone service
(VoIP) Tuesday and much of the talk focuses on how to regulate and tax the
new service. Currently, states rely on some $13 billion raised annually
through phone taxes to pay for emergency calling, subsidized phone services
and other social programs. But there's some fears these funds may dry up as
more calling moves to VoIP. And, on the flip side of the coin, other fear
that taxing VoIP may lead to taxes on e-mail and other Internet
applications. Senators seem to agree that VoIP providers should be forced
to follow some federal rules, such as being required to offer 911 service
or comply with law enforcement wiretapping demands, but they are leaning to
a hands-off approach to regulation as VoIP starts to grow. FCC Chairman
Powell testified at the hearing and endorsed telecommunications reform
legislation. He told the committee regulation of new technology such as
VoIP could not be resolved under the Telecom Act of 1996 since it doesn't
allow such services as VoIP to be "harmonized" and makes it difficult to
resolve intercarrier compensation. "The days are numbered on the way we're
doing this under the current statute," Chairman Powell said. "I do believe
there is going to have to be a statute in the future that recognizes these
dramatic technical changes."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com and Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Ben Chamy and
Terry Lane]
http://news.com.com/2100-7352_3-5164239.html?tag=nefd_top
See links to testimony delivered at
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1065
Read FCC Chairman Michael Powell's written testimony at
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-244231A1.pdf
Politicians Against Web Tax Turn Efforts Toward VOIP
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107765327809137965,00.html?mod=teleco...
(requires subscription)
Few Rules Better for Calls On Internet, Powell Says
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Griff Witte]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3495-2004Feb24.html

PRIVACY

COVERING TRACKS: NEW PRIVACY HOPE FOR P2P
Responding to Recording Industry Association of America lawsuits against
digital music file swappers, peer-to-peer network developers are trying to
find ways for Internet users to remain anonymous while downloading files.
Efforts have not been very successful yet because in order to download a
song from another computer online, a file swapper's computer must make some
kind of connection to it. That leaves a digital record that can be traced
back to a person's Internet service provider, and from there to the account
holder. Creating more privacy often creates efficiency problems that ruin
the peer-to-peer network. "The bottom line is that you just can't be
anonymous on the Internet if you're going to have some kind of peer
transaction," said Mark Ishikawa, chief executive officer of BayTSP, a
company that tracks and identifies file swappers for music labels and
Hollywood studios. "There is this myth that you can be anonymous. You can
hide, but we can get you."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: John Borland]
http://news.com.com/2100-1027_3-5164413.html?tag=cd_lede

QUICK HITS

STUDY: HDTV WILL BE CABLE'S DEFENSE VS. DBS
Each year Horowitz Associates surveys cable system staff and consumers and
then issues a report called State of Cable & Broadband. The research found
this year that 68% of cable operator respondents cited HDTV service built
into digital boxes as the key driver for acquisition and retention of
customers, followed by an interactive programming guide (58%),
video-on-demand (55%) and digital-video recorders (54%). But only 5% of all
consumers surveyed, however, were aware that they can get HDTV service from
a cable or satellite provider. And only 38% of cable subscribers surveyed
were aware that they can get DVR service from their operator.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Mike Reynolds]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA386126?display=Breaking+News

QWEST TO OFFER DSL SEPARATE FROM PHONE
"Naked DSL" may be coming your way, but don't delete this email from your
spam folder. Qwest is the first regional Bell telephone company that will
offer high-speed digital-subscriber-line (DSL) Internet service to
customers who are not regular phone subscribers as well. This company
policy change will allow more consumers to choose alternative local phone
service providers or even go all-wireless for phone service. Consumer
advocates endorsed the move by the Denver company. "We love lots of
different pricing options for consumers," says Chris Murray, legislative
counsel for Consumers Union Qwest's new a la carte DSL service is
particularly timely, he says, because more consumers are experimenting with
alternative ways of making calls. The other regional Bells may follow suit,
but not anytime soon, it appears. Why did Qwest make the move? "We decided
we'd rather not lose the customer," said Qwest Chairman and Chief Executive
Richard Notebaert.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Shawn Young shawn.young( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107766524136738263,00.html?mod=teleco...
(requires subscription)

MICROSOFT TO LAUNCH PLAN TO CONTROL SPAM
"Caller ID for E-mail" is a new system being launched by Microsoft that
will allow computers to recognize whether incoming e-mail is from a
legitimate Internet address. Rather than using filters to try to identify
and weed out spam, the new approach seeks to spot legitimate e-mail and
automatically segregate everything else. Microsoft's Bill Gates introduced
the system during a keynote address to a computer security conference in
San Francisco.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jonathan Krim]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3385-2004Feb24.html
See Also:
Latest Ideas for Fighting Spam Not the Greatest
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR: Dan Gillmor]
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/8035672.htm

PUBLICATION: TOWARD EQUALITY OF ACCESS
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and a number of other national civic
organizations, released a new report finding that public libraries have
helped close the digital divide by providing free, public access to
computers and the Internet, particularly for people without access at home
or work. The report, "Toward Equality of Access: The Role of Public
Libraries in Addressing the Digital Divide," also identifies significant
challenges libraries face in sustaining and improving this service and
recommends the public and private sectors work together to ensure that
libraries can continue to provide this vital access to technology for years
to come.
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/nr/Downloads/libraries/uslibraries/report...
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/24/04

NEW WARNINGS
Television Advertising Leads to Unhealthy Habits in Children
FTC Searches for a More Explicit E-Mail Warning

BROADBAND/INTERNET
Governors Press for Limits on Internet Tax Ban
Is Broadband Set to Make Power Lines Sing?
Speech: Rural Lands Of Opportunity: Broadband Deployment In America's
Heartland

NEW WARNINGS

TELEVISION ADVERTISING LEADS TO UNHEALTHY HABITS IN CHILDREN
Advertisers spend an estimated $12 billion per year on advertising messages
aimed at the youth market. Research shows that children under the age of
eight are unable to critically comprehend televised advertising messages
and are prone to accept advertiser messages as truthful, accurate and
unbiased. This can lead to unhealthy eating habits as evidenced by today's
youth obesity epidemic. For these reasons, a task force of the American
Psychological Association (APA) has developed the following
recommendations: 1) Restrict advertising primarily directed to young
children of eight years and under. Policymakers need to take steps to
better protect young children from exposure to advertising because of the
inherent unfairness of advertising to audiences who lack the capability to
evaluate biased sources of information found in television commercials. 2)
Ensure that disclosures and disclaimers in advertising directed to children
are conveyed in language clearly comprehensible to the intended audience
(e.g., use "You have to put it together" rather than "some assembly
required"). 3) Investigate how young children comprehend and are influenced
by advertising in new interactive media environments such as the Internet.
4) Examine the influence of advertising directed to children in the school
and classroom. Such advertising may exert more powerful influence because
of greater attention to the message or because of an implicit endorsement
effect associated with advertising viewed in the school setting.
The American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC, is the
largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in
the United States and is the world's largest association of psychologists.
There's much more information at the URL below.
[SOURCE: American Psychological Association Press Release]
http://www.apa.org/releases/childrenads.html
See also:
Information or Manipulation?
Washington Post coverage of the APA report includes reaction from the
advertising community: 1) the industry already has a voluntary code for
children's advertising, 2) the courts would look dimly at attempts to
regulate commercial speech, 3) parents have a responsibility to advise
children on an ad's truthfulness and 4) a restriction targeting under-8s
would be unenforceable as 9 and 10 year olds watch close to the same media.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Caroline Mayer]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A659-2004Feb23.html

FTC SEARCHES FOR A MORE EXPLICIT E-MAIL WARNING
In the first of seven rules the Federal Trade Commission is required make
under the Can-Spam Act, the Commission has proposed that the warning
"SEXUALLY-EXPLICIT-CONTENT: " appear in the subject line of any
non-solicited email that contains "material that many recipients may
consider vulgar or pornographic in nature." An FTC study found that 17% of
pornographic offers contain sexually explicit images and 40% of those
sampled by agency staff had fake information in the "from" or "subject"
lines that could mislead recipients about the nature of the content.
Additional protections are also proposed by the FTC including an electronic
brown wrapper that will allow viewing only after several other affirmative
clicks are taken by the recipient to get to the image. A ruling is expected
in mid-March. When this proceeding is completed, the FTC will begin work on
creating a Do Not Spam list similar to the Do Not Call list for telephones.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Cindy Skrzycki]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A938-2004Feb23.html

BROADBAND/INTERNET

GOVERNORS PRESS FOR LIMITS ON INTERNET TAX BAN
Govs Mike Huckabee (R-AK), Jim Doyle (D-WI) and Ed Rendell (D-PA) said
Monday they would try to scale back Congressional efforts to permanently
ban Internet access taxes, saying it could cost states billions in
revenues. They would like to see another temporary ban so policymakers can
figure out how to handle new services like Internet telephony. Two former
governors now in the Senate -- Lamar Alexander (R-TN) and Delaware Democrat
Tom Carper (D-DE) -- have introduced a bill that would start another
temporary ban. The bill is competing against another that would enact a
permanent ban.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=SKXQET0SX5FMYCRBAEZS...

IS BROADBAND SET TO MAKE POWER LINES SING?
Earlier this month, the FCC began a proceeding on rules governing the
provision of high-speed Internet access over power lines. The hope is that
broadband over power line (BPL) could jump start broadband deployment,
especially in rural areas. Already Internet service provider EarthLink has
announced it will begin testing a broadband service using power lines
leased from Progress Energy, an electricity company that serves the
Carolinas and central Florida. The company will charge ~$40/month for the
service. There are technical concerns and regulatory ones as well including
interference with amateur radio and public safety users. And the key
regulatory battle may not be at the FCC, but at state-level public utility
commissions which regulate power companies.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Jim Hu]
(http://news.com.com/)
The FCC released this rulemaking online yesterday, see
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-29A1.doc
Also see the Commission's Press release at
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-243879A1.doc

SPEECH: RURAL LANDS OF OPPORTUNITY: BROADBAND DEPLOYMENT IN AMERICA'S HEARTLAND
Fifty million Americans now access the Internet from home using high speed
connections. But as the pace of broadband deployment continues to
accelerate, FCC Chairman Micael Powell told the Kansas Rural Broadband and
Telemedicine Summit, "we must work together to ensure that individuals
living in rural America are not left behind in the digital migration."
Rural America has the most to gain from broadband deployment. Chairman
Powell highlighted the economic development potential of broadband
deployment and the community development potential of broadband to address
health, education and homeland security needs. He also outlined The Rural
Action Plan he announced last August: 1) Create Licensed Wireless Policies
that Encourage Rural Deployment, 2) Rural "Wireless Internet Service
Providers", 3) Advanced Services Through Satellite and 4) Comprehensive
Outreach Program.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-244205A1.pdf
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/23/04

BROADCASTING
Broadcasters Devise Plans To Placate FCC
By Skipping Ahead, FCC Leaves Public Behind
Comcast Might Want DTV Must-Carry
FCC, McCain: Open Doors to Big-Market LPFMs
FCC: Let's Re-Think UHF Rule

TELECOM
Should Broadband be the Universal-Service Goal?
Wi-Fi's Growing Pains
Internet Phone Fees Spark FCC Debate
Vodafone's Failed Bid Raises Fears

CONGRESSIONAL CALENDAR
Reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (2/24)
Voice Over Internet Protocol (2/24)
Broadcast Decency Enforcement (2/26)

Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.

BROADCASTING

BROADCASTERS DEVISE PLANS TO PLACATE FCC
In response to FCC Chairman Michael Powell's call to broadcast networks to
voluntarily curb indecent programming, Fox will begin a six-week print and
public service announcement (PSA) campaign today urging parents to use the
V-chip. In addition, the network will expand its standards and practices
department and has entered a "consultative" relationship with Henry J.
Kaiser Family Foundation, a non-profit that will brief Fox creative
executives about the organization's research and discuss how Fox programs
can incorporate health-related messages into story lines. CBS will also run
a PSA campaign to encourage parents to use the V-chip which allows parents
to program their TVs to block programs with specific content ratings. In
addition, CBS will delay the transmission of some live events.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Brian Steinberg at
brian.steinberg( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107750519573436327,00.html?mod=mm_med...
(requires subscription)
See note below about decency enforcement hearing this week in House.

BY SKIPPING AHEAD, THE FCC LEAVES PUBLIC BEHIND
Meredith McGehee, Director of the Alliance for Better Campaigns (ABC),
calls on the FCC to complete proceedings to define the public interest
obligations of digital broadcasters before finalizing rules to complete the
transition to digital TV including cable must-carry. ABC and other
advocates are working to get the FCC to revitalize public interest
standards including 1) political discourse; 2) children's educational
programming; and 3) diversity of independent programming. Broadcast
television is our nation's public square, writes McGehee. It is the one
medium that targets and reaches the public as a whole. Citizens will be
ill-served by broadcasters unless the FCC takes action ensuring that
broadcasters air at least a minimum amount of public affairs programming,
including candidate- and issue-centered discussion in the period just
before elections.
[SOURCE: The Political Standard (Alliance for Better Campaigns), AUTHOR:
Meredith McGehee]
http://www.bettercampaigns.org/standard/display.php?StoryID=304

COMCAST MIGHT WANT DTV MUST-CARRY
Prudential Equity Group analysts are guessing that if Comcast wins its
battle for Disney, the cable giant will change its stance on digital
must-carry and argue that cable operators should give digital broadcasters
a 6-megahertz spectrum allocation, as opposed to the requirement to send
just a primary signal. Officially, Comcast is saying that its policy on
must-carry has not changed. The analysts offer the following reasons for a
possible switch: 1) full digital carriage would push channels like MTV and
Bravo off the basic tier and on to digital tiers of cable systems, 2) the
FCC would impose the same condition on satellite operators DirecTV and
EchoStar and 3) in markets where Comcast owned TV stations, the company
would control even more programming.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA382828?display=Breaking+News

FCC, McCAIN: OPEN DOORS TO BIG-MARKET LPFMs
There may be some momentum building for expanding low power FM radio
stations (LPFM) in big(ger) cities. Last week, the FCC released a report to
Congress on the Low Power FM Interference Testing Program that endorses a
2003 Mitre study showing no harmful interference would be created if a
current law banning LPFM stations within two channel stops of an existing
full power station was eliminated. "There appears to be no public interest
reason to retain third-adjacent minimum distance separation requirements,"
the FCC said in the report to Congress. Senate Commerce Chairman John
McCain (R-AZ) has announced he'll introduce legislation making the
recommendation law. "Four years ago, broadcasters masqueraded their concern
about competition in grossly exaggerated claims of interference. Today, the
FCC has stripped the broadcasters of this disguise," said Sen McCain. The
National Association of Broadcasters maintains that the Mitre study is
"deeply flawed" and expansion of LPFM would create too much interference.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell ]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA385446?display=Breaking+News
See the FCC report at
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-244128A1.pdf
See statement by Sen McCain
http://www.mediaaccess.org/programs/lpfm/McCainPressRelease.htm

FCC: LET'S RE-THINK UHF RULE
UHF television stations have poor reception relative to VHF stations which,
19 years ago, led to a FCC rule that counting UHF stations at one-half
their audience reach when tallying station groups' compliance with the
national ownership cap. But with so many viewers relying on cable to
deliver TV signals, the Media Access Project and Capitol Broadcasting have
asked the Commission to do away with the UHF discount. On Thursday, the FCC
began a proceeding to gather public comment on whether or not the discount
is still needed. For more information, see the URLs below or contact FCC
staff Debra Sabourin or Patrick Webre at (202) 418-2330.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell ]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA382819?display=Breaking+News
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-320A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-320A1.pdf

TELECOM

SHOULD BROADBAND BE THE UNIVERSAL-SERVICE GOAL?
Building on the success of the Universal Service Fund (USF) to bring
telephone service to the vast majority of US households, Jackson asks if it
is time to start making broadband connections the goal of USF. Universal
service reform in the near future seems inevitable since revenues from long
distance service are down and demands for funds are going up. FCC
Commission Kevin martin has floated an idea that each phone number --
whether connected by traditional copper lines or wireless -- be assessed a
$1/month fee to fund universal service. If broadband was the standard of
universal service, there would be significantly more flexibility in
customer communications choice, because VoIP would be a viable option for
those with broadband connections. It also could provide flexibility to
regulators, as cable-modem, broadband wireless and broadband-over-power
line technologies could be used to satisfy the universal-service mandate as
an adjunct to traditional copper lines, which may not be the most efficient
way to serve some areas. Jackson admits that broadband may be too lofty a
goal while many Americans still don't have traditional phone service, but
it may be time to start considering broadband since it appears to be the
foundation of future communications.
[SOURCE: Telephony's Regulatory Insider, AUTHOR: Donny Jackson
(mailto:djackson( at )primediabusiness.comdjackson( at )primediabusiness.com)]

Wi-Fi'S GROWING PAINS
Business Week has a special report this week on wireless fidelity's
short-range-radio functionality. The technology promises transmission of
data, including songs and movies, at sizzling speeds. A range of articles
cover 1) why technology won't achieve the status it deserves until it
overcomes several obstacles now keeping it stuck in a techno-limbo, 2) a
Wi-Fi future, 3) new rivals already arriving, and 4) a Wi-Fi how-to. Wi-Fi
enables people to wirelessly connect to the Internet at speeds 100 times
the speed of a dialup connection. What does the future hold for Wi-Fi. Some
predict it will be in half of both homes and businesses connected to the
Internet by the end of the decade. Wi-Fi is already connecting to data cell
phone networks, allowing people to check email when they leave Wi-Fi
network areas. In the not distant future, cell phones will be able to place
calls over both wireless carriers networks and the Internet. Wi-Fi is also
being incorporated in consumer devices -- refrigerators, gaming consoles,
printers and televisions -- allowing them all to interact. For example a
song may be streamed from a computer to a stereo or a video could go from
the PC to the TV screen. But there's hurdles to realizing this potential.
First, there's security concerns must be overcome. Second, there is a lack
of comprehensive roaming agreements that would let any customer who buys
Wi-Fi service from a phone company, for instance, use the technology
anyplace in the country. And the biggest hurdle, at least for frequent
travelers, is the lack of in-flight Wi-Fi networks.
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek]
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/tc_special/tc_04wifi.htm

INTERNET PHONE FEES SPARK FCC DEBATE
The FCC may rule soon on a petition filed by AT&T asking for an exemption
from local carriers access fees for calls it routes over the Internet. SBC
Communications claims that since 2002, AT&T has dodged several hundred
million dollars in access fees by routing some of its long-distance calls
over its VoIP network. Insiders say Democrat Jonathan Adelstein recently
agreed to join Republicans Michael Powell and Kathleen Abernathy in denying
the petition. In exchange for Adelstein's vote, Chairman Powell may have
made concessions that ultimately could subject other Internet phone service
providers to access fees. That, in turn, could mean complex billing systems
and higher charges for VoIP providers.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Paul Davidson]
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040223/5947888s.htm
See note below on Senate hearing on VoIP this week.

VODAFONE'S FAILED BID RAISES FEARS
Investors are worried that Vodafone's failed bid for AT&T Wireless may mean
a new round of reckless spending by European telecommunications companies.
There's some speculation Vodafone may make a bid now for SFR, Vivendi
Universal's cellphone unit, or even bid for the entire French group. Dutch
telecom group KPN is discussing taking over U.K. wireless operator mmO2.
And France Telecom has launched today a $4.88 billion purchase of Wanadoo's
directory business Pages Jaunes.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jo Wrighton at jo.wrighton( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107749259086736131,00.html?mod=teleco...
(requires registration)
See Also:
TELECOMS BET ON NEW SERVICES TO BOOST SALES
For an alternative view of investor confidence in European telecom.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Paul Tobin, Bloomberg News]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-mobilephones23feb23,1...

CONGRESSIONAL CALENDAR

* Hearing: Reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act
Tuesday, February 24, 2004
Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property
4:00 p.m. in 2141 Rayburn House Office Building
[SOURCE: House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary]
http://boss.streamos.com/real-live/hjudiciary/4749/100_hjudiciary-live_0...
See Also:
Accelerating The Transition To Digital TV: The Satellite Home Viewer
Improvement Act Can Help
The Progress and Freedom Foundation has released a commentary by Thomas M.
Lenard arguing that Congress should use SHVIA renewal to accellerate the
transition to digital television. "Policy measures such as extending the
distant signal retransmission rights of satellite providers to include
digital signals can help complete the migration to MVPD [multi-channel
video program distributor, such as cable or satellite] at essentially zero
cost." This would help "free up large blocks of valuable spectrum for the
many new and innovative wireless technologies that are on the horizon."
See more at the URL below and find a link to the commentary there.
[SOURCE: Progress and Freedom Foundation Press Release]
http://www.pff.org/news/news/2004/022004shvia.html

* Hearing: Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP)
Tuesday, February 24 2004 - 9:30 AM - SR - 253
Members of the US Senate Commerce Committee will hear testimony on the
appropriate federal and state regulatory treatment of Internet telephone
service (VoIP), including obligations related to intercarrier compensation,
disability access, E-911, universal service, and assistance to law
enforcement. Senator McCain (R-AZ) will preside. FCC Chairman Powell is
expected to testify along with Vonage Chairman Jeffrey Citron, Time Warner
Cable Chairman Glenn Britt, CenturyTel
Chairman Glen Post, NARUC President Stan Wise and Kevin Werbach, founder
of Supernova Group.. The hearing will be Webcasted; see the URL below.
Communications Daily is reporting that Sen John Sununu (R-NH) will
introduce a bill soon classifying VoIP as an information service subject to
just light FCC regulation. The bill would also address, but not resolve,
universal service, law enforcement, Internet tax and enhanced 911 (E911) as
they releate to VoIP.
[SOURCE: US Senate Commerce Committee]
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1065

* House Telecom Subcommittee will discuss broadcast decency enforcement for
the 3rd time on February 26. A vote on HR-3717, a bill to increase
indecency fines by a factor of ten, is expected March 2. The bill's main
sponsor, House Telecommunications Subcommittee Chairman Fred Upton (R-MI)
is trying to limit the number of amendments to the bill fearing the could
slow or deny eventual passage of the bill.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/19/04

TELEPHONY
Wireless Number Portability

INTERNET
U.S. Cable Modem Growth Slows, Opening Door to DSL
Video Streaming Market

QUICK HITS
'Stand By Your Ad' Is Changing the Face of Campaign Spots
Publication: "Digital Futures: A Need-to-Know Policy Guide for Independent=
=20
Filmmakers"
$1.2 Million to EFF to Defend Online Freedom
USAC Names New CEO
Hearing on the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act 2/24
Broadcast Decency Enforcement Hearing 2/26; Vote Expected 3/2
Conf: Can Media Artists Survive Media Consolidation?

TELEPHONY

WIRELESS NUMBER PORTABILITY
New FCC portability rules, which allow cellphone customers to retain their=
=20
phone numbers when switching carriers, are not having the major effect on=20
the industry that was expected. The rules went into effect in November and=
=20
most consumers who have changed carriers since then have also changed their=
=20
phone numbers. Of course, delays, glitches and billing problems may have=20
made it so hard to retain phone numbers that many people opted just to get=
=20
a new number. The process is still taking a day or more with customers=20
carrying two phones in that time -- receiving calls on old phones and=20
placing calls on new ones. Carriers may not be totally in the clear.=20
Business customers may start switching more when the process is more=20
reliable, many people may switch after long-term contracts expire and=20
one-third of the nation becomes eligible for number portability on May 24.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Carl Bialik at carl.bialik( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107723173017934508,00.html?mod=3Dtele...
unications%5Fprimary%5Fhs
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107720457054133952,00.html?mod=3Darti...
outset-box
(requires subscription)

INTERNET

U.S. CABLE MODEM GROWTH SLOWS, OPENING DOOR TO DSL
High-speed Internet service is a key market for both cable and telephone=20
companies because it provides high margins to the provider and helps retain=
=20
customers for the companys' other businesses. Cable controls 64% of the=20
high-speed Internet market right now, but is facing competition from=20
slower, cheaper DSL connections provided by phone companies. In the last=20
quarter of 2003, all the top cable companies reported slowed growth in=20
cable modem subscribers while the top telephone companies are reporting=20
quick growth in DSL subscribership.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Michael Learmonth]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3DAYQ3Y12HZVMMMCRBAE...
Y?type=3DtechnologyNews&storyID=3D4398202

VIDEO STREAMING MARKET
Increased penetration of high-speed Internet services, better premium=20
content and more sophisticated media players are expanding the use of=20
streaming media services, according to AccuStream iMedia Research. Total=20
video streams were up by 104% in 2003 to 7.8 billion. 78% of video streams=
=20
served were viewed at broadband rates. Music videos captured 33% viewing=20
share, followed by news at 28% and sports 17%. The top ten streaming video=
=20
sites averaged over 400 million streams per month alone in =9203. Where's=20
that content coming from? Just three years ago, 85+% came from broadcast=20
and cable networks. News and sports are still dominated by broadcast and=20
cable TV network brands online, but their overall share has dropped to=20
under 5%. Instead, Internet users are turning to online brands -- AOL=20
Broadband, Real Networks, Yahoo and recent addition MSN Broadband.
AccuStream iMedia Research publishes the monthly reports iBroadcast Stream=
=20
Report, iBroadcast Avails Report, iBroadcast Wireless and Mobile Content=20
Report, plus other annual and semi-annual streaming media reports.
For more info contact: Paul A. Palumbo ppalumbo( at )concentric.net
[SOURCE: AccuStream iMedia Research Press Releases]
http://www.accustreamresearch.com/news/feb1804.html
http://www.accustreamresearch.com/news/feb1904.html

QUICK HITS

'STAND BY YOUR AD' IS CHANGING THE FACE OF CAMPAIGN SPOTS
New regulations -- part of the Campaign Finance Reform Act signed into law=
=20
in 2002 and upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court last year -- require=20
candidates to take personal responsibility for the messages in their=20
campaign ads. If you have seen political advertisements of late, you may=20
have noticed candidates saying "I approved this ad." The Alliance for=20
Better Campaigns was a leader in making this reform a reality and has made=
=20
links to coverage of this reform as well as commentary available on the its=
=20
web site.
[SOURCE: Alliance for Better Campaigns]
http://www.bettercampaigns.org/

PUBLICATION: "DIGITAL FUTURES: A NEED-TO-KNOW POLICY GUIDE FOR INDEPENDENT=
=20
FILMMAKERS"
From the Foreword: In a world of flickering screens, large and small, one=
=20
group has consistently championed more inclusive views of the world around=
=20
us: independent filmmakers. Working outside of the studios and television=20
networks, indies bring diverse voices to televisions, cinemas, and=20
computers alike, telling stories ruled not by profit but by art, by=20
conviction, and by people=92s need to connect to one another and the world=
=20
around them. Today=92s digital technology has forever transformed the way we=
=20
make and consume media in America. [This] publication ... exists to help=20
... [the] independent media makers navigate these ongoing changes and learn=
=20
how to protect [their] interests=97as both a citizen and a filmmaker. And it=
=20
comes at a moment when critical decisions are being made, in the halls of=20
government and in the marketplace, about how digital technology will be=20
used to create, copy, distribute, and present media in the years to come."
[SOURCE: Center for Social Media]
http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/documents/ITVSdigitalfutures.pdf

$1.2 MILLION TO EFF TO DEFEND ONLINE FREEDOM
the estate of Leonard Zubkoff, a software developer and entrepreneur who=20
died in 2002, has given the Electronic Frontier Foundation $1.2 million.=20
EFF will use $1 million of this money to establish the EFF Endowment Fund=20
for Digital Civil Liberties. "This gift is important to us for several=20
reasons," said EFF Executive Director Shari Steele. "Not only does it help=
=20
us establish our endowment fund, Leonard's legacy makes it possible for us=
=20
to bring aboard a Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to create and implement a=
=20
technology strategy for EFF. With our combined expertise in both the law=20
and technology, EFF is perfectly situated to help create and foster new=20
technologies designed to enhance freedom."
[SOURCE: Electronic Frontier Foundation Press Release]
http://www.eff.org/about/20040218_eff_pr.php

* The Universal Service Administrative Company's Board of Directors=20
unanimously elected Lisa M. Zaina as its CEO. Ms. Zaina will start with=20
USAC on March 1, 2004. She most recently served as Senior Legal Advisor to=
=20
Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein. She was formerly Vice President for=20
Industry and Regulatory Affairs and Corporate Secretary of Shenandoah=20
Telecommunications Company (Shentel) in Edinburg, VA. Prior to joining=20
Shentel, she served as Senior Vice President for Wallman Strategic=20
Consulting, LLC. She also served as Senior Counsel and Deputy Bureau Chief=
=20
for the Federal Communications Commission=92s Common Carrier Bureau (now the=
=20
Wireline Competition Bureau) as well as Vice President and General Counsel=
=20
of the Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small=20
Telecommunications Companies (OPASTCO). She also served as Deputy Assistant=
=20
General Counsel for the National Association of Regulatory Utility=20
Commissioners (NARUC).
See http://www.universalservice.org/

* The House Judiciary Intellectual Property Subcommittee will host a=20
hearing on the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA) Tues., Feb.=20
24, 4 p.m., Rayburn Bldg. Rm. 2141. SHVIA is designed to promote=20
competition among multichannel video programming distributors, such as=20
satellite companies and cable television operators while, at the same time,=
=20
increasing the programming choices available to consumers. Currently, SHVIA=
=20
permits satellite companies to provide local broadcast TV signals to all=20
subscribers who reside in the local TV station=92s market and "distant"=20
network broadcast stations to eligible satellite subscribers. Learn more at
http://www.fcc.gov/mb/shva/shviafac.html

* House Telecom Subcommittee will discuss broadcast decency enforcement for=
=20
the 3rd time on February 26. A vote on HR-3717, a bill to increase=20
indecency fines by a factor of ten, is expected March 2. The bill's main=20
sponsor, House Telecommunications Subcommittee Chairman Fred Upton (R-MI)=20
is trying to limit the number of amendments to the bill fearing the could=20
slow or deny eventual passage of the bill.

CONF: CAN MEDIA ARTISTS SURVIVE MEDIA CONSOLIDATION?
Media consolidation is rapidly changing the way films, television, music,=20
and other popular cultural works are created, produced, and=20
distributed. The proposed Comcast merger with Disney and the FCC's 2003=20
decision to further relax media ownership rules will doubtless unleash a=20
new wave of mergers and consolidation. What are the implications for the=20
creators of those popular works? What are the implications for the=20
American public, our nation's arts and culture, and our democratic=20
values? Does media consolidation threaten the vitality of our nation's=20
arts, culture, and democratic values? Are added safeguards are needed to=20
protect and promote freedom of expression and access to the public=20
airwaves? The Center for Creative Voices in Media will host a conference=20
to discuss these issues on the morning of March 13, 2004. The conferees=
=20
will also explore strategies to address these issues on an ongoing basis,=20
in order to help protect and promote access, creativity, competition,=20
diversity, and artistic freedom for the benefit of both media artists and=20
the American public.
The conference is free to the public, RSVP is required. To RSVP and for=20
further information, contact the Center for Creative Voices in Media at=20
434-971-3699 or at CONFERENCE( at )CREATIVEVOICES.US
[SOURCE: Center for Creative Voices in Media]
(www.creativevoices.us)
--------------------------------------------------------------
...and we are outta here. Have a great weekend.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/19/04

MERGERS
It's Not Enough to Be Just a Phone Company
Martin Perry Named FCC Chief Economist

MEDIA & POLITICS
Pollsters Faulted for Failure to Predict Edward's urge and for Subsequent
News Coverage

DIGITAL TV
New Digital TV Multicast Service

CALENDAR
VoIP and Indecency on Congressional Agenda Next Week

COMICS
Jenny, who can I turn to

MERGERS

IT'S NOT ENOUGH TO BE JUST A PHONE COMPANY
Just as the Comcast-Disney bid shows it is not enough to be just a media
content provider or distributor, the Cingular-AT&T Wireless merger shows it
is not enough to just be a phone company. Consumer markets for traditional
phone services, data transmission, mobile calling and even television are
converging into one industry. The buzz word is bundles -- companies are
vying to offer packages of services like wireless and traditional phone
minutes. Cingular is owned by SBC and BellSouth and the boards of those two
companies obviously saw the purchase of AT&T Wireless as crucial to their
future. Bundling services slow "churn," the rate at which customers leave
to purchase services from competitors. Consumers like the convenience of
receiving just one bill for all there telecommunications.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Matt Richtel]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/19/business/19wire.html
(requires registration)
See Also:
Wireless Firms Look at Phones as Limitless
Wireless phone acting as television, audio system and even the home
computer? Sure, we can do that.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Yuki Noguchi and Griff Witte]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52915-2004Feb18.html

MARTIN PERRY NAMED FCC CHIEF ECONOMIST
To the delight of economists everywhere, CommDaily is running a profile of
Martin Perry who has just joined the FCC. He's an antitrust expert, an
economist, mathematician, lawyer and he loves dogs. Mr. Perry is noted for
his expertise in vertical integration and he has advised the Justice
Department on merger reviews in the past. "I think that one of the reasons
why I'm here... is that some of the most complicated issues have to do with
vertical relationships. These are issues that have been
challenging for years," said Perry. If the proposed merger of Comcast and
Disney ever makes it to regulators to review, Mr. Perry will play a large
role at the FCC.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Brigitte Greenberg]
(Not available online)

MEDIA & POLITICS

POLLSTERS FAULTED FOR FAILURE TO PREDICT EDWARD'S SURGE AND FOR THE
SUBSEQUENT NEWS COVERAGE
Sen John Edwards got a big media boost after his surprisingly strong finish
in Wisconsin. But even the pollster who runs the service used by TV
networks and the Associated Press admits that results of the primary in the
Dairy State "exposed the biggest polling goofs in my memory." The incident
raises the question of whether or not media organizations are overdependent
on polling. If Sen Edwards' support was properly measured over the weekend,
for example, news coverage would have been much different Tuesday night and
Wednesday. The bounce Sen Edwards has seen has helped him raise needed
funds and continue his candidacy. And for the actual winner of the
Wisconsin primary? "Virtually every news outlet, based on public opinion
polling, created the expectation and standard that John Kerry would have a
big victory," he said. "So anything that was short of a big victory almost
inherently becomes a disappointment." Polling for the race ended Sunday
afternoon before a debate between the candidates and before the Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel endorsed Sen Edwards.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Jim Rutenberg]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/19/politics/campaign/19MEDI.html
(requires registration)

DIGITAL TV

NEW DIGITAL TV MULTICAST SERVICE
U.S. Digital TV (USDTV) will launch a mini wireless cable service in Salt
Lake City next month and move into 29 other markets by year-end. The
service uses spare digital television capacity at 4-5 local TV stations to
deliver a mix of high-definition cable networks and local programming.
USDTV charges consumers ~$20/month and gives local stations a portion of
the subscriber revenue.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Mark Seavy]
(Not available online)

CALENDAR

* Senate Commerce Committee will hold a hearing on Internet phone service
February 24.

* House Telecom Subcommittee will discuss broadcast decency enforcement for
the 3rd time on February 26. A final markup of HR-3717, a bill to increase
indecency fines by a factor of ten, is expected the week of March 1.

COMICS
...and something too funny to pass up...
eBay ended an auction for the phone number 867-5309 which was made famous
in the 1981 by Tommy Tutone. Bidding for the number in the 212 area code
had reached $80,300. The seller had claimed that new number portability
rules allowed him to assign the number to the buyer. But Verizon and the
New York Public Service Commission say that is not the case: the carrier,
not the customer, owns the phone number. And, of course, the record company
owns the song.
Jenny don't change your number.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily]
(Not available online)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/18/04

MERGER
A $41 Billion Telephone Deal, but What's in It for Consumers?

DIGITAL TELEVISION
The FCC and DTV (in three parts)
Protect Internet In Defining Broadcast Flag

QUICK HITS
Rural Americans Less Likely to Use Internet--Survey
Court upholds Do Not Call List
Grants Available: Technology Opportunities Program
TPRC: Call for Student Papers

MERGER

A $41 BILLION TELEPHONE DEAL, BUT WHAT'S IN IT FOR CONSUMERS?
There's probably 50 synonyms for "big," so instead of describing the
AT&T-Cingular Wireless deal, let's look at the potential costs/benefits to
the public and the regulatory hurdles the deal faces. Consumer groups led
by Consumers Union (see link to press release below) have already voiced
their opposition to the deal. SBC and Bell South, who share ownership of
Cingular Wireless, are "buying up the most likely competition against their
own telephone monopoly," said Gene Kimmelman, the policy director for
Consumers Union, who added that the group intends to lobby the FCC and the
Department of Justice to reject the deal as currently constructed. "This
needs to be restricted or rejected to continue to provide lower prices and
better service to both wireless and wireline consumers." The cost per
minute of wireless services has been dropping due to competition in the
industry; some analysts think the merger could accelerate that trend in the
short term as carriers try to woe Cingular and AT&T customers during the
transition which may short-term service problems.
CommDaily reports that in Dallas, Jacksonville, Miami, Oklahoma City,
Orlando and San Antonio the deal will face tight scrutiny because the
combine company will own both the original A- and B-block cellular license.
The new company may be required to divest some assets in these areas. The
highest ranking members of the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, Sens DeWine
(R-OH) and Kohl (D-WI), released a statement saying that the long
anticipated consolidation of the wireless industry had begun and that they
planned to monitor this and future transactions to ensure consumers benefit
from competition. The regulatory battle may be a harder fight at the state
level where billing and ad practices may be addressed as well as E911.
Pundits are predicting the deal, in the end, will be approved. The
companies have targeted the 4th quarter of this year for completion of the
deal.
[SOURCES: New York Times & Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Matt Richtel]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/18/business/18impact.html?hp
(requires registration)
AT&T, Cingular Wireless Merger Could Lead to Higher Prices, Poorer Services
[SOURCE: Consumers Union Press Release]
http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_telecom_and_utilities/000866.html

DIGITAL TELEVISION

THE FCC AND DTV (PART 1)
The Journal is running a three-part series on the transition to digital
television. In this first article, the state of the transition is examined.
And it ain't good. The original deadline for the transition to DTV was
2006. Two years from then, DTV tuners are in less than 1 million of the 98
million US households. To help get tuners to consumers, the FCC ordered set
manufacturers to include DTV tuners in all televisions with a 13-inch or
larger picture (an order that has stood up to court challenge). But since
the order does not take affect until July 1, 2007, it may take until 2010,
at the earliest, before 85% of TV households own TV sets with DTV tuners in
them, triggering the return of analog TV spectrum to the government for
auction.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jon Hart and Jim Burger]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107454139287105389,00.html?mod=mm%5Fm...
(requires subscription)

THE FCC AND DTV (PART 2: The Broadcast Flag)
The FCC is working to protect digital television content from the piracy
seen in digital music. Beginning July 1, 2005, FCC rules require new DTV
receivers to find
which DTV broadcasts require copy protection and encrypt the content after
you've received it in your home. Then the program can't be sent to another
display, network, or recorder unless the device is authorized to receive
it. Consumers' components must be able to "talk" to one another, using the
same protection technologies. There's already bad news for consumers: the
50 million DVD players now in use won't be able to play DTV content
recorded on a flag-compliant DVD recorder. And for producers, the system
has holes, too. DTV content converted to analog can be copied without
protection and there's already software that can help computers capture DTV
content. The mandates placed on manufacturers, some in the industry fear,
may chill innovation as it takes longer to get new products to market. And
the broadcast flag protection does not solve DTV's biggest problems, the
Journal authors point out: broadcasting's dwindling audience and the
difficulty receiving DTV signals over the air.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jon Hart and Jim Burger]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107454569644805493,00.html?mod=mm_med...
(requires subscription)

PROTECT INTERNET IN DEFINING BROADCAST FLAG
In comments to the FCC's proposed rulemaking on Digital Broadcast Content
Protection, the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) urged the
Commission to consider a narrow approach that will support reasonable uses
of content in order balance the importance of the growth of the Internet
with the intellectual property rights of copyright holders. In particular,
CDT asked the FCC to hold a objective, transparent and publicly accountable
process aimed at adopting a functional criteria for approving technologies
based on the narrow goal of preventing indiscriminate redistribution of
copyrighted content. CDT also urged that the Commission make clear that the
rulemaking is not a precedent for the FCC to take a broader role in the
regulation of consumer technologies.
You may read CDT's filing with the FCC at
http://www.cdt.org/copyright/20040213flagcomments.pdf
Also see "Implications of the Broadcast Flag: A Public Interest Primer" at
http://www.cdt.org/copyright/031216broadcastflag.pdf
[SOURCE: Center for Democracy and Technology]
http://www.cdt.org
Also see Public Knowledge, another organization active in this field
http://www.publicknowledge.org/
PK is working with Consumers Union and filed comments in the same proceeding
http://www.publicknowledge.org/content/legislation/fcc-comment-broadcast...

THE FCC AND DTV (PART 3: Plug and Play)
Almost 85% of households get their TV signals from cable or satellite
systems. The goal of "plug and play" is to make commercially available
set-top boxes and TVs that "plug" directly into cable TV and satellite
systems, eliminating the need to rent or purchase a box from the cable or
satellite provider. If all cable and satellite systems provided local DTV
stations and consumers had plug and play sets, just a few over-the-air DTV
tuners would need to be in households to trigger the analog-to-digital
switch. But television broadcasters are asking for "full carriage" of DTV
signals (all programming broadcast on a station's digital channel), while
cable operators contend that federal law requires that they provide just a
TV station's single primary program. The FCC is to decide this issue early
this year. "Plug and Play should be a substantial benefit to consumers. But
if cable operators don't carry each local broadcaster's DTV program, either
willingly or by FCC fiat, Plug and Play will likely do little to advance
the DTV transition," the authors conclude.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jon Hart and Jim Burger]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107454896378605555,00.html?mod=articl...
(requires subscription)

QUICK HITS

RURAL AMERICANS LESS LIKELY TO USE INTERNET--SURVEY
The Pew Internet and American Life Project has released results of a survey
finding that 52% of rural Americans are now using the Internet. But even
though that figure reflects a steady increase, rural Americans still lag
behind the two-thirds of urban and suburban residents who say they use the
Internet. Rural residents as a whole are less affluent, less educated and
older than the population as a whole, factors that correlate with reduced
Internet use. Rural Internet users are more likely to look for religious
information but are less likely to shop, bank or make travel reservations
online
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=4379266

COURT UPHOLDS DO NOT CALL LIST
"Just as a consumer can avoid door-to-door peddlers by placing a 'No
Solicitation' sign in his or her front yard, the 'do not call' registry
lets consumers avoid unwanted sales pitches that invade the home via
telephone," the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled on
Tuesday. "The First Amendment does not prevent the government from giving
consumers this option." The ruling may provide legal framework to start a
"do not e-mail" list soon as well.
FCC Chairman Michael Powell released this statement: "This decision is a
triumph for American consumers. The National Do-Not-Call Registry is one of
the most popular and successful consumer initiatives undertaken by the
Federal government and, along with the vast majority of our citizens, I
commend the court for removing the shadow of judicial uncertainty."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Declan McCullagh]
http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-5160690.html?tag=nefd_top

GRANTS AVAILABLE: TECHNOLOGY OPPORTUNITIES PROGRAM
This year, approximately $12.9 million is available for grants through the
Commerce Department's Technology Opportunities Program (TOP) for Fiscal
Year 2004. TOP's Announcement of Federal Funding Opportunity was released
on February 17, 2004. The Application Kit for FY04, including the
Announcement and Guidelines, provides information on the program, rules for
applying, suggestions for preparing an application, and the standard forms
you need to prepare a TOP application. The deadline for applications is
April 27, 2004.
[SOURCE: NTIA]
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/top/whatsnew/whatsnew.htm#FY2004_Grant_Round

TPRC: CALL FOR STUDENT PAPERS
The Telecommunications Policy Research Conference is an annual forum for
dialogue among scholars and decision-makers from the public and private
sectors engaged in communication and information policy. The purpose of
the conference is to acquaint policymakers with the best of recent research
and to familiarize researchers with the knowledge needs of policymakers and
industry. The TPRC offers the Graduate Student Paper award to support and
encourage excellence in telecommunications research at the graduate
level. Papers analyzing any aspect of communications and information
policy are eligible for the award. The competition is open to all
individuals who were graduate or law students on October 1, 2003 (thus,
"first-year" faculty members, industry and government professionals may be
eligible). Papers may be based on research undertaken for a master's
thesis, a Ph.D. dissertation, or other supervised analytical writing.
Get more info at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Telecommunications Policy Research Conference]
http://www.tprc.org/TPRC04/studentpap04.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 2/17/04

OWNERSHIP
Cingular Wins AT&T Wireless, Beating Out U.K.'s Vodafone
Ownership Rules Up for Grabs
Mega Media Mergers: How Dangerous?
Powell Warns About Comcast-Disney Local Concentration [includes brief
Comcast-Disney update]
Cable Can't Escape Rate Rage
On Russian TV, Whatever Putin Wants, He Gets

INTERNET
Internet Policy Working Group "Solutions Summit"
The Economic Impact of Taxing Internet Access

Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. Headlines are compiled by
Kevin Taglang (ktaglang( at )etpost.net) -- we welcome your comments.

OWNERSHIP

CINGULAR WINS AT&T WIRELESS, BEATING OUT U.K.'s VODAFONE
You may have read on the train this morning that Britain's Vodafone was
leading the bidding war, but... AT&T Wireless and Cingular Wireless will
announce this morning a $41 billion deal to combine the two companies into
the largest wireless carrier in the US with 46 million customers, wireless
spectrum in 49 states and coverage in 97 of the top 100 markets. The
combined 2003 annual revenues of the two companies would have exceeded $32
billion. "For shareholders, the transaction provides a handsome return on
investment," Mr. Zeglis said in the news release. "For customers, this
means all the advantages only the nation's largest wireless company can
provide. For employees who become part of the combined company, this means
more opportunities than they otherwise would have had with AT&T Wireless as
a standalone company." Stan Sigman, president and CEO of Cingular Wireless
said in the release, "This combination is expected to create customer
benefits and growth prospects neither company could have achieved on its
own and will mean better coverage, improved reliability, enhanced call
quality and a wide array of new and innovative services for consumers."
Cingular is a joint venture between SBC Communications Inc. and BellSouth
Corp.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anita Raghavan
anita.raghavan( at )wsj.com, Almar Latour almar.latour( at )wsj.com and Jesse Drucker
jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB107686092482730235,00.html?mod=home_w...
(requires subscription)
See Also:
Cingular's $41 Billion Offer Wins Bidding for AT&T Wireless
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Andrew Ross Sorkin]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/17/business/17WIRE.html?hp
(requires registration)

OWNERSHIP RULES UP FOR GRABS
We will not know for a couple of months which FCC ownership rules have
survived challenges in court. And no one seems comfortable predicting how
the United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit will rule. The National
Association of Broadcasters urged the court to strike down a limit
preventing duopolies among the top four rated stations in a market. "That
prohibition actually prevents the benefits of consolidation where the FCC
found they were most needed," argued the NAB lawyer. There was little
feedback on this argument or that offered by a Clear Channel representative
who said the FCC violated the intent of the deregulatory 1996
Telecommunications Act by reducing the number of stations an owner can
possess in small markets. "[The 1996 Telecommunications Act is] neither
regulatory nor deregulatory," said Media Access Project President Andrew
Schwartzman. Permitting only deregulation would eviscerate the FCC's
authority to protect the public interest, which he said Congress never
intended.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA381658?display=Top+of+the+Wee...

MEGA MEDIA MERGERS: HOW DANGEROUS?
If the Comcast-Disney merger happens, the cable giant's CEO Brian Roberts
and News Corp's Rupert Murdoch be gatekeepers to 33 million US homes, top
creative talent, and man, many news outlets galore. They will have their
hands on the newest technologies as entertainment goes ever more digital.
The recent deals by the two companies show that controlling more content is
not as important now as controlling distribution systems as well. "These
deals are all about the ability to deliver entertainment to customers when
they want it and how they want it," says Kathryn R. Harrigan, a professor
of business strategy at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business.
"[The Comcast bid] is such a beautiful, huge vertical play. You have to
have this scale to compete." The future of the media world is tilted toward
the companies that control access to America's homes. The three giants --
Comcast, Time Warner, and News Corp. -- collectively can reach more than a
third of U.S.
But at the same time many business pundits are celebrating the idea,
politicians and public interest advocates are questioning it. "When is the
endpoint to all of this? Why not have Rupert Murdoch buy another company,
then Comcast another, and on it goes. At some point, you'll have many
voices -- and one ventriloquist," said Arizona Senator John McCain
(R). "In a world where a few entrepreneurs control the media, they can
wink and nod at each other, rather than cut prices and offer a diverse set
of views and entertainment," warns Gene Kimmelman, co-director of Consumers
Union. And what about programming? "Smaller independent channels would be
forced into cable Siberia, the premium tiers, whereas the Disney channels
would get on the basic tier," says Jonathan Rintels, executive director of
the Center for Creative Voices in Media, representing independent
screenwriters and production houses. "They'll shrivel up and die or be
forced to merge with a media colossus."
The Comcast move may spur new mergers from Viacom, NBC and/or Time Warner.
"Yesterday's unthinkable deal becomes tame in comparison with what's coming
next," says Center For Digital Democracy's Chester.
This is the cover story for the latest Business Week.
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek, AUTHOR: Tom Lowry, Ronald Grover, Catherine Yang,
Steve Rosenbush, Peter Burrows]
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_08/b3871001_mz001.htm

POWELL WARNS ABOUT COMCAST-DISNEY LOCAL CONCENTRATION
How will the proposed Comcast-Disney merger fare with regulators? "Any
merger of this sort of monumental size and this level of vertical
integration and distribution across so many platforms is unquestionably
going to have to go through one of the finer government filters," said FCC
Chairman Michael Powell. "I can't say what the result would be." Although a
FCC rule prohibiting local cable-broadcast television crossownership was
abolished a couple of years ago, regulators still might look closely at how
the merger would affect communities. Comcast, for example, would be the
dominant cable-TV company and owner of the ABC affiliate in such large
markets as Philadelphia, Chicago and San Francisco.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA381388?display=Breaking+News
MERGER UPDATE
Even before regulators get a chance to review the deal, Comcast must make
it happen. Many media outlets are reporting today that the Disney board has
rejected the Comcast bid as too low and expressed support for CEO Michael
Eisner. Disney will hold its annual shareholder meeting March 3 in
Philadelphia.
The LA Times has an article today looking at what other companies may enter
the bidding for Disney. Considered briefly are possible bids from
Microsoft, John Malone's Media Liberty and Barry Diller's InterActiveCorp,
Time Warner (assuming a resolution to its SEC problems), and Viacom.
See
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-bidders17feb17,1,4529...
The Wall Street Journal, however, is reporting that Viacom announced it
would not make a bid for Disney as Comcast tries to complete the deal.

CABLE CAN'T ESCAPE RATE RAGE
Congress is frustrated by cable rate hikes and is looking into ways to
address the issue without turning to rate regulation again. Sen. Mike
DeWine (R-OH), chairman of the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, wants to make
sure cable systems can't deny popular regional sports nets to satellite and
overbuilder competitors. Sen DeWine is also examining ways to strengthen
uniform-pricing rules that require cable systems to offer a standard,
system-wide price for their programming packages. Sens DeWine and Herb Kohl
(D-WI), the subcommittee's ranking member, have also asked the General
Accounting Office to study why the growth of satellite TV competition has
failed to blunt cable rate hikes.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA381608?display=Washington&pub...

ON RUSSIAN TV, WHATEVER PUTIN WANTS, HE GETS
More than a dozen years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, what
Russians see, especially on the news, remains subject to the only rating
system that counts: the Kremlin's. Television is the only way to reach the
entire country and across the spectrum of TV stations, there's an
uncritical deference to the nation's elected leader. All the stations are
either owned by the state or by state-owned corporations.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Steven Lee Myers]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/17/international/europe/17RUSS.html?hp
(requires registration)

INTERNET

INTERNET POLICY WORKING GROUP "SOLUTIONS SUMMIT"
On Thursday, March 18, 2004, the FCC's Internet Policy Working Group (IPWG)
will hold the first in a series of a "Solutions Summits" at which leaders
in government and industry can discuss creative ways to address policy
issues that arise as communications services move to Internet-based
platforms. The initial meeting will focus on 911/E911 issues, and on the
particular challenges and opportunities created for emergency services in
expanding 911/E911 access to VoIP users and increasing the use of IP
technologies in emergency services networks. Participants will include
members of the public safety community, industry representatives, and FCC
staff. The event, which is open to the public, will be held at FCC
headquarters, 445 12th Street, SW, Washington, D.C. starting at 2:00 pm and
ending at 5:00 pm.
For additional information on the Working Group, please visit the Internet
Policy Working Group website at: www.fcc.gov/ipwg. For questions about the
working group contact: Robert Pepper, Chief of Policy Development, at
(202) 418-2030, Robert.Pepper( at )fcc.gov, or Jeff Carlisle, Senior Deputy
Chief, Wireline Competition Bureau, at (202) 418-1500,
Jeffrey.Carlisle( at )fcc.gov.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-243851A1.pdf

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF TAXING INTERNET ACCESS
The conservative Heritage Foundation weighs in on the Internet access tax
debate with a "WebMemo." The Internet Tax Freedom Act of 1997, the authors
write, imposed a moratorium on taxing Internet access, which expired in
November 2003. The House passed legislation to continue the moratorium, but
the Senate has failed to pass a corresponding bill. Critics of the House
bill contend that it does more than extend the moratorium and threatens
states' ability to collect sales taxes. Even if this were the case, though,
economic analysis predicts that such taxes would reduce GDP, disposable
income, and employment.
The Heritage Foundation is a think tank whose mission is to formulate and
promote conservative public policies based on the principles of free
enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American
values, and a strong national defense.
[SOURCE: Heritage Foundation, AUTHOR: Norbert J. Michel and William W. Beach]
http://www.heritage.org/Research/InternetandTechnology/wm424.cfm
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