June 2004

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/25/04

Headlines is taking another break. We'll be back TUESDAY JULY 6.

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.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. While the summaries are
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

MEDIA
Appellate Court Remands FCC's Media Ownership Rule Changes
Don't Blame TV

BROADBAND PROPOSALS
Bush and Kerry Offer Plans for High-Tech Growth
Bush Supports Internet Tax Ban, Spectrum Trust Fund
Kerry Makes Pitch to High Tech

TELECOM
Rules Driving Telecom Shifts

SPECTRUM
New Objections to FCC Deal With Nextel Over Spectrum
Managing Spectrum in the 21st Century

INTERNET
Anti-Spyware Bill Advances in Congress

MEDIA

APPELLATE COURT REMANDS FCC'S MEDIA OWNERSHIP RULE CHANGES
In Prometheus Radio Project v. FCC, score a major victory for the
Prometheus Radio Project. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals released its
ruling Thursday remanding the FCC's June 2003 decision to relax regulation
of broadcast ownership. The rules would have allowed one company to own 3
TV stations, 8 radio stations and a newspaper in a single market. The court
remanded local TV ownership rules, which would give broadcasters greater
opportunities to own 2 or 3 stations depending on market size. The Court
also ruled that the FCC should fix flaws in its diversity index, which it
used to determine the new local cross-ownership rules. The court also sent
back to the FCC a new local radio market definition, which would generally
prevent larger radio clusters, though it would also give companies,
including Clear Channel, new opportunities in some cases. Both rules were
sent back to the Commission on the grounds that the evidence and reasoning
presented didn't justify the changes as serving the public interest.
Consumer advocacy groups claimed victory. Andrew Schwartzman, President of
Media Access Project, said the decision was a big win for diversity in the
media. Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America said, "The rules
were never supported by public opinion; they can't drag their feet
anymore." Consumers Union launched a national campaign urging President
Bush to shift course on media ownership rules in view of the court's
decision. The group urged the FCC to act swiftly on the court's remand.
"The American people, the Congress, and now the courts have said that
competition, localism and democratic dialogue must exist in our nation's
media," said CU Public Policy Director Gene Kimmelman.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins, Terry Lane]
(Not available online)
See the court documents including the decision
http://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/staymotion/Petition.htm
Read comments from FCC Commissioners:
Powell http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248793A1.doc
Copps http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248779A1.doc
Adelstein http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248773A1.doc
Coverage in
NYTimes http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/25/business/media/25MEDI.html
Ruling Only Irritates Big Owners
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/25/business/media/25owners.html
WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108809840424546633,00.html?mod=todays...
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3853-2004Jun24.html
USAToday http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040625/6319215s.htm
B&C http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA429374?display=Breaking+News
Multichannel News
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA429410?display=Breaking+News
Press releases
MAP http://www.mediaaccess.org/prometheus_decision/index.html
Consumers Union http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/campaignmedia/001212.html
Common Cause http://www.commoncause.org/news/default.cfm?ArtID=350
CWA http://www.cwa-union.org/news/PressReleaseDisplay.asp?ID=432
Free Press http://mediareform.net/news/release.php?id=22

DON'T BLAME TV
Although obesity rates in the US for both children and adults are alarming,
the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission writes, banning junk food ads
on kids' programming is impractical, ineffective and illegal. In fact,
advertising is part of the solution, Chairman Muris writes. "We need to
harness that same power to help fight obesity. Year after year,
manufacturers have shown great ingenuity in pitching foods to kids as tasty
and fun; their challenge now is to develop and promote healthy foods, too.
I urge them to accept this challenge." The role of the FTC, Chairman Muris
writes, is to ensure that advertising claims are truthful.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: FTC Chairman Timothy Muris]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108811772070847171,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

BROADBAND PROPOSALS

BUSH AND KERRY OFFER PLANS FOR HIGH-TECH GROWTH
Both Sen John Kerry (D-MA) and President George Bush (R-TX) delivered
speeches proposing new high-tech policies on Thursday [see stories for more
covergae]. Here are quotes from the speeches. President Bush: (Referring to
broadband adoption) "On a per capita basis, America ranks 10th amongst the
industrialized world. That's not good enough. We don't like to be ranked
10th in anything. The goal is to be ranked first when it comes to per
capita use of broadband technology. It's in our nation's interest. It's
good for our economy." (On access in rural areas) "A lot of people in rural
America like living there. The quality of life is really good. You walk
down your street and know who you're looking at, and, generally, they'll
say: 'How are you doing? It's good to see you. I hope you're having a
wonderful day. What can we do to help you?' And it makes sense to be able
to take the potential of broadband to rural America."
Sen Kerry: "We need a leadership that says if Bangalore in India can be
completely wired, then so should all of America, and it will be. In the
last century, across a continent that stretched from sea to shining sea,
there were entire islands of darkness in America," he added, citing
Franklin D. Roosevelt's Rural Electric Administration as a model. "Today,
visionary national leadership can build a bridge across the digital divide
and bring the promise of broadband technology to every home in America,
just the way we brought electricity to every home in America."
Broadband is currently available in 93% of all US ZIP codes.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Jodi Wilgoren & David Sanger]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/25/politics/campaign/25campaign.html
(requires registration)

BUSH SUPPORTS INTERNET TAX BAN, SPECTRUM TRUST FUND
President Bush (R-TX) spoke at the Department of Commerce on Thursday about
technology policy. He said he views broadband rollout, including broadband
over powerlines (BPL), more efficient use of the spectrum and wireless
broadband, as key building blocks of the U.S. economy. He called for a
permanent ban on taxes on Internet services and a spectrum transition fund.
Although the focus was on broadband, President Bush also stated his support
of the FCC's decision appeal the Triennial Review Order decision by the
U.S. Appeals Court, D.C. "In this case, the FCC provided regulatory
certainty, and by doing so created incentives for communication companies
to build out their fiber optic broadband lines to more homes," President
Bush said. "It's a good decision. I think the decision will benefit
American consumers, as well."
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk, Patrick Ross]
(Not available online)
See full text of the President's remarks at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/06/20040624-7.html
Also see a discussion of the President's "Innovation Agenda" at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/ask/20040624.html
Cable liked President's focus on broadband
http://www.ncta.com/press/press.cfm?PRid=509&showArticles=ok

KERRY MAKES PITCH TO HIGH TECH
Sen John Kerry (D-MA) was in San Jose Thursday delivering his
much-anticipated proposals on technology policy. His plan is to auction off
spectrum currently used for broadcast television to fund: 1) a cut in
long-term capital gains taxes on small businesses and "reforming or
eliminating" regulations that block America's high-tech competitiveness, 2)
a 20% tax incentive for companies investing in next-generation high-speed
Net infrastructure, 3) increases in government-funded university research,
including the extension of the research and development tax credit and 4)
more investment in elementary and secondary math and science education, and
incentives for colleges to increase the number of science and engineering
graduates. He also called for universal access to broadband services by the
end of 2006 for public safety officials.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: John Borland]
http://news.com.com/Kerry+makes+pitch+to+high+tech/2100-1028_3-5246632.h...
A press release from the Kerry campaign is available at
http://www.johnkerry.com/pressroom/releases/pr_2004_0624.html
And the full text of his plan is available at
http://www.johnkerry.com/pdf/pr_2004_0624.pdf
Coverage in
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3738-2004Jun24.html

TELECOM

RULES DRIVING TELECOM SHIFTS
On June 9, the Bush Administration decided not to challenge a federal
appeals court ruling that struck down FCC rules on local telephone network
access. The rules, aimed at spurring competition under the 1996
Telecommunications Act, expired June 15. This week we started to see the
fallout of the decision. AT&T has announced it will no longer compete for
local customers in 46 states while local phone giant SBC announced it will
invest $4 billion to $6 billion over five years to offer digital
television, high-speed Web access and Internet-based phone service over an
expanded fiber-optic network in California and 12 other states. The
announcements signal how competitors and incumbents will react to new rules
the FCC must craft for local phone competition. FCC Chairman Michael Powell
has promised new rules in the next couple of weeks. Consumer advocates
believe the Bush Administration decision will lead to fewer local phone
choices for consumers -- and higher prices for service.
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR:John Woolfolk
jwoolfolk( at )mercurynews.com]
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/8999897.h...
There's also more on the decision not to appeal phone competition rules to
the Supreme Court. See releases from:
Association for Local Telecommunications Services
http://206.161.82.210/NewsPress/062204PR%20Powell%20TRO%20ltr.pdf
CompTel/ASCENT http://www.comptelascent.org/news/recent-news/062404.html
USTA http://www.usta.org/news_releases.php?urh=home.news.nr2004_0624

SPECTRUM

NEW OBJECTIONS TO FCC DEAL WITH NEXTEL OVER SPECTRUM
The FCC appears close to approving a deal that would allow Nextel, the
nation's 6th-largest cell phone carrier, to swap spectrum used for its
services to ensure an end to interference problems it has cause in public
safety communications. The upcoming elections are increasing pressure on
the Commission to complete the deal which has Nextel moving to valuable
spectrum in the 1.9 gigahertz band and paying $5.4 billion. Steve Largent,
the chief executive of the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet
Association, said that his association is pushing the FCC to either hold an
auction for the 1.9-gigahertz spectrum, or give Nextel less valuable
2.1-gigahertz spectrum that he says is closer in value to the amount Nextel
is spending. House Budget Committee Chairman Jim Nussle (R-IA) plans to
introduce a bill today that would force the FCC to transfer any money
raised from the sale of spectrum to the Treasury. In any case, a court
challenge to the FCC decision appears likely.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Ken Belson]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/25/technology/25spectrum.html
(requires registration)

MANAGING SPECTRUM IN THE 21ST CENTURY
The Commerce Department's National Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) Thursday released two reports proposing ways to
better manage the nation's crowded airwaves for the 21st Century including
the establishment of an innovation test-bed for increased sharing between
federal and non-federal spectrum users. The report recommends that the
FCC and the NTIA should each identify approximately 10 MHz of spectrum to
be made available for this program.
The recommendations proposed in the first report (see
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/reports/specpolini/presspecpolini_report1_062420...)
build upon the recent experiences of the federal spectrum management
community in its efforts to implement policies for third generation (3G)
wireless, Wireless Fidelity (WiFi) and Ultrawideband (UWB). Although these
new technologies offer great potential economic and commercial benefits,
before they could be introduced, critical federal government systems had to
be protected. While ultimately successful, the effort to introduce these
new technologies exposed limitations of the nation's spectrum management
system. The report contains 15 recommendations on 1) modernizing and
improvising the spectrum management system, 2) creating incentives for more
efficient use of spectrum, 3) streamlining deployment of new services
(while ensuring homeland security) and 4) meeting critical public safety
spectrum needs.
The second report (see
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/reports/specpolini/presspecpolini_report2_062420...)
contains eight recommendations from state and local governments on the same
issues.
[SOURCE: NTIA]
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/press/2004/specpolini_06242004.htm
See FCC Chairman Powell's comments on the reports
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248816A1.doc
Press release from CTIA
http://www.ctia.org/news_media/press/body.cfm?record_id=1411

INTERNET

ANTI-SPYWARE BILL ADVANCES IN CONGRESS
The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 45-4 for a bill introduced by
Reps Mary Bono (R-CA) and Ed Towns (D-NY) would allow the Federal Trade
Commission to seek millions of dollars in fines for logging users'
keystrokes or stealing their identities. The bill is designed to crack down
on deceptive "spyware" that hides in users' computers and secretly monitors
their activities.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=IHP4WHIU5P35CCRBAE0C...

See the House Commerce Committee Press release at
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/News/06242004_1330.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------
...and we are outta here. We'll be back TUESDAY, JULY 5. Enjoy the holiday
... and then we promise to go an entire week or so without taking a day off!
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/24/04

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.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. While the summaries are
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

SPECTRUM
FCC Plans Star-Spangled Announcement Supporting Nextel Plan
Radio Daze: Technology and the Airwaves

TELECOM
AT&T Stops Competing in Residential Markets in 7 States
In 1 Year, Do-Not-Call List Passes 62 Million

INTERNET
Senate Bill Targets Internet Song-Swapping
Decision Bolsters Online-Publisher Immunity
Lawmakers Move Toward Placing Restrictions on Spyware Programs

TELEVISION
Kerry Backs Smut-Fine Boost
High-Maintenance TV

LABOR
Comcast Bashed as Union-Buster

SPECTRUM

FCC PLANS STAR-SPANGLED ANNOUNCEMENT SUPPORTING NEXTEL PLAN
Expect an announcement before July 4 that the FCC has decided to approve
the Nextel consensus plan to clear up interference with public safety
communications.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk]
(Not available online)
There's also coverage in:
WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108804383187646261,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A823-2004Jun23.html
(requires registration)

RADIO DAZE: TECHNOLOGY AND THE AIRWAVES
Since 1927, the federal government has allocated spectrum among competing
interests -- between those who hold spectrum rights and don't want to share
them and those with new technologies that need spectrum to prosper. The FCC
has made sure spectrum users don't interfere with eachother and allocated
bands of spectrum use for broadcasting or cell phone service, etc.
Technology is challenging that approach. Parts of the spectrum long have
been designated for "unlicensed" use, such as microwave ovens and cordless
phones; geeks called this "junk band." The junk has turned to gold. All
sorts of new wireless devices, from poker chips equipped with radio
transmitters so casinos can keep tabs on gamblers to wireless Internet
zones that can serve a whole neighborhood, are exploiting unlicensed slices
of spectrum. The folks on the right, Wessel writes, think the economy would
be better served if the government let license-holders essentially own
their pieces of the spectrum, arguing that the profit motive would
encourage them to welcome new technologies. Folks on the left think the
economy would be better served if more of the spectrum were treated like a
public park for all to use, encouraging a proliferation of wireless
devices. Regulators need to find the right balance between these two views.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: David Wessel capital( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108803001141445880,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

TELECOM

AT&T STOPS COMPETING IN RESIDENTIAL MARKETS IN 7 STATES
AT&T has announced that it will stop competing for customers for local
telephone service in seven states (and perhaps more) because the Bush
Administration and the FCC failed to support an appeal of the U.S. Appeals
Court (DC) ruling overturning the FCC's UNE rules. Consumer Union (CU) said
the AT&T's decision "indicates how damaging the [Bush] Administration's
decision is to local phone competition -- and lower phone bills for
consumers." CU Senior Public Policy Director Gene Kimmelman said the AT&T
move was "just the beginning of the end of local phone competition. By
failing to stand up for a policy that supports competition, the Bush
Administration effectively sentenced consumers to a fate of higher prices
and poorer service when it comes to their local and long-distance service."
Consumer Federation of America Research Director Mark Cooper said the AT&T
announcement was "the expected and unfortunate result" of the
Administration's and the FCC's decision not to appeal. "Anyone who said
that the decision would not be a problem for the competing telephone
companies was simply trying to fool American consumers," he said. Mr.
Cooper said preserving competition would "require the Commission's close
attention and careful regulation as it prepares interim rules during the
next two weeks." He said the Commission "must not simply phase out UNE-P.
Instead, under the law, it needs to evaluate local markets and find in
which areas competition is too nascent to flourish on its own."
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Susan Polyakova]
(Not available online)
See the CU Press Release
http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_telecom_and_utilities/001206.html
Coverage in:
WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108799741619545268,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1083-2004Jun23.html
(requires registration)
LATimes
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-att24jun24,1,6997714....
(requires registration)
USAToday http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040624/6314255s.htm
NYTimes http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/business/24phone.html
(requires registration)

IN 1 YEAR, DO-NOT-CALL LIST PASSES 62 MILLION
One year after the Federal Trade Commission began the do-not-call list, 62
million phone numbers have been listed in the registry. The average
household received ~30 sales calls a month before the list was put into
effect; now they are receiving six. The FTC reports that 428,000 complaints
had been filed against more than 130,000 companies said to have made
telemarketing calls to numbers on the do-not-call list. About 200 companies
are repeat offenders with 100 or more complaints each.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Caroline E. Mayer]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A767-2004Jun23.html
(requires registration)
The LATimes has an article on a company that will pay $100,000 to settle
do-not-call list violations
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-donot24jun24,1,701846...
(requires registration)

INTERNET

SENATE BILL TARGETS INTERNET SONG-SWAPPING
The Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004, a bill that would
allow companies to be held liable if they "intentionally induce" copyright
infringement, was introduced into the Senate Tuesday with backing from
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN), Senate Minority Leader Tom
Daschle, and the ranking members of the Judiciary Committee -- Orrin Hatch
and Patrick Leahy. The nonprofit policy group Public Knowledge said the
bill is too broad, as it could discourage investment in new technology and
expose people to lawsuits who do not mean to encourage copyright
infringement. The odds of any new bill becoming law are slim, as Congress
has only 35 working days scheduled before the fall elections.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=MN4Y32UWEXDXUCRBAEOC...
See also:
B&C http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA429064?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
Link to Senate Commerce Committee hearing on peer-to-peer networking
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1247
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A801-2004Jun23.html
(requires registration)
FTC Press Release
http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2004/06/p2p.htm
NYTimes http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/technology/24copyright.html
(requires registration)

DECISION BOLSTERS ONLINE-PUBLISHER IMMUNITY
Last month, U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler ruled that a Web site
publisher could not be sued because one if its advertisers used a photo of
a woman without her permission. "This case should help search engines and
Web sites avoid liability for the ads they run, even if the Web sites help
the advertiser develop the advertising content and decide where to place
it," said Eric Goldman, an assistant professor at Marquette University Law
School. "This is a good one for Google, Overture, eBay, Amazon and everyone
else who runs third-party ads." For more on the legal ramifications, see
the URL below.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Paul Festa]
http://news.com.com/Decision+bolsters+online-publisher+immunity/2100-102...

LAWMAKERS MOVE TOWARD PLACING RESTRICTIONS ON SPYWARE
Today, the House Energy and Commerce Committee is expected to approve a
spyware regulation bill and send it to the full House. Although sweeping
regulation of the practice seems unlikely anytime soon, consumer groups,
privacy advocates and the technology industry are watching the debate
closely -- and what any changes would mean for them.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Mary Kissel mary.kissel( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108803242725245991,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

TELEVISION

KERRY BACKS SMUT-FINE BOOST
By a vote of 99-1, the US Senate approved legislation that will increase
fines for indecent broadcast content to $275,000 per incident. The
increased fines also mean that artists would now be liable for much bigger
hits. The FCC has never fined a performer, but it is free to do so after a
single warning. The American Federation of Radio and TV Artists praised the
amendment because it did not include language specifically targeting
performers, but there is also nothing preventing the FCC from breaking with
precedent. The Senate also approved by voice vote amendments that would
make the indecency fines proportionate to market size or ability to pay
create a violence safe-harbor and throw out the FCC's June 2 ownership
deregulation ostensibly because they would lead to more indecency. The
safe-harbor provisions would ban indecent cable and satellite programs
during daytime hours unless they were rated and could work with a V-Chip.
It would also require the FCC to study whether the V-Chip worked. If it
didn't, violence on broadcast and cable would be banned during the same
daytime hours (6 a.m. to 10 p.m.) that indecency is now proscribed.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA429225?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)

HIGH-MAINTENANCE TV
Since the transition to digital broadcasting began in 1998, 8.3 million
households have acquired digital TVs, according to Adams Media Research.
But only 1.7 million of those have the built-in hardware or set-top box
necessary to receive and decode HDTV broadcast signals. The owners of the
other 6.6 million sets are using them to watch standard-definition TV and
DVDs. Despite the policy implications, maybe it is a good thing many people
are not trying to get their HDTV via antenna because it is causing some to
pull their hair out. Learn more at the URL below.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Eric Taub]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/24/technology/circuits/24hdtv.html
(requires registration)

LABOR

COMCAST BASHED AS UNION-BUSTER
American Rights at Work, a workers-advocacy group chaired by former Rep
David Bonior (D-MI), released a study Tuesday finding that Comcast has
routinely fired workers for trying to unionize, stalled contract
negotiations to freeze wages and benefits "for years," and moved union jobs
from acquired systems to non-union facilities. The group characterized
these moves as human-rights abuses. Mr. Bonior noted that labor laws
guarantee the right to organize. When a fired worker can't pay the mortgage
or college tuition because he has been denied that right, Mr. Bonior says,
it is absolutely a human rights violation. A Comcast spokesperson
countered, "We believe employees should have the freedom to chose whether
or not they work in a union environment and we invest in people with the
belief that our company can only be as strong as our work force. Comcast
has been a pro-employee, pro-worker company for 40 years."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA429285?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/18/04

The FCC's Consumer Advisory Committee meets today and there will be two
town meetings on the Future of Media next week. For these and other
upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm.

Headlines will publish again THURSDAY JUNE 24.

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. While the summaries are
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

INTERNET
Eroding E-rate

MEDIA
Senate Judiciary Approves SHVIA Legislation
Outside Audit: TV Networks May Not Be 'Upfront'

QUICKLY
The Politics of Spam
House Panel Passes Spyware Permission Bill
Weather Radios Will Carry More Kinds of Alerts
Broadcast Indecency Bill
Video Competition NOI Released

ONE LAST THOUGHT: Juneteenth

INTERNET

ERODING E-RATE
With a House oversight hearing on the e-rate this week, C-Net posted this
long look at the charges of fraud associated with the program to wire
schools and libraries to the Internet. Consumers contribute about $1/per
month to the program which has distributed about $13 billion since 1998 in
the form of discounts for telecommunications services. As of 2001, 87
percent of all classrooms in public schools have Internet access, including
81 percent of all classrooms in schools with minority enrollment of 50
percent or more. And as of 2002, about 95 percent of all public libraries
provide Internet access. "Ten years ago, most classrooms didn't even have
phone lines, much less Internet connectivity," says Sam Simon, chairman of
the Telecommunications Research & Action Center, a consumer advocacy group
in Washington, D.C. "That's changed, and I don't think the country would
have gotten there without E-rate.
This articles chronicles both the program's successes and failures. Take a
look at the URL below.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Marguerite Reardon]
http://news.com.com/Eroding+E-rate/2009-1028_3-5236723.html?tag=cd.lede
Also see link to House hearing
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/Hearings/06172004hearing1291/hearing...
Additional coverage in
USA Today http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040618/6299634s.htm
NYT http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/18/education/18computer.html

MEDIA

SENATE JUDICIARY APPROVES SHVIA LEGISLATION
The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a version of the Satellite Home
Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA) on Thursday that had similarities to a
version moving in the House Judiciary Committee, but it appeared not to be
as restrictive on satellite broadcasters. The bill's provisions would 1)
raise royalty rates and require a Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel
(CARP) to review the rates, 2) apply simpler rules to allow DBS
broadcasters to broadcast out-of-market significantly-viewed stations similar
to the rules placed on cable for significantly-viewed stations, and 3)
allow viewers who either don't receive a local broadcast signal, or receive
a grade B signal, to receive both the local signal and a distant signal.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)
Also see coverage in:
Multichannel news
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA428012?display=Breaking+News

OUTSIDE AUDIT: TV NETWORKS MAY NOT BE 'UPFRONT'
The TV broadcast networks have claimed that $9.5 billion in advertising has
been committed for the next TV year, but does this highly touted number
have anything to do with reality? In trying to link upfront numbers in past
years to actual results, "I couldn't find any correlation whatsoever to
reality," says Tom Wolzien, a senior media analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein
& Co. According to Mr. Wolzien, total 2002-2003 upfront commitments were up
21% compared with the previous upfront. The 2003-2004 upfront was up 13%.
In a sign that those figures have little to do with real activity, Mr.
Wolzien wrote in a recent research note that broadcast-network revenue rose
only 1% in calendar year 2003, which spanned parts of two TV seasons, while
the overall ad market for that calendar year rose a mere 2.8%. Although
advertisers make commitments in the spring, deals are not secured in
contracts until August or September. Advertisers often have options to
cancel a portion of their commitments if a network kills off a program and
swaps it for something that the advertiser doesn't think is right for its
products or brand. This happens more often than not -- about 80% of new TV
programs fail. When a show to which an advertiser had committed is
canceled, the network and the advertiser must agree on an alternative. So
then what is the upfront good for? It's still a great way to gauge
advertisers' interest in the effectiveness of broadcast television. This
year, skepticism has been high, with marketers fighting not to pay higher
prices for the networks' dwindling audiences. Consider that for 2003-2004,
the upfront process was completed in a matter of days, while for 2004-2005,
marketers took a trip first to top-tier cable outlets, and bought time
there before starting to negotiate with the broadcast networks in earnest.
This year, the broadcast-net work negotiations took several weeks showing
that advertisers are growing disenchanted with traditional media, such as
TV commercials.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Brian Steinberg
brian.steinberg( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108750553903140525,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

QUICKLY

THE POLITICS OF SPAM
This brief piece begins: "It's bracing to encounter a rare government
agency that knows when it has met its match. So a tip of the hat to the
Federal Trade Commission, which this week declined to go mano a mano with
spam." The WSJ appreciates the opportunity to say, "understand that there
are some problems in life that don't have a government solution."
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: WSJ Editorial Staff]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108751408723841011,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

HOUSE PANEL PASSES SPYWARE PERMISSION BILL
The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade
and Consumer Protection approved legislation (H.R. 2929) Thursday that
would regulate computer "spyware," forcing software makers to notify
consumers before installing some kinds of monitoring programs on their PCs.
The bill was introduced by Reps Mary Bono (R-CA) and Ed Towns (D-NY).
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: John Borland]
http://news.com.com/House+panel+passes+spyware+permission+bill/2100-1028...

WEATHER RADIOS WILL CARRY MORE KINDS OF ALERTS
The Department of Homeland Security and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), a branch of the federal government that
oversees the National Weather Service and operates the emergency network
that broadcasts messages to weather radios, have agreed to use the radio
network to notify the public of terrorist attacks and a change in the
color-coded national threat level. About 15-20% of households own a weather
radio which is designed to alert people of an emergency even when the
devise is not turned on.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Traci Watson]
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040618/6299661s.htm

BROADCAST INDECENCY LEGISLATION
Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) has reportedly decided to offer his indecency
bill as an amendment to the Department of Defense authorization bill.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA428022?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)

VIDEO COMPETITION NOI RELEASED
The FCC released its Notice of Inquiry for its Annual Report to Congress on
Video Competition. It is now available online at the URL below.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-136A1.doc

ONE LAST THOUGHT: Juneteenth

From "Losing Ground Bit by Bit: Low-Income Communities in the Information
Age" (1998)
http://www.benton.org/publibrary/losing-ground/intro.html

When Tony Riddle, executive director of Manhattan Neighborhood Network,
wants to emphasize the importance of information to social welfare, he
tells the story of "Juneteenth."

June 19 commemorates the day in 1865 when slaves in Texas first learned
that Abraham Lincoln had issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln
actually signed the proclamation much earlier in 1863. But the Texas
slaves, deprived of this information, had to wait two and a half more years
before finally achieving freedom.

Today, it's hard to imagine anybody being denied information so vital to
his or her well-being for so long. Yet in ways more subtle but nevertheless
insidious, some people lack access to the emerging information resources of
the digital age. By 1998, we may assume that every American has at least
heard of, if not used, the global computer network called the Internet. But
while kids in wealthier households may now take access to technology at
home, at school, or at the local library for granted, the lack of access to
up-to-date computers in low-income communities and to affordable Internet
service in rural areas leaves many people cut off from good jobs and the
chance to participate in the affairs of the broader society.

Indeed, even as digital technologies are bringing an exciting array of new
opportunities to many Americans, they actually are aggravating the poverty
and isolation that plague some rural areas and inner cities. Advances in
telecommunications are speeding the exodus of good jobs from urban areas to
the suburbs, leaving inner cities and rural areas more isolated than ever
from the kinds of jobs, educational opportunities, quality health-care
services, and technological tools that they need to be able to contribute
to the overall economy.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Enjoy the holiday. We'll be back June 24.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/17/04

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service=20
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday =
through=20
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry =
developments,=20
policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are=20
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent =
the=20
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang=20
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

MEDIA
McCain Threatens to Mandate Free Time for Political Spots

INTERNET
Waste and Fraud Besiege U.S. Program to Link Poor Schools to Internet
Broadband Market is About to Heat Up

TELECOM
White House Urges FCC to Keep Rein on Wholesale Phone Rates
Wiretaps Should Apply to Net Calls -- Justice Dept
Cell-Tower Detectives Fight Static
Lawmakers Move to Cut Junk Faxes, Save Small Business

MEDIA

MCCAIN THREATENS TO MANDATE FREE TIME FOR POLITICAL SPOTS
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and FCC Michael Powell have sent letters to the=20
nation's broadcasters asking them what their plans are for educating =
voters=20
during this election year. But at a Capitol Hill press briefing on=20
Wednesday organized by The Campaign Legal Center, Chairman Powell said=20
there is little the government can do about the lack of coverage other =
than=20
considering it as a factor during a station's license renewal =
proceedings.=20
Sen. McCain said, however, that if broadcasters fail communities during=20
this election cycle, it could very well give new life to legislation=20
calling for free time for political candidates. [Currently, the only =
people=20
who receive free time are the broadcasters themselves.]
[SOURCE: TVWeek.com, AUTHOR: Doug Halonen]
(http://www.businessweek.com/technology/index.html/)

INTERNET

WASTE AND FRAUD BESIEGE US PROGRAM TO LINK POOR SCHOOLS TO INTERNET
On Thursday, Congress is to open hearings on waste and fraud in the =
E-Rate=20
program designed to connect schools and libraries to the Internet. The=20
hearings will be held by the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on=20
Oversight and Investigations, whose chairman, Rep James Greenwood =
(R-PA),=20
says the FCC's supervision was weak. Rep Greenwood said that since =
schools=20
often must pay only 10% of the cost of equipment and services while =
E-rate=20
picks up the rest, "contractors have mastered the art of coming into =
these=20
districts, recommending gold-plated architecture, and school officials,=20
buying at 10 cents on the dollar, take everything they recommend. You=20
couldn't invent a way to throw money down the drain that would work any=20
better than this," he added. The program still has its supporters, =
however.=20
"Every mammoth government program has problems," said Gregg Downey, =
editor=20
of eSchool News, a paper that covers educational technology. "The sloth, =

the waste and the cases of outright fraud shouldn't be a reason to get =
rid=20
of a program that's doing a lot of good. This is a program that helps=20
schools serve students better through technology."
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Sam Dillon]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/17/politics/17computer.html
(requires registration)

BROADBAND MARKET IS ABOUT TO HEAT UP
About 80% of the nation's Internet users still connect through dial-up. =
But=20
with more high-speed choices and competitive pricing, Shiver writes, =
"This=20
may be the summer of broadband." In a study released this spring, 71% of =

those surveyed by Yankee Group said they would switch to a faster =
broadband=20
service if it were priced at the level of dial-up service - about $10 to =

$25 a month. By contrast, only 17% said they would pay $45 or more for=20
broadband
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Jube Shiver, Jr]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-dsl17jun17,1,4966096.s=
tory?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

TELECOM

WHITE HOUSE URGES FCC TO KEEP REIN ON WHOLESALE PRICES
Michael D. Gallagher, head of the National Telecommunications and=20
Information Administration at the Department of Commerce, has written =
FCC=20
Chairman Michael Powell asking him to use "all methods at your disposal =
to=20
protect consumers and ensure appropriate competitive access to local=20
networks" [at least until the November election passes]. The FCC should=20
rapidly adopt interim rules that would last for 12 months and any =
permanent=20
rules adopted before then should hold rates at the same level for the =
full=20
year, wrote Assist. Secretary Gallagher. He wrote that any rules also=20
should include the "maximum legally sustainable transition period =
without=20
wholesale rate increases" for network parts involved in the U.S. Circuit =

Court of Appeals decision March 2 to throw out the FCC's local phone=20
competition rules.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR:James S. Granelli]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-phones17jun17,1,584229=
5.story?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)
See the text of the letter at=20
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/fccfilings/2004/gallagherletter_06162004=
.htm

WIRETAPS SHOULD APPLY TO NET CALLS -- JUSTICE DEPT
The Senate Commerce Committee help a hearing on Internet telephony =
(known=20
as VoIP) Wednesday and heard warnings from the US Justice Department =
that=20
terrorists could use the technology to plan attacks if law enforcement=20
officials are not allowed to apply existing wiretap laws to it. But =
members=20
of the Senate Commerce Committee said the Justice Department needed to =
show=20
that a problem exists before they impose new regulations that could=20
restrict the fast-growing communications technology. "You are looking =
for=20
a remedy for a problem that has not been documented," said Sen. Ron =
Wyden=20
(D-OR). Lawmakers and regulators must determine whether the new =
technology=20
should be subjected to traditional phone requirements, such as emergency =

911 service and access guarantees for the disabled and those living in=20
remote rural areas. A bill sponsored by Sen. John Sununu (R-NH) would=20
require the U.S. government rather than individual states to set =
standards,=20
and would subject VoIP carriers to the same wiretap rules that apply to=20
Internet providers
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3DOE2BFLGAEJEXUCRBAE0=
CFEY?type=3DinternetNews&storyID=3D5440380=20

For more on the Commerce Committee hearing, see=20
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=3D1230
Additional coverage in
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47882-2004Jun16.html

CELL-TOWER DETECTIVES FIGHT STATIC
The Post puts a human face on the Nextel spectrum, bringing new meaning =
to=20
"Can you hear me now?" Nextel and its competitors are feuding over =
rival=20
proposals before the Federal Communications Commission to rearrange=20
frequencies to separate Nextel from the emergency communications =
systems.=20
With billions of dollars in costs and airwave rights at stake, platoons =
of=20
lawyers and lobbyists are working the issue in Washington. But this =
story=20
focuses on what it is like now for emergency teams in the field.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Yuki Noguchi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47852-2004Jun16.html
(requires registration)

LAWMAKERS MOVE TO CUT JUNK FAXES, SAVE SMALL BUSINESS
The Federal Communications Commission has proposed to require that=20
businesses, charities and even parent-teacher associations get written=20
consent before sending a fax, a requirement that could shut down =
legitimate=20
communication without denting the problem of junk faxes. Unsolicited=20
advertising delivered by phone line to a facsimile machine -- the junk =
fax=20
-- was banned in 1991, with mixed results. Following a recent=20
reinterpretation of its regulations, however, the FCC held that faxes =
may=20
not be delivered without written permission, and then stayed that order=20
until next January. Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI), chairman of the House Energy =

and Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, is=20
leading a bipartisan effort to assert an "existing business =
relationship"=20
test for faxing. Under the proposed FCC rules, he pointed out, "every=20
business, small large or home-based, every association, every non-profit =

organization, and every charity would be required to obtain prior =
written=20
approval from each individual before it sends a commercial fax." Added=20
Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton (R-TX), "For instance, =

school associations will be forced to initiate the tedious process of=20
collecting written permission slips from thousands of members just to =
send=20
a fax." The Upton legislation, Rep Barton also noted, establishes in law =

both the right and the mechanism to stop any faxes, junk or otherwise. =
In=20
effect, he said, the fax recipient will have the ability to decide what =
is=20
useful and what is intrusive, and will have the right to say no to=20
additional faxes sent by any source.
For more on the hearing, see=20
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/Hearings/06152004hearing1301/hearing.=
htm
[SOURCE: House Commerce Committee Press Release]
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/News/06162004_1318.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/16/04

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service=20
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday =
through=20
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry =
developments,=20
policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are=20
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent =
the=20
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang=20
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

MEDIA
Stations' Good Deeds Worth $9.6 Billion
A $5 Billion Proposal
Diversity Advisory Committee Adopts Interim Reports
and Recommendations
Eliminating Market Entry Barriers for Small Telecommunications =
Businesses
Piracy Fight Spreads to Radio Airwaves

MEDIA & POLITICS
Voters Are Harder to Reach As Media Outlets Multiply
Gun Group's Radio Show Tests Limits on Advocacy

INTERNET
FTC Declines to Create Do-Not-Spam Registry

MEDIA

STATIONS' GOOD DEEDS WORTH $9.6 BILLION
The National Association of Broadcasters says broadcast stations aired =
$7.3=20
billion worth of public-service announcements (PSAs) and helped raise =
$2.1=20
billion for national and local charities and disaster relief. The latter =

figure includes $158 million for victims of tornadoes, hurricanes,=20
wildfires, and floods. But many regulators and public interest advocates =
do=20
not believe this fulfills broadcasters public interest obligations. FCC=20
Commissioner Michael Powell says he's more interested in what =
programming=20
broadcasters provide to serve communities with the spectrum they receive =

for free. Andrew Schwartzman, of the Media Access Project, dismisses the =

fundraising as cause-related marketing. "It's no different than what =
Giant=20
supermarket does in conjunction with Toys for Tots," he says. "It's not=20
something that is unique or special to broadcasting and would justify =
the=20
free use of the public spectrum. That stuff to me is just feel-good=20
marketing. Sending Bozo the Clown to the hospital doesn't count. It's =
got=20
to be programming." NAB lobbyist Dennis Wharton has heard it all and=20
doesn't like it. "That is the most outrageous assertion you can make," =
he=20
says. "To them, going on the air and raising money for breast-cancer=20
research is not as important as offering a political debate for dog=20
catcher." Mr. Schwartzman also says NAB inflates the value of PSAs. The=20
broadcasters generally use unsold time for the PSAs, he says. The value =
of=20
such time is minimal, yet, he suggests, broadcasters assign it the =
highest=20
possible value in calculating their PSA contribution. According to Mr.=20
Schwartzman, broadcasters have to go beyond the PSAs and the fundraising =

and begin offering "more and better" programming that addresses the =
needs=20
of the community regardless of its commercial attractiveness. "What we =
are=20
looking for is vastly increased service to the community in light of the =

value that broadcasters have been receiving since 1996 when they =
received a=20
second digital channel and greater protection from competition." But the =

NAB's Wharton says broadcasters' public service is second to none: "You =

can look at the amount of money that is raised by foundations, and =
nobody=20
comes close to the billions and billions of dollars that broadcasters =
raise."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Harry Jessell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425963?display=3DTop+of+the+We=
ek
(requires subscription)

A $5 BILLION PROPOSAL
Public Broadcasting Service President Pat Mitchell is quietly pushing an =

plan that would free public-TV stations from their annual federal=20
allowance. PBS would get a one-time $5 billion payment from the =
government=20
in return for a 2007 return of spectrum noncommercial stations currently =

use for analog television broadcasts. An auction of these airwaves would =

then generate revenue for the government. But Ms. Mitchell's plan is =
also=20
to deliver more innovative programming to the public and free PBS from=20
finding deep-pocketed, corporate sponsors for programming. "We must =
figure=20
out a more sustainable model for public broadcasting to work in this=20
country," she says, noting that the government's annual contribution to=20
PBS, which covers about 15% of its budget, lags far behind that of most=20
other countries. "It's astonishing that we've survived this long with so =

little coming from Congress. It's a fundamental flaw. We can't have such =
a=20
small foundation."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425964?display=3DTop+of+the+We=
ek
(requires subscription)

DIVERSITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE ADOPTS INTERIM REPORTS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The FCC Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the =
Digital=20
Age at its third meeting adopted a wide range of resolutions and=20
recommendations aimed at promoting opportunities for minorities and =
women=20
in telecommunications and related industries. Initially, the Committee=20
expressed its strong belief that tax-based incentives such as the former =

tax certificate program would open opportunities for socially and=20
economically disadvantaged persons, including minorities and=20
women. Recognizing that any revitalization of such a program is not =
within=20
the FCC's immediate power, the Committee went on to recommend that the=20
Commission consider ways to use its own rules to promote opportunity. =
Those=20
recommendations included: retaining and possibly expanding the =
Commission's=20
Distress Sale Policy; creating incentives within FCC ownership and=20
licensing rules; and considering a Supplier Diversity Program that might =

provide auction credits to companies that do business with diverse=20
entities. The Committee also recommended that the Commission adopt a =
rule=20
specifically prohibiting intentional discrimination on the basis of =
race,=20
color, national origin, or gender in the purchase or sale of any=20
FCC-licensed facility.
Committee member Henry Rivera, a partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins, =
also=20
serve's on the Benton Foundation board of directors.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2004/db0614/DOC-248391A1=
.doc

ELIMINATING MARKET ENTRY BARRIERS FOR SMALL TELECOMMUNICATIONS =
BUSINESSES
The FCC's Media Bureau is seeking comment on constitutionally =
permissible=20
ways to further the mandates of Section 257 of the Telecommunications =
Act=20
of 1996 which directs the FCC to identify and eliminate market entry=20
barriers for small telecommunications businesses, and Section 309(j) of =
the=20
Communications Act of 1934 which requires the FCC to further =
opportunities=20
in the allocation of spectrum-based services for small businesses and=20
businesses owned by women and minorities. The Commission is =
specifically=20
encouraging commenters to discuss possible next steps to further these=20
statutory objectives in a constitutionally permissible manner, =
especially=20
in light of two recent Supreme Court decisions (Grutter v. Bollinger and =

Gratz v. Bollinger). Commenters should discuss and proffer specific=20
recommendations for building on the series of market entry barrier =
studies=20
listed at the URL below.
For further information, contact Anne Levine at (202) 418-7027 or via =
email=20
at Anne.Levine( at )fcc.gov.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-1690A1.doc

PIRACY FIGHT SPREADS TO RADIO AIRWAVES
The Recording Industry Association of America is expected to ask the FCC =

today to require broadcasters to either encrypt their digital signals or =

transmit a special marker that discourages replication. The fight over=20
digital radio could echo battles over digital television, which promises =

sharper pictures and clearer sound than traditional analog broadcasts. =
The=20
rollout of digital television, originally scheduled to be completed in=20
2006, has been slowed, in part, by squabbles between studios and TV-set=20
manufacturers over copy protection. The consumer electronics industry =
and=20
broadcasters say that the RIAA position will just slow down the rollout =
of=20
digital radio service so they do not support it.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Jube Shiver Jr]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-hdradio16jun16,1,59663=
80.story?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)
Public Knowledge is a public interest advocate which has great deal of=20
work in this area. For more information see =
http://www.publicknowledge.org/

MEDIA & POLITICS

VOTERS ARE HARDER TO REACH AS MEDIA OUTLETS MULTIPLY
Political campaigns are finding it harder to reach people with political =

advertising as their media options grow and harder to poll public =
opinion=20
as people use technology to screen unwanted phone calls or use cell =
phones=20
which pollsters are prohibited from calling. Political consultants =
compare=20
rising media costs to an arms race, as ever-greater sums produce =
messages=20
that reach fewer and fewer eyes and ears. Media costs are by far the=20
biggest single expenditure for the two major-party presidential =
campaigns.=20
Advertising and promotion of all types accounted for about 60 percent of =

President Bush's record spending of $129.8 million, and about 48 percent =
of=20
Sen Kerry's $88.7 million through the end of April, according to Federal =

Election Commission figures.
Find out more about modern campaigns at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR:Paul Farhi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44697-2004Jun15.html
(requires registration)

GUN GROUP'S RADIO SHOW TESTS LIMITS OF ADVOCACY
"There are 90 million gun owners in America," says National Rifle=20
Association executive vice president Wayne LaPierre. "And a lot of them=20
don't believe they are getting accurate news from the media." For these =
90=20
million truth-deprived Americans, a new voice will be hitting the=20
(satellite) airways -- NRANews. The 3-hour news and commentary is viewed =
by=20
some as a way for the gun lobby to get around new campaign finance laws=20
aimed at curtailing political advertising in the days just prior to the=20
election. "If the N.R.A. is successful at this, we will definitely see=20
other groups explore going down the same road," said Larry Noble, =
executive=20
director of the Center for Responsive Politics and former general =
counsel=20
to the Federal Election Commission. Mr. LaPierre said the program, to be =

broadcast on Sirius satellite radio, would be a step toward a larger =
media=20
enterprise. The organization is looking to acquire radio stations in the =

Midwest, the Rockies and the South
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: James Dao]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/16/national/16nra.html
(requires registration)

INTERNET

FTC DECLINES TO CREATE DO-NOT-SPAM REGISTRY
In the law intended to crack down on junk e-mail (spam) that passed last =

December, Congress ordered the Federal Trade Commission to report on the =

feasibility of allowing e-mail users to place their e-mail addresses on =
a=20
registry for those who do not want unsolicited messages. But in its =
report,=20
the FTC finds that a do-not-spam list might be counterproductive,=20
suggesting such a list might help spammers find legitimate e-mail=20
addresses. Instead, the FTC says that the most promising way to reduce =
spam=20
is to create new technology that can verify that an e-mail message was =
sent=20
from the address that it claims to be from. Senders of the most =
offensive=20
spam often use false return addresses. The FTC said it would defer to =
the=20
private sector on which authentication standard should be employed. If a =

standard does not emerge, the commission proposed creating a federal=20
advisory committee to encourage the adoption of a standard.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Saul Hansell]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/16/technology/16spam.html
(requires registration)
See http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2004/06/canspam2.htm for a release from the =
FTC=20
and a link to the report to Congress.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/16/04

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service=20
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday =
through=20
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry =
developments,=20
policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are=20
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent =
the=20
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang=20
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.

MEDIA
Stations' Good Deeds Worth $9.6 Billion
A $5 Billion Proposal
Diversity Advisory Committee Adopts Interim Reports
and Recommendations
Eliminating Market Entry Barriers for Small Telecommunications =
Businesses
Piracy Fight Spreads to Radio Airwaves

MEDIA & POLITICS
Voters Are Harder to Reach As Media Outlets Multiply
Gun Group's Radio Show Tests Limits on Advocacy

INTERNET
FTC Declines to Create Do-Not-Spam Registry

MEDIA

STATIONS' GOOD DEEDS WORTH $9.6 BILLION
The National Association of Broadcasters says broadcast stations aired =
$7.3=20
billion worth of public-service announcements (PSAs) and helped raise =
$2.1=20
billion for national and local charities and disaster relief. The latter =

figure includes $158 million for victims of tornadoes, hurricanes,=20
wildfires, and floods. But many regulators and public interest advocates =
do=20
not believe this fulfills broadcasters public interest obligations. FCC=20
Commissioner Michael Powell says he's more interested in what =
programming=20
broadcasters provide to serve communities with the spectrum they receive =

for free. Andrew Schwartzman, of the Media Access Project, dismisses the =

fundraising as cause-related marketing. "It's no different than what =
Giant=20
supermarket does in conjunction with Toys for Tots," he says. "It's not=20
something that is unique or special to broadcasting and would justify =
the=20
free use of the public spectrum. That stuff to me is just feel-good=20
marketing. Sending Bozo the Clown to the hospital doesn't count. It's =
got=20
to be programming." NAB lobbyist Dennis Wharton has heard it all and=20
doesn't like it. "That is the most outrageous assertion you can make," =
he=20
says. "To them, going on the air and raising money for breast-cancer=20
research is not as important as offering a political debate for dog=20
catcher." Mr. Schwartzman also says NAB inflates the value of PSAs. The=20
broadcasters generally use unsold time for the PSAs, he says. The value =
of=20
such time is minimal, yet, he suggests, broadcasters assign it the =
highest=20
possible value in calculating their PSA contribution. According to Mr.=20
Schwartzman, broadcasters have to go beyond the PSAs and the fundraising =

and begin offering "more and better" programming that addresses the =
needs=20
of the community regardless of its commercial attractiveness. "What we =
are=20
looking for is vastly increased service to the community in light of the =

value that broadcasters have been receiving since 1996 when they =
received a=20
second digital channel and greater protection from competition." But the =

NAB's Wharton says broadcasters' public service is second to none: "You =

can look at the amount of money that is raised by foundations, and =
nobody=20
comes close to the billions and billions of dollars that broadcasters =
raise."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Harry Jessell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425963?display=3DTop+of+the+We=
ek
(requires subscription)

A $5 BILLION PROPOSAL
Public Broadcasting Service President Pat Mitchell is quietly pushing an =

plan that would free public-TV stations from their annual federal=20
allowance. PBS would get a one-time $5 billion payment from the =
government=20
in return for a 2007 return of spectrum noncommercial stations currently =

use for analog television broadcasts. An auction of these airwaves would =

then generate revenue for the government. But Ms. Mitchell's plan is =
also=20
to deliver more innovative programming to the public and free PBS from=20
finding deep-pocketed, corporate sponsors for programming. "We must =
figure=20
out a more sustainable model for public broadcasting to work in this=20
country," she says, noting that the government's annual contribution to=20
PBS, which covers about 15% of its budget, lags far behind that of most=20
other countries. "It's astonishing that we've survived this long with so =

little coming from Congress. It's a fundamental flaw. We can't have such =
a=20
small foundation."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425964?display=3DTop+of+the+We=
ek
(requires subscription)

DIVERSITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE ADOPTS INTERIM REPORTS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The FCC Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the =
Digital=20
Age at its third meeting adopted a wide range of resolutions and=20
recommendations aimed at promoting opportunities for minorities and =
women=20
in telecommunications and related industries. Initially, the Committee=20
expressed its strong belief that tax-based incentives such as the former =

tax certificate program would open opportunities for socially and=20
economically disadvantaged persons, including minorities and=20
women. Recognizing that any revitalization of such a program is not =
within=20
the FCC's immediate power, the Committee went on to recommend that the=20
Commission consider ways to use its own rules to promote opportunity. =
Those=20
recommendations included: retaining and possibly expanding the =
Commission's=20
Distress Sale Policy; creating incentives within FCC ownership and=20
licensing rules; and considering a Supplier Diversity Program that might =

provide auction credits to companies that do business with diverse=20
entities. The Committee also recommended that the Commission adopt a =
rule=20
specifically prohibiting intentional discrimination on the basis of =
race,=20
color, national origin, or gender in the purchase or sale of any=20
FCC-licensed facility.
Committee member Henry Rivera, a partner at law firm Vinson & Elkins, =
also=20
serve's on the Benton Foundation board of directors.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2004/db0614/DOC-248391A1=
.doc

ELIMINATING MARKET ENTRY BARRIERS FOR SMALL TELECOMMUNICATIONS =
BUSINESSES
The FCC's Media Bureau is seeking comment on constitutionally =
permissible=20
ways to further the mandates of Section 257 of the Telecommunications =
Act=20
of 1996 which directs the FCC to identify and eliminate market entry=20
barriers for small telecommunications businesses, and Section 309(j) of =
the=20
Communications Act of 1934 which requires the FCC to further =
opportunities=20
in the allocation of spectrum-based services for small businesses and=20
businesses owned by women and minorities. The Commission is =
specifically=20
encouraging commenters to discuss possible next steps to further these=20
statutory objectives in a constitutionally permissible manner, =
especially=20
in light of two recent Supreme Court decisions (Grutter v. Bollinger and =

Gratz v. Bollinger). Commenters should discuss and proffer specific=20
recommendations for building on the series of market entry barrier =
studies=20
listed at the URL below.
For further information, contact Anne Levine at (202) 418-7027 or via =
email=20
at Anne.Levine( at )fcc.gov.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-1690A1.doc

PIRACY FIGHT SPREADS TO RADIO AIRWAVES
The Recording Industry Association of America is expected to ask the FCC =

today to require broadcasters to either encrypt their digital signals or =

transmit a special marker that discourages replication. The fight over=20
digital radio could echo battles over digital television, which promises =

sharper pictures and clearer sound than traditional analog broadcasts. =
The=20
rollout of digital television, originally scheduled to be completed in=20
2006, has been slowed, in part, by squabbles between studios and TV-set=20
manufacturers over copy protection. The consumer electronics industry =
and=20
broadcasters say that the RIAA position will just slow down the rollout =
of=20
digital radio service so they do not support it.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Jube Shiver Jr]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-hdradio16jun16,1,59663=
80.story?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)
Public Knowledge is a public interest advocate which has great deal of=20
work in this area. For more information see =
http://www.publicknowledge.org/

MEDIA & POLITICS

VOTERS ARE HARDER TO REACH AS MEDIA OUTLETS MULTIPLY
Political campaigns are finding it harder to reach people with political =

advertising as their media options grow and harder to poll public =
opinion=20
as people use technology to screen unwanted phone calls or use cell =
phones=20
which pollsters are prohibited from calling. Political consultants =
compare=20
rising media costs to an arms race, as ever-greater sums produce =
messages=20
that reach fewer and fewer eyes and ears. Media costs are by far the=20
biggest single expenditure for the two major-party presidential =
campaigns.=20
Advertising and promotion of all types accounted for about 60 percent of =

President Bush's record spending of $129.8 million, and about 48 percent =
of=20
Sen. Kerry's $88.7 million through the end of April, according to =
Federal=20
Election Commission figures.
Find out more about modern campaigns at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR:Paul Farhi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A44697-2004Jun15.html
(requires registration)

GUN GROUP'S RADIO SHOW TESTS LIMITS OF ADVOCACY
"There are 90 million gun owners in America," says National Rifle=20
Association executive vice president Wayne LaPierre. "And a lot of them=20
don't believe they are getting accurate news from the media." For these =
90=20
million truth-deprived Americans, a new voice will be hitting the=20
(satellite) airways -- NRANews. The 3-hour news and commentary is viewed =
by=20
some as a way for the gun lobby to get around new campaign finance laws=20
aimed at curtailing political advertising in the days just prior to the=20
election. "If the N.R.A. is successful at this, we will definitely see=20
other groups explore going down the same road," said Larry Noble, =
executive=20
director of the Center for Responsive Politics and former general =
counsel=20
to the Federal Election Commission. Mr. LaPierre said the program, to be =

broadcast on Sirius satellite radio, would be a step toward a larger =
media=20
enterprise. The organization is looking to acquire radio stations in the =

Midwest, the Rockies and the South
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: James Dao]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/16/national/16nra.html
(requires registration)

INTERNET

FTC DECLINES TO CREATE DO-NOT-SPAM REGISTRY
In the law intended to crack down on junk e-mail (spam) that passed last =

December, Congress ordered the Federal Trade Commission to report on the =

feasibility of allowing e-mail users to place their e-mail addresses on =
a=20
registry for those who do not want unsolicited messages. But in its =
report,=20
the FTC finds that a do-not-spam list might be counterproductive,=20
suggesting such a list might help spammers find legitimate e-mail=20
addresses. Instead, the FTC says that the most promising way to reduce =
spam=20
is to create new technology that can verify that an e-mail message was =
sent=20
from the address that it claims to be from. Senders of the most =
offensive=20
spam often use false return addresses. The FTC said it would defer to =
the=20
private sector on which authentication standard should be employed. If a =

standard does not emerge, the commission proposed creating a federal=20
advisory committee to encourage the adoption of a standard.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Saul Hansell]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/16/technology/16spam.html
(requires registration)
See http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2004/06/canspam2.htm for a release from the =
FTC=20
and a link to the report to Congress.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/11/04

Next week, the FCC will hear from the Advisory Committee on Diversity for=20
Communications in the Digital Age and a House subcommittee will look at=20
problems with the E-rate program. But Headlines will not be back to remind=
=20
you until WEDNESDAY JUNE 16. For upcoming media policy events, see=20
http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

NEWS FROM THE FCC
FCC Chair to Pen New Phone-Line Rules
Long-Distance Carriers Take a Blow, but It's No Knockout
Deployment of Wireless Broadband Services
Inquiry Concerning Report to Congress on Video Competition
Spectrum Sharing Plan

QUICKLY
Univision Sues to Stop TV Rating System in Los Angeles
FTC: All Eyes on Consumer Privacy
Health of US Democracy Tied to New Model for Public Access to
Online Information

NEWS FROM THE FCC

FCC CHAIR TO PEN NEW PHONE-LINE RULES
On Thursday, FCC Chairman Michael Powell announced plans to draft new rules=
=20
for leasing access to the local telephone carriers' networks after the Bush=
=20
administration decided not to defend the old ones. "We will begin=20
immediately," he told reporters after the agency's monthly open meeting.=20
"I'm quite optimistic with the new guidance and, understanding what our=20
limits are, we'll be relatively expeditious at this." Chairman Powell hopes=
=20
to have new rules by the end of the year. "My goal will be to do something=
=20
that will limit disruption and will be as simple and as easy to execute as=
=20
possible," Chairman Powell said. He added that the agency has several=20
options available from its past attempts to rewrite the rules. One analyst=
=20
said the agency would likely have a hard time fashioning interim rules that=
=20
would satisfy the Bells. "From a Bell perspective, they think the rules are=
=20
going away in a few days," said Legg Mason analyst Blair Levin. "The=20
question is, are there any burdens the Bell guys will find OK?"
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://news.com.com/FCC+chair+to+pen+new+phone-line+rules/2100-1037_3-52...
1.html?tag=3Dnefd.top
Also see:
STATES' BIG ROLE IN PHONE RATES MAY BE ONLY A CAMEO
If the Supreme Court does not entertain an appeal concerning the FCC's=20
phone competition rules (and most expect it will not intervene), then=20
states will have authority to oversee commercial negotiations and=20
arbitration to set new phone network leasing rates. But their authority may=
=20
be short-lived. In the long run, the new position of the commission and the=
=20
Bush administration could make state regulators the biggest losers.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stephen Labaton]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/11/business/11regs.html
(requires registration)
WSJ=20
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108690495206534344,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
LATimes=20
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-phones11jun11,1,30897...
tory?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business

LONG-DISTANCE CARRIERS TAKE A BLOW, BUT IT'S NO KNOCKOUT
Phone companies like AT&T, MCI and Sprint, with their long-distance=20
businesses in trouble, suffered a big blow on Wednesday with the Bush=20
administration's decision to side with the regional Bell companies on the=20
issue of local access fees. But that decision is unlikely to cause any=20
immediate consolidation in the industry or damage the long-distance giants=
=20
as quickly or harshly as they have predicted, industry analysts said. That=
=20
is because those carriers have been pushing to develop new sources of=20
revenue, the analysts said, and this week's bad news will most likely=20
accelerate those efforts. Legal challenges by the long-distance carriers,=20
state governments and others could also delay any damage.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Ken Belson & Matt Richtel]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/11/business/11phone.html
(requires registration)
Also coverage in:
WSJ=20
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108690160089634192,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
See Also
PHONE FIRMS APPEAL OVER LOCAL ACCESS
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Christopher Stern]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A32762-2004Jun10.html
(requires registration)

DEPLOYMENT OF WIRELESS BROADBAND SERVICES
As part of its ongoing efforts to promote the deployment of wireless=20
broadband services, the FCC adopted a Report and Order (Order) and Further=
=20
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Further Notice) that transforms the rules=20
governing the Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS) and Instructional=20
Television Fixed Service (ITFS) in the 2495-2690 MHz band. These rules=20
provide greater flexibility and a more functional band plan for licensees.=
=20
In the Order, the FCC takes a number of important steps to restructure the=
=20
2495-2690 MHz band and facilitate more efficient use of the=20
spectrum. First, the Order creates a new band plan for 2495-2690 MHz which=
=20
eliminates the use of interleaved channels by MDS and ITFS licensees and=20
creates distinct band segments for high power operations, such as one-way=20
video transmission, and low power operations, such as two-way fixed and=20
mobile broadband applications. By grouping high and low power users into=20
separate portions of the band, the new band plan reduces the likelihood of=
=20
interference caused by incompatible uses and creates incentives for the=20
development of low-power, cellularized broadband operations, which were=20
inhibited by the prior band plan. In order to reflect these new=20
opportunities for providing broadband service, today's Order renames the=20
MDS service the Broadband Radio Service (BRS), while maintaining the ITFS=20
label for ITFS licenses and operations. The Order also expands the original=
=20
MDS-ITFS band by adding to it five megahertz of additional spectrum from=20
below 2500 MHz, which increases the total size of the band to 194=20
megahertz. This will provide room for the future relocation of MDS Channels=
=20
1 and 2, which are presently located in the 2.1 GHz band. The Order retains=
=20
the existing eligibility rules for ITFS spectrum. Therefore, ITFS licenses=
=20
in the new band plan will continue to be subject to existing rules that=20
limit eligibility for licensing to qualified educational institutions. The=
=20
Order also allows ITFS licensees to lease spectrum to BRS providers,=20
provided they comply with existing educational content requirements, and=20
grandfathers all existing MDS-ITFS leases. In addition, the Order lifts=20
all non-statutory eligibility restrictions on BRS spectrum, including those=
=20
applicable to cable operators. However, the cable/BRS cross-ownership=20
restriction prohibiting cable operators from providing multichannel video=20
programming distribution (MVPD) services using BRS licenses, which is=20
mandated by statute, will remain in effect. The Order establishes simpler=20
and more flexible rules for licensees, including geographic area licensing=
=20
and the ability to employ the technology of their choice. In addition, the=
=20
new rules allow for spectrum leasing under the FCC's secondary market=20
rules, but grandfather all existing leasing arrangements between MDS and=20
ITFS licensees. Finally, the Order establishes a mechanism for transition=20
from the existing band configuration to the new band plan. BRS and ITFS=20
providers will have a three-year period during which they may propose=20
transition plans for relocating existing facilities of all other licensees=
=20
within the same Major Economic Area (MEA) to new spectrum assignments in=20
the revised band plan. Plan proponents must notify all licensees in the=20
MEA and file their plans with the Commission. This will trigger a 90-day=20
Transition Planning Period during which licensees negotiate and coordinate=
=20
their transition with other licensees in the MEA. Transitions to the new=20
band plan must be completed within 18 months of the conclusion of=20
negotiations. In the Further Notice, the Commission seeks comment on=20
alternative transition options for markets in which no transition plan is=20
proposed within the initial three-year period. Among other options, the=20
Further Notice seeks comment on whether to accomplish the transition in=20
such markets by offering existing licensees tradable instruments that they=
=20
can use to bid for spectrum at auction.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248267A1.doc
See coverage in:
WSJ=20
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108688250788033800,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
WP http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A32706-2004Jun10.html

INQUIRY CONCERNING REPORT TO CONGRESS ON VIDEO COMPETITION
The FCC initiated its 11th annual inquiry, as required by Congress, into=20
the status of competition in the market for the delivery of video=20
programming. The Notice of Inquiry is designed to assist the FCC in=20
gathering the information, data, and comments for the 2004 Competition=20
Report. In the 2004 Competition Report, the FCC expects to report on=20
changes in the competitive environment over the last year. The NOI seeks=20
information that will allow the FCC to evaluate the status of competition=20
in the video marketplace, changes in the market since the 2003 Report,=20
prospects for new entrants to that market, factors that have facilitated or=
=20
impeded competition, and the effect of competition on industry groups and=20
most importantly, consumers. The Notice seeks comments and information on=20
video distributors in the market for the delivery of video programming=20
including those using both wireline and wireless technologies. Video=20
programming distributors include cable systems, direct broadcast satellite=
=20
(DBS) providers, home satellite dish providers, broadband service=20
providers, private cable or satellite master antenna television systems,=20
open video systems, multichannel multipoint distribution services or=20
wireless cable systems (MMDS), local exchange carrier (LEC) systems,=20
utilities, and over-the-air broadcast television stations. Video=20
programming is also distributed on videocassettes and DVDs through retail=20
distribution outlets and over the Internet. The Notice also requests=20
information that will allow the FCC to evaluate horizontal concentration in=
=20
the video marketplace, vertical integration between programming=20
distributors and programming services, and other issues relating to the=20
programming available to consumers. The Notice requests information on=20
technical issues, including equipment and emerging services. The Notice=20
further asks for comments regarding developments in foreign markets, as=20
they may contribute to the FCC's understanding of domestic markets.
The 2004 Competition Report should be sent to Congress by the end of the=
year.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248338A1.doc

SPECTRUM SHARING PLAN
The FCC adopted a spectrum sharing plan for low earth orbit satellite=20
systems (Big LEOs) in the 1.6 GHz and 2.4 GHz bands. The spectrum sharing=
=20
plan will further the Commission's goal of efficient spectrum utilization=20
by increasing the number of providers offering services to consumers over=20
the same spectrum, and will promote the deployment of more innovative=20
services to consumers.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248343A1.doc

QUICKLY

UNIVISION SUES TO STOP TV RATING SYSTEM IN LOS ANGELES
Univision Communications filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court on=20
Wednesday, seeking to stop Nielsen from introducing electronic devices=20
known as local people meters to gather ratings data in Los Angeles, where=20
they are scheduled to begin July 8. Univision, the country's largest=20
Spanish-language television broadcaster, contends in its lawsuit that=20
Nielsen is engaging in unfair, unlawful and deceptive business practices=20
because the changes would significantly undercount Univision's core viewers=
=20
in Los Angeles: Hispanics who are younger, in large families and speak=20
mostly Spanish rather than mostly English.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stuart Elliott]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/11/business/media/11nielsen.html
(requires registration)

FTC: ALL EYES ON CONSUMER PRIVACY
According to Director of Consumer Protection Howard Beales, the Federal=20
Trade Commission plans to make consumer privacy rights a higher priority.=20
The FTC is gearing up to bring more privacy-related cases against Internet=
=20
operators, with one expected in the coming weeks.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Stefanie Olsen]
http://news.com.com/FTC%3A+All+eyes+on+consumer+privacy/2100-1024_3-5230...
html?tag=3Dcd.top

HEALTH OF U.S. DEMOCRACY TIED TO NEW MODEL FOR PUBLIC ACCESS TO ONLINE=20
INFORMATION
The Free Expression Policy Project released "The Information Commons", a=20
report that links the vitality of 21st century democracy to the creation of=
=20
online communities dedicated to producing and sharing information. The=20
report begins: =93For democracy to flourish, citizens need free and open=20
access to information. In today=92s digital age, this means access to=20
information online.=94 The information commons movement promoted by the=20
report recognizes that public access to online information is being damaged=
=20
by a combination of restrictive technology, unbalanced changes to=20
intellectual property law, onerous licenses, and media industry=20
consolidation. Essential ingredients for a healthy democracy =AD political=
=20
discourse, free speech, civic participation, and creativity =AD all suffer=
as=20
a result. According to the report, these threats to democracy can be=20
remedied, or at least dampened, by adopting the emerging concept of the=20
information commons.
Nancy Kranich, a former president of the American Library Association, is=20
the report=92s author.
[SOURCE: Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law/Press Release]
http://www.brennancenter.org/presscenter/releases_2004/pressrelease_2004...
8b.html
http://www.fepproject.org/policyreports/infocommons.contentsexsum.html
--------------------------------------------------------------
...and we are outta here. Have a great weekend. We'll be live from the home=
=20
office on K Street come Wednesday.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/10/04

The FCC announced Wednesday that it had deleted the following item from
today's open meeting: Consideration of an Order on Reconsideration
concerning requests from BellSouth and Sure West to reconsider and/or
clarify unbundling obligations relating to multiple dwelling units and the
network modification rules.
For this and other upcoming media policy events, see
http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

TELECOM
Bush Administration Won't Appeal Phone Decision
SBC Restrictions on DSL Are Illegal, Judge Rules

MEDIA
Digital Television: Sharpening the Focus on Children
McCain: Don't Forget Off-Air-Only Viewers
Kerry Comes Out Against Big Media . . . Sort Of
Clear Channel Settles for $1.75 Million

TELECOM

BUSH ADMINISTRATION WON'T APPEAL PHONE DECISION
U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson, who represents the federal
government in cases before the Supreme Court, on Wednesday let the FCC know
he will not ask the Supreme Court to reinstate Commission rules forcing
local phone carriers to share parts of their networks with rivals. Barring
any further court intervention, the regulations will no longer be in effect
on June 15. Baby Bells have promised no disruption in service for customers
of rival companies using Bell networks. But AT&T, MCI and other
long-distance providers say that left to their own devices, the Bells will
ultimately raise their rates to anticompetitive levels.
Additionally, Communications Daily reported that FCC Commissioner Kevin
Martin, a former aide to President Bush, announced late Wednesday that he
no longer supports appealing the U.S. Appeals Court, D.C. decision. He said
he made that decision because the U.S. Solicitor Gen. has decided not to
support an appeal. His decision means there no longer are enough votes at
the FCC to support an appeal.
U.S. Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee, and U.S. Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI), chairman of the
Telecommunications and the Internet Subcommittee, issued the following
joint statement: "We are delighted that the Solicitor General has decided
not to appeal the D.C. Circuit's decision that struck down parts of the
FCC's Triennial Review Order, or to ask the Supreme Court to stay the
decision pending appeals from other parties. This is the right decision to
facilitate new investment in the telecommunications sector that can help
continue the economic growth that we have witnessed so far this year. We
again applaud the parties that have already reached commercial agreements
governing competitive carriers' access to incumbent local exchange
facilities, and encourage all parties to return to the negotiating table to
complete further agreements. And we strongly urge the FCC commissioners to
immediately promulgate interim access rules that will apply to carriers
that are not able to negotiate commercial agreements."
Communications Daily reported reaction from consumer advocate Mark Cooper
of the Consumer Federation of America. He said "the Bush Administration
turned its back on consumers." Without competitor access to Bell facilities
"at reasonable rates," these companies "will be driven out of the market
and the billions of dollars of savings linked to competition will be gone."
The White House "has shown just how far it would go in promoting the
interests of big corporations at the expense of consumers," he said.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Ben Charny]
http://news.com.com/Bush+administration+won%27t+appeal+phone+decision/21...
WHITE HOUSE WON'T SEEK AN APPEAL OF THE UNE DECISION
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Edie Herman, Susan Polyakova, Terry
Lane]
(Not available online)
http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/News/06092004_1305.htm
Reactions:
NTIA http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/press/2004/mdgstatement_06092004.htm
Association for Local Telecommunications Services
http://206.161.82.210/NewsPress/060904%20PR%20on%20SG%20Decision.pdf
CompTel/ASCENT http://www.comptelascent.org/news/recent-news/060904.html
USTA http://www.usta.org/news_releases.php?urh=home.news.nr2004_0609
Progress & Freedom Foundation
http://www.pff.org/news/news/2004/060904fccstatement.html
Additional coverage in
WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108679651736332702,00.html?mod=todays...
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108682514131933352,00.html?mod=todays...
(Op-Ed)
WP: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A28365-2004Jun9.html
LATimes
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-phones10jun10,1,26310...
USAToday http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040610/6274542s.htm
NYTimes http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/10/business/10PHON.html?hp

SBC RESTRICTIONS ON DSL ARE ILLEGAL, JUDGE RULES
A California Public Utilities Commission administrative law judge rules
that SBC's refusal to sell its DSL service to non-SBC local telephone
subscribers "is not just or reasonable" and that California's dominant
local phone company must cease the practice. Competitors have complained
that SBC has unfairly maintained its control over local phone service
partly by tying that to its DSL service. SBC counters that it has no
obligation to offer retail DSL service.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR:James S. Granelli]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-sbc10jun10,1,4839600....
(requires registration)

MEDIA

DIGITAL TELEVISION: SHARPENING THE FOCUS ON CHILDREN
Speaking at Children's Now conference on the transition to digital
television and children, FCC Commissioners Abernathy, Copps and Adelstein
said the Commission must do a better job of defining broadcasters
obligations to serve children. Today, in the analog arena, broadcasters are
required to air at least 3 hours of children's programming per week and
must limit the amount of advertising aimed at children. When broadcasters
can multicast several channels, it's not clear whether they will be
required to air 3 hours on each stream, or just on a designated primary
stream of programming, or whether the obligation could be fulfilled some
other way, such as a separate children's programming channel. Commissioner
Adelstein compared the current TV environment for children with a parent
allowing a youngster to wander through an unsafe neighborhood. "It turns
out these neighborhoods are filled with slick storekeepers trying to lure
kids in to buy candy, junk food and violent games. Not every street is
Sesame Street. Clearly, some people in the neighborhood don't have your
kids' best interests in mind," Commissioner Adelstein said. Joined by
Commissioner Copps, Adelstein said the FCC has failed to police the
situation. "Parents, be warned: the cops on the beat aren't on top of the
new developments in the neighborhood."
Children Now's Patti Miller outlined proposal to better serve children in
the digital TV era: 1) Forbid TV companies from embedding Internet links in
online interactive content that could lead children to commercial
advertising, 2) Ensure that parents get more information about programming
and associated online content in the digital age, and 3) Ensure that the
privacy of children is preserved online.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Brigitte Greenberg]
(Not available online)

MCCAIN: DON'T FORGET OFF-THE-AIR VIEWERS
At the Senate Commerce Committee hearing on speeding the transition to
digital television, Sen John McCain (R-AZ), Chairman of the committee, said
that a federal plan to end the digital-TV transition should not abandon
consumers who don't subscribe to cable or satellite. "We must not leave
these consumers out in the digital cold," Sen McCain said. "Let me be clear
that any proposal to accelerate the digital-television transition is
incomplete unless it ensures that consumers may continue to use their
existing television sets to view over-the-air broadcast signals." "We can't
just turn off these people's analog sets," agreed Association of Public
Television Stations President John Lawson. "We must give the consumer a
simple and inexpensive pathway to go digital. Some subsidies may be necessary."
Mr. Lawson discussed the status of public television stations' digital
conversion and the promise it holds - particularly emphasizing how digital
television enables public television stations to provide a new generation
of telecommunications services to the American people, including: HDTV;
multicasting to provide expanded educational content; and high-speed
wireless datacasting for homeland security and other public services.
Lawson also addressed some of the challenges public television stations
face in completing the digital transition, including the goal of ensuring
that there's "no viewer left behind" - which addresses public television
stations' unique universal service mandate.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA425167?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
http://www.apts.org/
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1220
See coverage in
B&C http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425183?display=Breaking+News

KERRY COMES OUT AGAINST BIG MEDIA....SORT OF
Senator John Kerry (D-MA) finally has ventured forth -- during an interview
broadcast last weekend on C-SPAN -- to make a statement against media
consolidation. But does this mean that Kerry's campaign will make the fight
against big media a platform issue in 2004?
[SOURCE: MediaChannel.org, AUTHOR: Timothy Karr]
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert212.shtml

CLEAR CHANNEL SETTLES FOR $1.75 MILLION
Today, the FCC entered into a $1.75 million Consent Decree with Clear
Channel Communications, Inc., and its subsidiaries (Clear Channel) to
resolve investigations into whether Clear Channel stations had broadcast
obscene, indecent, or profane material in violation of the Communications
Act and Commission rules. As part of the agreement, Clear Channel admits
that some of the material it broadcast was indecent. In addition to the
$1.75 million payment to the U.S. Treasury, Clear Channel has also
committed to implementing a company-wide Compliance Plan aimed at
preventing future violations. The Consent Decree resolves all pending
Notices of Apparent Liability, Enforcement Bureau investigations, and
third-party complaints against Clear Channel for possible violations.
Commissioner Copps dissented from the ruling saying the FCC had entered
into the settlement without first investigating some of the alleged
allegations. "[M]y dissent is about process," he wrote, "and the process
here is inadequate. What message do we send to citizens when we fail even
to investigate their complaints before making a sweeping settlement?"
[SOURCE: FCC]
Press Release
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248237A1.doc
Order http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-128A1.doc
Statements from Commissioners
Powell http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-128A2.doc
Adelstein http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-128A4.doc
Copps http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-128A3.doc
See coverage in:
B&C http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA425190?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
USAToday http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040610/6274538s.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. While the summaries are
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/09/04

For upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

MEDIA
Broadcast Decency Amendment Proposed for DoD Authorization Bill
Radio Giant In Record Indecency Settlement
Group Calls on FTC to Launch Investigation of Interactive Advertising=20
Targeted at
Children, "Tweens," and Teens
Fewer Republicans Trust the News, Survey Finds
Ads of Both Campaigns Zero in on a Typical City
Nielsen Picks People Meter Panel
Comcast Plans to Create 24-Hour Network -- for Toddlers

TELECOM
Fraud, Waste Mar Plan to Wire Schools to Net
Semiannual Report of FCC Inspector General
Universal Service Proceeding
Broadband Internet Use Up 42% in 2003
Civil Society Policy Websites Set Up in Ten Nations

MEDIA

BROADCAST DECENCY AMENDMENT PROPOSED FOR DOD AUTHORIZATION BILL
Just when you thought it was safe to curse on TV again... it's back! Sen=20
Sam Brownback (R-KS) apparently has proposed an amendment to Department of=
=20
Defense authorization legislation that will raise the fines for=20
broadcasters who air indecent programming. The DoD bill will be considered=
=20
next week. The indecency provisions are likely to be focused just on=20
increased fines and not include more controversial provisions concerning=20
rolling back the FCC's new media ownership rules.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)
Also coverage in:
WSJ=20
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108673926033632255,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)
LATimes=20
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-clear9jun09,1,4052108...
ry?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)
NYT http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/09/business/media/09radio.html
(requires registration)

RADIO GIANT IN RECORD INDECENCY SETTLEMENT
An announcement could be made today that Clear Channel will pay $2 million=
=20
to the FCC to settle indecency charges against the radio giant including=20
on-air remarks made by shock jock Howard Stern. Perhaps most important, one=
=20
source said, the deal would cover not only Clear Channel's outstanding=20
fines but also dozens of listener complaints in the FCC's indecency=20
pipeline that have not been ruled on. If those complaints were to result in=
=20
fines, they could cost the radio company millions. Apparently, the FCC's=20
three Republican commissioners -- Chairman Michael Powell, Kevin J. Martin=
=20
and Kathleen Q. Abernathy -- voted for the deal while Democratic=20
Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein agreed in part. But fellow Democrat=20
Michael J. Copps voted against the settlement instead wanting each=20
complaint against Clear Channel to be examined rather than grouped into a=20
universal settlement.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Frank Ahrens]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A26431-2004Jun8.html
(requires registration)

GROUP CALLS ON FTC TO LAUNCH INVESTIGATION OF INTERACTIVE ADVERTISING=20
TARGETED AT CHILDREN, "TWEENS," AND TEENS
The Center for Digital Democracy (CDD) urged the Federal Trade Commission=20
Tuesday to review and analyze the interactive marketing and branding=20
technologies and techniques used by advertisers to target the country's=20
children, "tweens," and teens. In a letter to FTC Chairman Muris and the=20
other four commissioners, the nonprofit , public interest advocacy=20
organization wrote that the "immersive, relational, and ubiquitous nature=20
of such marketing raises serious questions about the ability of existing=20
safeguards and rules to protect our nation's children and young=20
people." The letter urged the Commission to use its subpoena power to=20
obtain any needed documents, including proprietary research studies. CDD=20
also called on the ad industry to adopt a moratorium on all interactive=20
techniques that -- in the absence of independent research suggesting=20
otherwise -- could potentially harm or negatively affect children and youth.
See more at the URLs below.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy Press Release]
http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/FTCAdPR.html
Text of letter to FTC
http://www.democraticmedia.org/resources/filings/FTCletter.html

FEWER REPUBLICANS TRUST NEWS, SURVEY FINDS
The Pew Research Center finds that Republicans have come to distrust the=20
media in greater numbers since President Bush took office while Democratic=
=20
views are mostly unchanged. "CNN's once-dominant credibility ratings have=20
slumped in recent years, mostly among Republicans and independents," the=20
survey says. "By comparison, the Fox News Channel's believability ratings=20
have held steady -- both overall and within partisan groups." While the=20
percentage of people who rate CNN as highly credible has slid from 42=20
percent six years ago to 32 percent now, the study says, "more continue to=
=20
say they can believe all or most of what they hear on CNN than say that=20
about Fox News Channel," whose credibility rating is 25 percent. MSNBC=20
clocks in at 22 percent. ("60 Minutes" edged the field with 33=20
percent.) In a finding that surprised Andrew Kohut, the Pew center's=20
director, 29 percent of Republicans say Fox News Channel is credible, only=
=20
slightly more than the 26 percent of GOPers who feel that way about CNN.=20
Among Democrats, though, 45 percent give CNN a thumbs up for credibility,=20
compared with 24 percent for Fox News Channel. The changing views "reflect=
=20
the political polarization we've seen," says Andrew Kohut, the Pew center's=
=20
director. "It reflects anger on the part of Republicans about the way the=20
media's treated Bush lately, and also reflects the appeal of Fox News."=20
Readers and viewers, he says, are "reacting to a perception of a political=
=20
point of view, whether that means bias in political reports or tone."
There's much more at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Howard Kurtz]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A26345-2004Jun8.html
(requires registration)

ADS OF BOTH CAMPAIGNS ZERO IN ON A TYPICAL CITY
A look at ad spending in Columbus, Ohio -- one of the most evenly-divided=20
cities in one of the most evenly-divided states during this election.=20
Rarely if ever has so much been spent to sway so few (population, 704,000)=
=20
so early in a presidential campaign. Approximately $4 million has been=20
spent to show the typical TV viewer there 3,000 political ads since March.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Jim Rutenberg]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/09/politics/campaign/09ads.html
(requires registration)

NIELSEN PICKS PEOPLE METER PANEL
On Tuesday, Nielsen Media Research named the members of its task force that=
=20
will advise the ratings company on ways to insure that the household=20
samples it creates for local people meter service in the top 10 markets=20
accurately reflect the audiences being measured. Former Illinois=20
Congresswoman Cardiss Collins will serve as the chair and be joined by Bob=
=20
Barocci, President/CEO of The Advertising Research Foundation; Melody=20
Spann-Cooper, President and General Manager of WVON-AM Chicago;Rev. James=20
L. Deemus III, Executive Director of the NAACP Chicago (Southside); Ray=20
Durazo, Chair of the Latin Business Association in Los Angeles; Mary=20
Gonzales Koenig, President of the Spanish Coalition for Jobs, Inc.; Scott=20
McDonald, Senior Vice President for Market Research at Cond=E9 Nast=20
Publications and the former top research executive at Time Warner;Byron E.=
=20
Lewis, Chair and CEO of UniWorld Group; Guillermo Linares, former member of=
=20
the New York City Council; Manuel Mirabal, President of the National=20
Puerto-Rican Coalition,Inc.; Elinor Tatum, Publisher of The Amsterdam News.=
=20
"It is important to determine the best possible method to accurately=20
reflect the choices being made by media audiences, and particularly by=20
black and Latino viewers who have been historically undercounted, because=20
of the enormous social, cultural and financial implications arising from=20
the measured popularity of media programming," said New York Congressman=20
Charles Rangel (D), who helped put the task force together.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Steve McClellan]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA424631?display=3DBreaking+News
(requires subscription)

COMCAST PLANS TO CREATE 24-HOUR NETWORK -- FOR TODDLERS
Here's a solution for all our four-year old readers searching for quality=20
video entertainment at 4am -- a new 24-hour cable channel for preschoolers=
=20
brought to you by Comcast, the Public Broadcasting System, Sesame Street=20
Workshop and HIT Entertainment. The as-yet-unnamed network would carry no=20
commercials and would have rights to "Barney & Friends," "Sesame Street,"=20
"Bob the Builder" and "Thomas the Tank Engine," among others. The network=20
is likely to be a digital channel. Negotiations could be finalized in weeks=
=20
and the channel could be launched by year's end.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108674158907832328,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)

TELECOM

FRAUD, WASTE MAR PLAN TO WIRE SCHOOLS TO NET
While the $2.25 billion-a-year E-Rate program has helped bring the Internet=
=20
to more than 90% of the nation's classrooms, lawmakers and investigators=20
say it also is riddled with waste, mismanagement and fraud. A series of=20
House hearings on E-rate will kick off on June 17 with an examination of=20
flaws in the management of E-rate. Consultants and public-interest=20
advocates say blame is shared by everyone involved in the program: public=20
officials so eager, they say, to get the much-hyped program going that they=
=20
imposed few safeguards; school administrators who welcome the federal=20
largesse but who often have little expertise in setting up high-tech=20
systems; vendors who prey on wide-eyed school officials in hopes of feeding=
=20
at the trough of taxpayers' money. E-rate's management says critics=20
overstate the fraud and waste. And E-rate backers say the program's good=20
far outweighs the bad. One problem with rules compliance is E-rate's=20
complex application process. Schools must submit detailed plans and get=20
bids before applying. As a result, districts -- especially small or poor=20
ones with little technical support -- often rely on vendors to fill out=20
requests for bids. FCC officials say that can let vendors steer proposals=20
to their own offerings. Another problem: The FCC doesn't require schools to=
=20
keep records on competitive biddings. They need only follow state and local=
=20
rules. The FCC is considering stricter record-keeping rules. Bob Williams=20
of the Center for Public Integrity believes Universal Services=20
Administrative Company scrutiny is limited because half its board are=20
telecom, cable and Internet executives -- industries that gain from E-rate.=
=20
"You basically have an industry group handing out and watching the money."
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Paul Davidson, Greg Toppo and Jayne O'Donnell]
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040609/6270165s.htm

SEMIANNUAL REPORT OF THE FCC INSPECTOR GENERAL
The FCC's Office of Inspector General (OIG) provided Chairman Michael=20
Powell with a review of the OIG's actions over the during the six-month=20
period ending March 31, 2004. During this reporting period, as in the=20
previous one, OIG activity continued to focus on the Universal Service Fund=
=20
(USF) -- which includes the E-rate program --activities because of=20
continuing allegations of waste and fraud, and the results of beneficiary=20
audits performed by contract auditors and Commission staff. Despite limited=
=20
resources, the OIG has implemented an aggressive program for independent=20
oversight of the USF. The oversight program includes: (1) audits conducted=
=20
using internal resources; (2) audits conducted by other federal Offices of=
=20
Inspector General under reimbursable agreements; (3) review of audit work=20
conducted by the Universal Service Administrative Company; and (4) active=20
participation in federal investigations of E-rate fraud.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://www.fcc.gov/oig/SAR_31_FCC-OIG.pdf

UNIVERSAL SERVICE PROCEEDING
In a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Notice) released Tuesday, the FCC=20
announced it is seeking comment on the Recommended Decision of the=20
Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service (Joint Board) concerning the=
=20
process for designation of eligible telecommunications carriers (ETCs) and=
=20
the Commission's rules regarding high-cost universal service support. In=20
its Recommended Decision, the Joint Board recommended that the Commission=20
adopt permissive federal guidelines for states to consider in proceedings=20
to designate ETCs under federal law. In addition, the Joint Board=20
recommended that the Commission limit the scope of high-cost support to a=20
single connection that provides a subscriber access to the public telephone=
=20
network. Finally, the Joint Board recommended that the Commission further=20
develop the record on specific issues identified in its Recommended=20
Decision relating to the high-cost support mechanism, including=20
identification of mobile wireless customer location, and standards for the=
=20
submission of accurate, legible, and consistent maps. The Commission seeks=
=20
comment on whether the Joint Board's recommendations should be adopted, in=
=20
whole or in part, in order to preserve and advance universal service,=20
maintain competitive neutrality, and ensure long-term sustainability of the=
=20
universal service fund. The Commission also seeks comment on several=20
related proposals to streamline rules governing annual certifications and=20
submission of data by competitive ETCs seeking high-cost support.
Hey, hey, slow down! Let's not have everyone click on the URL below at the=
=20
same time. Comments are not due until 30 days after publication in the=20
Federal Register.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-127A1.doc

BROADBAND INTERNET USE UP 42% IN 2003
The FCC reported Tuesday that there were 28.2 million broadband lines in=20
use by the end of 2003 up 42% from 2002. The growth was fueled by=20
residential and small-business subscriptions. Cable-based services=20
continued to be the most popular form of broadband service, the FCC found,=
=20
accounting for 16.4 million lines. Telephone-based digital subscriber line=
=20
service accounted for 9.5 million lines, while 2.3 million high-speed lines=
=20
used satellite, fiber-optic or wireless technologies.
The summary statistics released include state-by-state, population density,=
=20
and household income information, ranked by zip codes. For more info=20
contact: FCC's Industry Analysis and Technology Division at (202) 418-0940
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=3DinternetNews&storyID=3D5...
62
See FCC Press Release:=20
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-248089A1.doc
The report is available online
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/Reports/FCC-State_Link/IAD/hsp...
4.pdf

CIVIL SOCIETY POLICY WEBSITES SET UP IN TEN NATIONS
APC has spent the last two years advocating for civil society involvement=20
in international ICT (information and communications technologies)=20
policy-making processes. Now 10 APC members have created national ICT=20
policy portal websites in their own countries in a joint initiative. The=20
portals which are all uniquely adapted to address each country's particular=
=20
situation all use free software that allows content-sharing in different=20
languages and between multiple information databases hosted in different=20
parts of the world. The portals have been set up by APC members -=20
organizations who work with ICTs for sustainable development, and social=20
and environmental justice- locally in Argentina, Australia, Bulgaria,=20
Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo*, Italy, Mexico, the=20
Philippines, South Africa, Spain, the UK and Uruguay.
More at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Association for Progressive Communications (APC) Press Release]
http://www.apc.org/english/news/index.shtml?x=3D20966
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service=20
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through=20
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,=20
policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are=20
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the=
=20
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang=20
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 6/08/04

As Washington pauses to mourn the passing of former President Ronald=20
Reagan, a number of this week's policy events have been postponed. Please=20
check our media policy calendar http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm for an=20
updated schedule.

MEDIA
Stations Must Track Race, Gender
MAP Backs XM Over NAB
Kerry 'Clarifies' Indecency Position
Television Ad Revenue May Fall

TELECOM
Nextel Offers Public Safety More Spectrum
Cellular Firms Sued in Bid To Ease Switching Service
Airports Clash With Airlines Over Wi-Fi

MEDIA

STATIONS MUST TRACK RACE, GENDER
The FCC is requiring broadcast stations and cable operators to provide the=
=20
Commission annual employment reports breaking down the ethnic and gender=20
breakdown of their work forces. The FCC said the information will be used=20
only to track industry trends and will not be used to judge whether the=20
companies' employment outreach efforts are sufficiently reaching minority=20
and female job-seekers. But industry groups fear that the data will be used=
=20
for lawsuits filed by civil rights groups or other third parties and are=20
asking that the information be kept confidential. The FCC is seeking input=
=20
on this question as it begins collecting the data.
For more information see=20
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-103A1.doc
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA424008?display=3DBreaking+News
(requires subscription)

MAP BACKS XM OVER NAB
Earlier this year, the National Association of Broadcasters filed a=20
petition with the FCC asking the Commission to prohibit XM Satellite=20
Radio's local traffic and weather reports. In comments filed with the FCC=20
late last week, the Media Access Project has requested the Commission hold=
=20
off on ruling on the petition until the FCC has completed its own=20
investigation into how well local commercial broadcasters are serving their=
=20
local markets. Broadcasters complain that XM's service will steal audience=
=20
and threaten radio stations' ability to survive, thus threatening the=20
existence of locally originated programming. But common practices such as=20
importing "voice tracked" recordings of DJs from out-of-town markets and=20
corporate playlists appears to have diminished radio broadcasters'=20
commitment to localism already, read MAP's filing. If the FCC doesn't put=20
the XM review into abeyance, it should declare that satellite radio=20
operators' have the right to provide local content. "It is difficult to=20
imagine how it serves the public interest to foreclose additional, albeit=20
limited, opportunities for locally oriented content when terrestrial radio=
=20
is increasingly failing to provide local service," MAP wrote.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA424013?display=3DBreaking+News
(requires subscription)

KERRY 'CLARIFIES' INDECENCY POSITION
What we have here is a failure to miscommunicate. In March Sen John Kerry=20
(D-MA) voted in support of an amendment to a Senate indecency bill that=20
would have cracked down on cable indecency by applying broadcast indecency=
=20
standards to cable and satellite. So how does that square with comments=20
made over the weekend in a C-SPAN interview in which the Senator said he=20
did not support expanding indecency rules to cable? Well, here's more=20
context. INTERVIEWER: "Philosophically once again, is this emphasis on=20
indecency standards, perhaps even the suggestion that they should be=20
applied to cable television, something that you support philosophically?"=20
SEN KERRY: "I think there is a distinction between public broadcast and the=
=20
notions we've had historically about family time, family hour -- and what=20
you buy privately and personally. I am not in favor of government=20
interference and censorship and restriction of what an individual privately=
=20
can decide to do in their home, in their own space, so to speak." A=20
spokesperson for the Kerry campaign said Monday that the Senator was=20
seeking a middle ground to indecent content on cable: recognizes the need=20
for a balance between individual rights and standards of public decency,=20
something he also spoke about in the interview, and believed the amendment,=
=20
which failed to pass, was an attempt at a reasonable compromise. The=20
amendment, introduced by Senator John Breaux (D-LA), would have applied=20
indecency rules to cable and satellite programming on expanded basic tiers=
=20
until a critical mass (85% of households with children) either could use=20
the V-chip or other blocking technology to block programming or say they=20
don't want to use it. The spokesperson stressed that the amendment applied=
=20
to expanded basic tiers, not premium, and included promotion of the V-Chip=
=20
and that Sen Kerry recognizes that a lot of people don't distinguish=20
between cable and other channels.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA424000?display=3DBreaking+News
(requires subscription)

TELEVISION REVENUE MAY FALL
Last spring, the six big broadcast networks set a record for total revenue,=
=20
estimated at $9.3 billion, by taking in as much as 15 percent more money in=
=20
the advance-sales bazaar, known as the upfront market, than they had in the=
=20
previous spring. This week, as the broadcasters wrap up selling commercial=
=20
time before the start of the 2004-5 season, it is possible they will end up=
=20
flat at best, or more likely fall short of their total last spring by $100=
=20
million to $300 million.
See who's winning and who's losing at the URL below.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stuart Elliott]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/08/business/media/08adco.html
(requires registration)
Also see:
CABLE NETWORKS SEE 17-20% INCREASE IN 'UPFRONT' SALES OF AD TIME
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Michael McCarthy]
http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20040608/6266071s.htm

TELECOM

NEXTEL OFFERS PUBLIC SAFETY MORE SPECTRUM
Nextel has offered to give public safety officials more spectrum -- valued,=
=20
the company says, at $863 million -- in order to complete a rebanding plan=
=20
that would both clear up interference the company is currently causing with=
=20
these officials and give the company valuable spectrum in another band. The=
=20
spectrum would provide public safety officials with space for 40 more=20
communication channels. Other carriers don't think the pot has been=20
sweetened enough. =93This continues to demonstrate that their main objective=
=20
is to better their commercial competitiveness by grabbing 1.9 GHz=20
spectrum,=94 a spokesman for Verizon Wireless said. =93I think this should=
give=20
public safety pause. If the last offer wasn't their best offer, what makes=
=20
them think they=92re getting it now. We continue to believe the [Cellular=20
Telecommunications & Internet Association] plan is the best. This latest=20
effort doesn't give public safety what they really need, which is money.=94=
=20
CTIA also blasted the proposal. =93Our focus remains the same=97crafting a=
=20
proposal that first solves Public Safety interference, while still being=20
equitable and legally sustainable,=94 the group said. =93This latest=
evolution=20
of the consensus plan helps address public safety=92s stated desire for more=
=20
spectrum, but it does not address other important issues=97such as providing=
=20
public safety with adequate funding.=94
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk]
(Not available online)

CELLULAR FIRMS SUED IN BID TO EASE SWITCHING SERVICE
The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights has filed a suit against=20
AT&T Wireless, T-Mobile and Cingular Wireless accusing them of using=20
software in their handsets that prevents them from being used on a=20
competitor's network. The practice effectively thwarts recent federal=20
regulations allowing people to keep phone numbers when switching mobile=20
carriers. The carriers counter that they routinely subsidize handset cost.=
=20
"This subsidy is a great benefit to subscribers," AT&T spokesman Art=20
Navarro said. "We simply can't afford to subsidize phones, however, unless=
=20
they are used on our network. The FCC has previously examined this=20
issue...and found that it promoted competition." The suit was filed in=20
Superior Court in Los Angeles.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Associated Press]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108666050386931318,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)
Additional coverage
LATimes:=20
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-phones8jun08,1,300242...
ory?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

AIRPORTS CLASH WITH AIRLINES OVER WI-FI
A tragedy of the commons, of sorts, is taking place inside America's=20
airports as competing Wi-Fi networks are interfering with eachother. Since=
=20
Wi-Fi signals have a radius of 300 feet or less and interference problems=20
tend to be localized, the FCC hasn't regulated them. But in some cases the=
=20
systems used by carriers to track baggage have been blasted out by systems=
=20
used by other parties to provide other services. Airport management has=20
stepped in, insisting that airlines get permission before installing their=
=20
own systems so the terminal managers can prevent problems with signal=20
interference. Others are asking airlines to make sure that they limit their=
=20
Wi-Fi signals to within the boundaries of allotted space in the airport --=
=20
a request many airlines consider unreasonable. Some airports are taking the=
=20
notion of managing Wi-Fi a step further: They are installing their own=20
networks. But some airlines fume that airports don't have the legal=20
authority to ration the airwaves. They also worry that their own=20
multimillion-dollar systems could be jeopardized: If an airline's Wi-Fi=20
hardware isn't compatible with an airport-installed network, the carrier=20
would have to buy a whole new system. So what do you do? Turn to the=20
regulators, of course. The FCC is being asked to step in and decide whether=
=20
or not landlords -- airports in this case -- have the right to restrict the=
=20
use of unlicensed frequencies.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Amy Schatz at Amy.Schatz( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB108664580246330926,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service=20
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through=20
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,=20
policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are=20
factually accurate, their often informal tone does not always represent the=
=20
tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang=20
(headlines( at )benton.org) -- we welcome your comments.
--------------------------------------------------------------