November 2004

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 11/30/04

Gutierrez Is Pick for Commerce Secretary
President Bush has nominated Carlos Gutierrez, Cuban-born chief executive=20
of the Kellogg cereal company, to replace Donald Evans as secretary of=20
commerce. The Post writes that the Commerce Department is a hodgepodge=20
agency that controls the Census Bureau, the National Oceanic and=20
Atmospheric Administration, the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the=20
National Institute of Standards and Technology (as well as the National=20
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA)). Many of those=20
agencies will probably be on the chopping block when Bush unveils his 2006=
=20
budget request in February.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Mike Allen and Jonathan Weisman]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19761-2004Nov29.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20689-2004Nov29.html
(requires registration)

MEDIA OWNERSHIP
Fox, Viacom/CBS, and GE/NBC Tell Supreme Court:
FCC Ownership Rules Violate Our First Amendment Rights!
Giants Rule the Media Sea
The Next Rebirth of the Media
FCC Sells 258 Stations in First FM Auction
The Future of Broadcast Network News

MORE MEDIA POLICY
FCC Pressed To Enforce Restrictions on Sirius and XM Radio
Consumer Advisory Committee Recommendations on Digital Television

TELECOM
Verizon, Philadelphia Discuss Deal on City's Wi-Fi Proposal
Bell Rivals Struggle to Connect
White Spaces Proposal Threatens Public Safety, APCO Says

QUICKLY -- Education technology; Nielsen, Univision declare truce;=20
Universal service;
Cingular, MetroPCS spectrum deal; Media in China

MEDIA OWNERSHIP

MEDIA GIANTS TELL SUPREME COURT: FCC OWNERSHIP RULES VIOLATE OUR FIRST=20
AMENDMENT RIGHTS!
[Commentary] Three of the country's most powerful media corporations have=20
asked the U.S. Supreme Court for a thirty-day extension as they consider=20
whether to submit arguments designed to eliminate media ownership=20
safeguards. It's clear that these giants are going apoplectic over the=20
decision by the Third Circuit US Court of Appeals last June, which sent=20
most of Michael Powell's conglomerate love letter back for agency review.=20
In a joint filing by Fox, NBC/Telemundo, and Viacom, the networks continue=
=20
their long-running disinformation campaign and abuse of the First=20
Amendment. In their November 19th petition, the gang of three tell the=20
Court that Congress was so "skeptical of the continuing need" for=20
media-ownership rules that "the 1996 Congress enacted Section 202(h) of the=
=20
Telecommunications Act, which directed the FCC to 'review=85all of its=20
ownership rules biennially,' to 'determine whether any of such rules are=20
necessary in the public interest as the result of competition,' and to=20
'repeal or modify any regulation it determines to be no longer in the=20
public interest.'" The 202(h) provision has been cited repeatedly by the=20
networks and other media moguls as the key legal rationale for all media=20
ownership rules to be swept away (except those they favor, of course). But=
=20
the networks didn't tell the Supreme Court that one of them had placed the=
=20
provision in the 1996 legislation as a "poison pill," designed to be a sort=
=20
of "Manchurian Candidate" legal provision that would help them in their=20
campaign to destroy media ownership safeguards.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy]
http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/washingtonwatch/SupremeCourt202.html

GIANTS RULE THE MEDIA SEA
Pulitzer's move to possibly put itself on the market is a sign that=20
newspapers remain attractive businesses, despite declining circulation and=
=20
stiff competition from television, the Internet and other sources of=20
information. But the move also suggests that the days of small, independent=
=20
media companies are numbered, experts say. Before the age of conglomerates,=
=20
when most media companies were privately owned, they answered to three=20
constituencies, said Brian Steffens, executive director of the National=20
Newspaper Association. "Your stakeholders were the owners, the readers and=
=20
the advertisers," he said. When the companies sold stock to the public,=20
they added a fourth constituency - shareholders. That group, Steffens said,=
=20
"has no vested interest in the product, other than monetary return."
[SOURCE: St Louis Post-Dispatch, AUTHOR: Christopher Carey]
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/newswatch/story/591AD5...
A99F7586256F59006D2BA5?OpenDocument&Headline=3DGiants+rule+the+media+sea+&hi=
ghlight=3D2%2Cpulitzer

THE NEXT REBIRTH OF THE MEDIA
[Commentary] The entire media landscape is undergoing basic, fundamental,=20
change. A decade from now, much of what we take for granted will be morphed=
=20
beyond recognition. With broadband Internet flowing in to your PC, personal=
=20
video recorder, iPod, even your cellphone, you will be able to access what=
=20
you like, when you like. Sound great? Maybe for you, but not for broadcast=
=20
TV affiliates who may face extinction as networks find it more economical=20
to distribute programming via the Internet. Without that programming, why=20
would you give any attention to the ex-ABC/CBS/Fox/NBC affiliate in your=20
area? You might, if they offered local programming, but, these days, that's=
=20
the last type of programming you'll get from many affiliates. How will=20
these stations survive? They will have to become local-content specialists,=
=20
with intensely local-news and current-affairs programming the heart of=20
their operations: From micro-coverage via C-SPAN-style narrowcasts of local=
=20
government, to real-time traffic updates, to aggressive development of all=
=20
manner of nonfiction programming, including weather, talk, sports, schools,=
=20
condo and civic association politics, consumer affairs, even local music=20
and arts. And, of course, they will have to compete with local newspapers=20
who are way ahead in this evolution. It's competition that might actually=20
end up leaving the public better informed and better served.
[SOURCE: Miami Herald, AUTHOR: Prof. Edward Wasserman, Washington and Lee=20
University]
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/opinion/10292032.htm?1c
(requires free registration)

FCC SELLS 258 STATIONS IN FIRST FM AUCTION
The FCC raised $147.4 million in the first-ever auction for FM 258 radio=20
licenses. Located in mainly rural areas, the licenses were purchased by new=
=20
entrants to broadcasting as well as some of the biggest conglomerates in=20
radio like Clear Channel (3 licenses in Iowa and Washington) and Cumulus (7=
=20
licenses, each in a different state). In 1997, Congress ordered the FCC to=
=20
issue TV and radio licenses through bidding rather than doling them out to=
=20
applicants the commission deemed most qualified, as it had previously done.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA483748.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also FCC Press Release:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254665A1.doc

THE FUTURE OF BROADCAST NETWORK NEWS
Over the weekend, Newsday and the Chicago Tribune ran long stories=20
addressing the question "will broadcast TV network newscasts survive?" The=
=20
combined audience of the Big Three networks still draw a weekly audience=20
that dwarfs that of cable news networks. And they still produce big=20
profits. But their audience is aging, not very desirable to broadcast=20
advertisers and may not be replaced by younger people who are used to=20
getting news when and where they want to. One industry analyst asks, Why=20
call yourself a network, if you don't runs a news division?
http://www.newsday.com/entertainment/news/ny-fftv4054422nov28,0,6600874....
y
http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/arts/chi-0411280353nov28,1,34354....
y

MORE MEDIA POLICY

FCC PRESSED TO ENFORCE RESTRICTIONS ON SIRIUS AND XM RADIO
With envelope-pushing air talent like Howard Stern and Opie & Anthony=20
flocking to the less-restricted refuge of satellite radio, could the FCC --=
=20
and indecency enforcement -- be far behind? Legal experts think pay=20
services have deeper First Amendment rights, but one broadcaster believes=20
the FCC has the power to regulate satellite radio programming. Saul Levine=
=20
of Mt. Wilson FM Broadcasters has told the FCC that the type of radio=20
service =93is not a relevant consideration=94 in the imposition of=
programming=20
or public-interest rules, nor is whether satellite radio operates as a=20
broadcast or subscription service. In fact, the FCC put satcasters on=20
notice in 1997 that it =93may adopt additional public-interest requirements=
=20
at a later date.=94 Bolstering his case is the fact that some spectrum that=
=20
satellite operators use was granted without an auction, placing it in the=20
province of the public airwaves. Since that slice of spectrum was borrowed,=
=20
not bought, it belongs to the people and, the argument goes, the FCC can=20
attach indecency regulations to it. Andrew Schwartzman of the Media Access=
=20
Project agrees that the FCC has the authority to apply the indecency=20
statute to satellite. But, he adds, =93to do it, they would have to change=
=20
their own current rules, and I'm not so sure they would do it on their own,=
=20
without pressure from Congress. =93The Communications Act defines=20
subscription service broadcasting differently than broadcasting,=94=20
Schwartzman says. =93The FCC has the power to change that. =85 (Whether it=
=20
would) hold up in court is another matter.=94
[SOURCE: Radio Ink]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126024&pt=3Dtodaysnews

CONSUMER ADVISORY COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS ON DIGITAL TELEVISION
On November 19, the FCC's Consumer Advisory Committee (CAC) adopted a=20
number of recommendations for the Commission. Concerning the FCC's "DTV -=20
Get It!" campaign, the CAC recommended: 1) the Commission should convene a=
=20
high-profile panel on consumer concerns; 2) The Commission should strive to=
=20
make all of the DTV outreach materials and information, distributed=20
electronically or physically, accessible to people with disabilities,=20
speakers of other languages, and those with low literacy skills; 3) the FCC=
=20
should move to ensure closed-captioned and video-described DTV content; and=
=20
4) the FCC work to clarify a) financial issues in transitioning from analog=
=20
to digital TV, b) nomenclature confusion, c) emergency warnings and=20
emergency information, d) interference issues and cable reception of=20
off-air signals, e) accelerating the transition via equipment subsidies, f)=
=20
standards and variations consumers will experience as they receive DTV over=
=20
the air, via cable, via satellite and via the emerging VDSL=20
(Very-high-speed Digital Subscriber Line) and fiber-to-the-home (FTTH)=20
delivery of DTV by phone companies, and g) compatibility with recording=20
devices (Personal Video Recorders, DVD-Recorders, etc.) and display devices
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/cac/

TELECOM

VERIZON, PHILADELPHIA DISCUSS DEAL ON CITY'S WI-FI PROPOSAL
The Pennsylvania General Assembly passed legislation this month that could=
=20
make it illegal for municipalities to provide low-cost wireless Internet=20
access via the technology called Wi-Fi, or to provide other=20
telecommunications services. Gov. Edward G. Rendell has until the end of=20
today to sign or veto the pending legislation, which would require=20
municipalities to ask the local phone company for permission to offer such=
=20
services. If the phone company says it plans a similar offering, it would=20
have the power to deny the municipality and then have 14 months to offer it=
=20
themselves. These provisions are part of a much larger bill supported by=20
Verizon that gives phone companies in Pennsylvania large financial=20
incentives if they promise to deploy broadband networks. They are also part=
=20
of a larger trend by telecom providers to lobby legislators to stem=20
competition from the public sector. Verizon is negotiating a deal with=20
Philadelphia that would allow the city to proceed with a planned Wi-Fi=20
network, but watchdog groups say that although it is a good deal for=20
Philly, it is bad news for the rest of PA and cities across America.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker at=
jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110177460936386225,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)

BELL RIVALS STRUGGLE TO CONNECT
Industry executives and investors say the biggest obstacle to success for=20
local telephone service competitors has been legal and regulatory=20
uncertainty. In the past eight years, rules for how local-phone competition=
=20
should work in a mostly deregulated world have been written by the Federal=
=20
Communications Commission three times and repeatedly rebuffed by the=20
courts. Now, as the FCC struggles to draft another set of rules, possibly=20
as soon as next month, congressional leaders are pushing a Telecom Act of=20
2005 that probably would further muddy the waters for those attempting to=20
plot successful strategies.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anne Marie Squeo at=20
annemarie.squeo( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110177370537086201,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)

WHITE SPACES PROPOSAL THREATENS PUBLIC SAFETY, APCO SAYS
In comments in an FCC proceeding due today, the Association of=20
Public-Safety Communications Officials (APCO) asked the FCC to refrain from=
=20
allowing unlicensed
operations between TV channels in the 470-512 MHz band, citing a potential=
=20
risk to public safety. Many groups are expected to oppose the FCC proposal,=
=20
but Edmond Thomas, chief of the FCC Office of Engineering & Technology, has=
=20
said in recent speeches he continues to believe that the TV =93white spaces=
=94=20
can be safely used for wireless Internet and other unlicensed users. APCO=20
notes that some of the largest U.S. public safety agencies use the band,=20
which includes channels 14-20, for their principal portable and mobile=20
systems; the controls proposed by the Commission, APCO says, are=20
inadequate and would lead to =93destructive interference=94 with public=
safety.=20
The Wireless Internet Service Providers Association encouraged the FCC to=20
proceed with opening the unused TV channels to unlicensed users.=20
=93Operations in the TV channel spectrum below 700 MHz will allow users to=
=20
access the unlicensed signals regardless of the amount of arboreal foliage=
=20
along a transmission path,=94 the group
said. =93The impact of universal coverage on small, rural, economically=20
deprived communities will be measurable.=94
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk, Tania=
Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)

QUICKLY

Ed funds up $1.4B, ed-tech off $200M
Though overall education funding will top $57 billion in fiscal year 2005,=
=20
ed-tech advocates are faulting the omnibus spending package for failing to=
=20
provide enough money to support the use of technology in the nation's=20
schools. The legislation has some $200 million less for the Enhancing=20
Education Through Technology (EETT) block-grant program, the primary source=
=20
of federal funding for school technology. Don Knezek, chief executive=20
officer of the International Society for Technology in Education=20
(ISTE), said the final cuts fly in the face of everything the federal=20
government has said with regard to its support of technology in schools. He=
=20
said the current administration has repeatedly tried to justify cuts to=20
smaller technology-specific education programs, such as the now defunct=20
Preparing Tomorrow's Teachers to Use Technology program and the Star=20
Schools program, by continuing to pump money into EETT and other No Child=20
Left behind-related initiatives. But as EETT and other tech-specific=20
education programs continue to suffer major hits, he said, questions abound=
=20
with regard to the federal government's true intentions.
[SOURCE: eSchool News, AUTHOR: Corey Murray]
http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=3D5388

New site highlights ed-tech research
The State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA=20
http://www.setda.org/) has unveiled a new web site intended to highlight=20
nine federally funded studies currently under way in eight states -- all=20
charged with exploring the effects of educational technology on student=20
learning.
[SOURCE: eSchool News, AUTHOR: Corey Murray]
http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=3D5391

Doubts about school computer use
A new study done by Thomas Fuchs and Ludger Woessmann of the CESifo=20
economic research organization in Munich finds that students who use=20
computers often actually perform poorer than those who use them less often.
[SOURCE: BBC News]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/4032737.stml

The Kids Are Online
Kids ages 2 to 11 viewed 106% more Web pages on average in October 2004=20
than two years before in October 2002, according to a Nielsen//NetRatings=20
report.
[SOURCE: eMarketer.com]
http://www.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?1003151

Nielsen's Concessions End Fight With Univision
Univision Communications and Nielsen Media Research have dropped lawsuits=20
against each other over the rollout of Nielsen's controversial "personal=20
people meters," which critics said undercount the size of minority=20
television audiences.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Frank Ahrens]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20829-2004Nov29.html
(requires registration)
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/30/business/media/30adco.html
(requires registration)

FCC Acts To Reduce Backlog of Petitions on Universal Service Issues
The FCC dismissed a number of petitions for reconsideration filed in=20
response to the rules adopted concerning universal service.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-237A1.doc

Cingular, MetroPCS Agree To $230 Million Spectrum Deal
Cingular Wireless agreed to sell wireless spectrum in Dallas and Detroit to=
=20
MetroPCS in a deal valued at $230 million as part of the company's=20
regulatory obligations for its merger with AT&T Wireless Services.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110173867660985543,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_money_and_investing
(requires subscription)

China Blocking Access to Google News Site - Watchdog
China is blocking access to the Web site Google News, media watchdog=20
Reporters Without Borders said on Tuesday, and accused the U.S.-based=20
company of being complicit by filtering its Chinese-language site.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3DDHMKFW5JGPL0ICRBAE...
A?type=3DinternetNews&storyID=3D6951891

Chinese Game Show Offers a Big Prize: A 15-Second Ad Slot
China can be both a centrally planned economy and a sometimes-crass=20
capitalist juggernaut. Both faces show up at the lurid "Economic Olympics,"=
=20
an annual televised event designed to sell advertising on China's state-run=
=20
TV network. During the event, the nation's businessmen bid to buy ad slots=
=20
for 2005 in front of a studio audience and in the process sometimes become=
=20
instant celebrities.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Geoffrey A. Fowler at=20
geoffrey.fowler( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110176504019385950,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(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.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 11/29/04

Back to business in DC with comments due this week on broadcast localism
and unlicensed use of spectrum; forums on universal service and
intellectual property; and the Supreme Court considering cable modems and
media ownership rules. For these and other upcoming media policy events,
see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

MEDIA, ELECTIONS & GOVERNING
$1.6 Billion Spent on Political TV Ads in 2004
In a Sign of the Times, Ukrainian TV Interpreter Makes Bold On-Air Move
Anchor's Ouster Stirs Furor Over Berlusconi's Oversight of Media

MEDIA POLICY
Boxing Bill Has Congressional Telecom Work in Clinch
FCC Reiterates Tougher Smut Rules
In Battle Over Values, Will the Family PC Be the Next Target?
Comcast: FCC Should Ease Regulation
TV, Today and Tomorrow

TELECOM POLICY
FCC Warns SBC on Net Phones
Adelstein's Supporters Helped Win Renomination

QUICKLY TV Lobbying; Cingular to Sell Assets; Film Studios Win Suit Against
Web Site;
"Serious" Video Games; Europe Stalls ContentGuard Deal

MEDIA, ELECTIONS & GOVERNING

$1.6 BILLION SPENT ON POLITICAL TV ADS IN 2004
Candidates, parties and independent groups spent more than $1.6 billion on
television ads in 2004, a record for any campaign year and double the
amount spent in the 2000 presidential election. A total of 1,950,737
political spots aired this year on 615 stations in the nation's top 100
markets. At 30 seconds each, that would be the same as 677 solid days of
advertising. The deluge of ads swamped the meager campaign coverage that
most local stations offered this fall. According to the Lear Center Local
News Archive, in presidential battleground states, a half-hour of local
news averaged almost six minutes of campaign advertising, but only three
minutes of campaign news. Forty-five percent of all campaign stories were
about strategy or horserace, while only 29 percent focused on campaign
issues. Ad watch stories, which truth-check the political commercials, made
up less than one percent of campaign stories in the study's sample.
"Television air time is the number one cost center for candidates in
competitive races," said Meredith McGehee, president of the Alliance for
Better Campaigns. She characterized the heavy ad spending as "an enormous
election-year windfall for broadcasters, who receive free licenses to
operate on the publicly-owned airwaves."
[SOURCE: Alliance for Better Campaigns Press Release]
http://bettercampaigns.org/press/release.php?ReleaseID=65
See also:
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=6800

IN A SIGN OF THE TIMES, UKRAINIAN TV INTERPRETER MAKES BOLD ON-AIR MOVE
Ukraine's state TV channel wasn't broadcasting demonstrations by hundreds
of thousands of supporters of Viktor Yushchenko, the pro-Western candidate
who believes that the presidency was stolen from him through
government-sponsored fraud, so the channel's sign-language interpreter
adopted guerrilla tactics to break the information blockade. Conspiring
with her makeup artist, Ms. Dmytruk tied an orange ribbon inside her
sleeve. Orange is the color of Mr. Yushchenko's campaign, and of the
spreading protest movement that many Ukrainians now call the Orange
Revolution. Then after interpreting the news broadcast for the deaf on Nov.
25, Ms. Dmytruk bared her wrist. "Everything you have heard so far on the
news was a total lie," she says she told viewers in sign language.
"Yushchenko is our true president. Goodbye, you will probably never see me
here again." But a funny thing happened on her way to oblivion... she was
greeted with hugs from her shocked colleagues and even the station's
technicians and the staffs of the daily children's show and other
nonpolitical programs decided to join the strike over the coverage, some of
them inspired by Ms. Dmytruk's broadcast. A few hours later, the evening
newscast opened with a pledge to resist censorship in the future. Ms.
Dmytruk was also back on the air the next morning. Management at the two
other main television networks caved in the same day and allowed balanced
reporting. The break of the government's stranglehold over mass media
proved a turning point in Mr. Yushchenko's campaign to annul the official
results of the Nov. 21 election.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Yaroslav Trofimov
yaroslav.trofimov( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110168408811185171,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
See also:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/28/international/29media.ready.html?oref=...

ANCHOR'S OUSTER STIRS FUROR OVER BERLUSCONI'S OVERSIGHT OF MEDIA
When he first started running for public office more than a decade ago,
Silvio Berlusconi, the billionaire media tycoon who became prime minister,
was often ribbed as Sua Emittenza -- "His Broadcastership." Allegations
that his vast television and publishing empire posed a serious conflict of
interest with running the country have followed him ever since. The latest
controversy surrounds the dismissal of one of Italy's most popular and
respected anchormen, Enrico Mentana, from the nightly newscast on the
Berlusconi-owned Channel 5. After 13 years, Mentana was taken off the air,
given other duties and replaced by the editor of Panorama, a
Berlusconi-owned magazine. Mentana's removal immediately raised concerns
that Berlusconi was acting to assure the media's bland obedience. Mentana
was known for independence and for occasionally airing reports critical of
the prime minister or his right-wing party.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR:Tracy Wilkinson]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-media29nov29,1,4...
(requires registration)

MEDIA POLICY

BOXING BILL HAS CONGRESSIONAL TELECOM WORK IN CLINCH
The spectrum relocation trust fund, enhanced 911 (E-911), junk faxes, and
the universal service fund anti-Deficiency Act modification. All these
items are being held up because of boxing. No, I'm not being metaphorical.
The House has passed legislation dealing with all these issues, but the
Senate has not acted because Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain wants
ensure action on a bill designed to give boxers more protection and lessen
the influence of promoters. The House has considered, but not acted on, a
similar bill. Sources supportive of either Sen McCain or his House
counterpart, Rep Joe Barton (R-TX) used harsh rhetorical language to pin
blame on the other. Each source said the opposing politician's stubbornness
would lead to schools losing E-rate funding, safety lapses due to no E-911
funding and a dearth of spectrum for wireless services.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily 11/26, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)

FCC REITERATES TOUGHER SMUT RULES
In a proposed fine against Beasley Broadcast Group's WQAM(AM) Miami, the
FCC took pains to reiterate its toughened indecency standards for radio and
TV. Beasley argued that the broadcast in question "makes use of 'innuendo
and double entendre' that would not have an 'inescapable and understandable
sexual or excretory import' to children, and cannot therefore give rise to
a finding of indecency." The FCC disagreed, saying they "clearly relay
sexual images that are patently offensive." Beasley also argued the
excerpts were short and out of context and that they did not violate the
community standards of Miami. The FCC countered that they were long enough,
were clearly intended to pander and titillate, and that they did violate a
"reasonable person" standard. The Commission wrote, "We reiterate our
recent statement that multiple serious violations of our indecency rule by
broadcasters may well lead to license revocation proceedings. We also
remind broadcasters that separate utterances within a single broadcast may
be considered separate violations for purposes of determining forfeitures
under our indecency rules."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA483315?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

IN BATTLE OVER VALUES, WILL THE FAMILY PC BE THE NEXT TARGET?
[Commentary] If the country goes on a values campaign, how long will it
take for the Internet-enabled PC to become a target? Politicians,
especially conservative ones, regularly take on "Hollywood values" as
shorthand for a poisonous social force; that was part of the dynamic of the
recent political campaign. But they haven't yet in great numbers taken what
could be considered the next logical step: moving from the living room to
the den to do the same with the Internet and the computer. There was a
Senate Commerce Committee hearing in Washington this month about Internet
pornography at which witnesses made the case that the situation with erotic
material online was analogous to the worst sort of drug epidemic. Using the
language of addiction would make an anti-porn crusade a matter of public
health rather than public morals. Yet it's hard to see anything close to a
social consensus developing around that issue, the way there might be for
one involving ultraviolent video games. Right now, the U.S. television
networks are very busy looking over their shoulders as they decide the
sorts of things they should put on the air. It isn't hard to imagine a
similar kind of response occurring among people responsible for various
parts of the computer industry, even if they don't have anything like the
same sort of direct control over content that broadcasters do. The computer
and the Internet have established themselves as an integral part of many
homes; small wonder if some people will begin to wonder what is being let in.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Lee Gomes lee.gomes( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110168430408285177,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

COMCAST: FCC SHOULD EASE REGULATION
With the Federal Communications Commission nearing release of its annual
pay-TV-competition report to Congress, Comcast is urging the agency to roll
back rules that the cable giant said are inconsistent with a competitive
pay TV market. Specifically, Comcast wants a rule that would totally
deregulate all cable systems in a state where direct-broadcast satellite
penetration exceeds 15%. Current rules require cable operators to prove
that an individual franchise area has 15% penetration by pay TV rivals.
Comcast's proposal would result in total cable deregulation in 41 states,
according to data the National Cable & Telecommunications Association
submitted to the FCC July 23. Comcast also urged the FCC to "initiate a
review" of its program-access rules, which require Comcast to sell its
satellite-delivered programming to EchoStar and DirecTV. The FCC, Comcast
said, should eliminate the rule prior to its October 2007 sunset, or at
least allow the company to withhold programming from EchoStar and DirecTV,
which are allowed to secure exclusive program rights with affiliated and
unaffiliated programmers and not sell those services to cable operators.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA483302.html?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)

TV, TODAY AND TOMORROW
BusinessWeek has a special report on digital television this week and
identifies three drivers for DTV adoption: broadband Internet, wireless
home networking, and high-definition broadcasting. Included in the package
of articles is a look at the "spectrum showdown." Broadcasters received
free electronic airwaves -- which are technically owned by the public and
controlled by the federal government -- for digital transmissions. In
return, they had to give back the airwaves they now use for their old
analog broadcasts, which had been doled out over several decades. But they
didn't have to return it until 85% of U.S. households receive digital
signals or the year 2006, whichever came later. Now patience is running out
for the broadcasters to turn in that valuable piece of the sky. The year
2006 is just around the corner, and carriers are now sending digital
signals that reach 85% of households in just about all of the nation's 210
TV markets (even though not all those households have digital-ready TVs).
The spectrum is very valuable to wireless technologies from cell phones to
wireless, high-speed Internet access. But regulators and lawmakers have
lacked the political will so far to boot the powerful broadcasters out of
their analog space.
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek]
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/tc_special/tc_04hdtv.htm

TELECOM POLICY

FCC WARNS SBC ON NET PHONES
The FCC told phone giant SBC Communications to make sure a new pricing plan
it is offering to Internet phone companies isn't a back-door attempt to
levy higher fees on an emerging technology, or the company could face an
investigation. In a statement released Friday, FCC Chairman Michael Powell
said it appears that a new tariff SBC last week said it would charge
doesn't necessarily raise questions because it's not mandatory and Internet
phone companies can continue to use lower-cost alternatives. But, he added,
"should we conclude that this tariff is being used to justify the
imposition of traditional tariffed access charges on [Internet phone]
providers or to discriminate against SBC's competitors, the commission will
take appropriate action including, but not limited to, initiating an
investigation."
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110150508756684437,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
See also:
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Reuters]
http://news.com.com/FCC+is+watching+SBCs+VoIP+charge/2100-7352_3-5468448...
Statement by FCC Chairman Powell:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254681A1.doc

ADELSTEIN'S SUPPORTERS HELPED WIN RENOMINATION
The renomination of FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein to another FCC term
surprised many industry observers who thought his chance to stay on the FCC
ended with the defeat of his mentor, Senate Minority Leader Thomas Daschle
(D-SD). But apparently Daschle's defeat itself jump-started Adelstein's
stalled nomination. Commissioner Adelstein's strong focus on rural issues
helped him win the support of rural commercial interests and Republicans in
rural states around the country -- including John Thune (R-SD), the man who
defeated Daschle. Before the election, Adelstein's main foe appears to have
been President Bush's chief political adviser Karl Rove who did not want to
do anything that could appear to be a help for Daschle. Several sources
questioned why President Bush would re-appoint a commissioner who held
opposite views on several issues -- particularly media ownership -- but one
offered a well-known saying to describe Bush's rationale: "The devil you
know is better than the devil you don't." Several sources speculated that
while other candidates for the Democratic seat may have offered a change
from Adelstein on some fronts, the Administration still needed to find a
Democrat for the seat who would be supported by Senate Democrats. As one
industry source told us, once the political war of the elections ended,
both Republicans and Democrats had interests in putting the fighting aside
and moving nominees that both could agree on. Adelstein was just one of
the more than 170 nominees that the Senate agreed to.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily 11/29, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)

QUICKLY

RETURNING TO THE GENRE HE STARTED
A look at the godfather of TV lobbying, Ben Goddard. In 1993, several chief
executives of health insurance companies approached Goddard and his partner
in media consulting, Rick Claussen. President Bill Clinton had just
proposed a sweeping health care program. If he got his way, one of the
executives told Goddard, "I'm out of business." Goddard suggested a radical
solution -- an advertisement nicknamed "Harry and Louise" after the
fictional couple that did all the talking. To the shock of many insiders,
it killed the president's initiative and launched a lobbying-by-television
wave. Goddard now says he foresees rapid growth in the already widely used
method. He also expects an increasing use of innovative formats, especially
via the Internet.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jeffrey H. Birnbaum]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A18417-2004Nov28.html
(requires registration)

CINGULAR TO SELL ASSETS TO ALLTEL AS PART OF AT&T WIRELESS DEAL
Alltel, the country's sixth-biggest cellular carrier with 8.2 million
subscribers, will buy licenses, network equipment and subscribers from
Cingular Wireless for $170 million to help Cingular meet federal
divestiture requirements as part of its purchase of AT&T. Roughly 200,000
customers will be transferred to Alltel as part of the deal which will need
approval by federal regulators.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110147884694084250,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

FILM STUDIOS WIN $24 MILLION AGAINST WEB SITE
Hollywood's major movie studios said they won a $23.8 million judgment
against a California company and its Malaysian owner for operating a Web
site that charged customers to download illegally copied movies.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=H5TNDIUFKQ4G2CRBAE0C...

VIDEO GAMES TEACH MORE THAN HAND-EYE COORDINATION
Video games, often maligned as having little or no redeeming value, are
becoming a way for firefighters, soldiers, currency traders and college
administrators to hone their skills. See more about "serious games" at the
URL below.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=CU1XBRYWMAJP0CRBAEKS...

EUROPE STALLS CONTENTGUARD DEAL
Since April, Microsoft and Time Warner have been trying to purchase
ContentGuard, a pioneer in digital rights management (DRM). But, in an
indication of just how important the world of digital rights has become,
the deal has been stalled while the European Commission considers whether
the purchase would give Microsoft a monopoly in the digital-rights
management market.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Victoria Shannon]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/29/technology/29newecon.html
(requires registration)
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 11/23/04

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

TODAY'S QUESTION comes from our last story... yes, this may well be a false
choice, but would you trade peer-to-peer networks for tighter gun control?

MEDIA POLICY
Appeals Court Tells FCC to Say Why It Hasn't Acted on Must-Carry
FCC, Viacom Agree on Indecency Fine
More Indecent News
Children's Programming Obligations for Digital Television Broadcasters
Let the Market Decide

JOURNALISM
Dan Rather Stepping Away from Anchor Chair
Radio Liberty

INTERNET
E-Rate Program Issues New Funding Commitments
Bytes and Bullets

MEDIA POLICY

APPEALS COURT TELLS FCC TO SAY WHY IT HASN'T ACTED ON MUST-CARRY
The FCC must tell the U.S. Appeals Court in Washington, DC within 30 days
why it hasn't acted on DTV must-carry, the court ruled. The cable industry
immediately urged the FCC to respond by reaffirming decisions reached in
2001 that dual must-carry regulations would likely be unconstitutional. The
court ruling was in response to an action brought by Paxson Communications
which wants the FCC to resolve broadcasters' cable carriage rights for
their DTV signals. After the FCC responds, Paxson then will have 14 days to
respond, the court said in the brief order.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Anne Veigle]
(Not available online)
See more in B&C:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482802?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

FCC, VIACOM AGREE ON INDECENCY FINE
On Tuesday, the FCC entered into a $3.5 million Consent Decree with Viacom
and certain of its subsidiaries to resolve investigations into whether
Viacom broadcast stations, as well as non-Viacom owned affiliates of the
CBS Television Network and UPN, had aired obscene, indecent, and/or profane
material in violation of the Communications Act and Commission rules. As
part of the agreement, Viacom admits that some of the material that it
broadcast was indecent. In addition to the $3.5 million payment to the
U.S. Treasury, Viacom has committed to implementing a company-wide
Compliance Plan aimed at preventing future violations. Communications Daily
reports that Viacom will install video and audio time delay controls at TV
and radio stations. Any future airing of indecent content will result in
suspension and an investigation of the employees responsible. Viacom said
it also intended to continue its efforts to encourage parents to use
ratings and V-chips tools to make informed
decisions on the programming their children watch. The Wall Street Journal
reports that the payment will cover five outstanding fines totaling
$440,500 involving radio programs. It also will settle numerous other
incidents under investigation by the FCC that could have led to millions of
dollars in additional penalties. Among them was an expected fine of nearly
$1.5 million related to shock jock Howard Stern's raunchy on-air antics, as
well as complaints involving television shows on CBS and UPN including
"Cold Case," "CSI" and the Victoria's Secret annual fashion show. The
Washington Post reports that the biggest fine covered in the settlement was
spurred by an August 2002 broadcast of the "Opie & Anthony Show" in which
the hosts, since fired and now employed by XM Satellite Radio, aired what
the FCC described as a "couple engaged in actual or simulated sexual
activity inside [New York's] St. Patrick's Cathedral while the program
hosts . . . discussed that activity on the air." Notably, the agreement
does not include last year's Super Bowl, Viacom will still fight that fine.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254596A1.doc
Order: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-268A1.doc
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)
Wall Street Journal:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110124179578082178,00.html?mod=todays...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8977-2004Nov23.html
LA Times:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-fi-viacom24nov24,1,101...

MORE INDECENT NEWS
The FCC had additional announcements concerning indecent broadcasts: 1) the
Commission issued a $55,000 Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture
against WQAM License Limited Partnership, a subsidiary of Beasley Broadcast
Group, Inc., for the willful broadcast of sexually explicit material over
Station WQAM(AM), Miami, Florida; 2) the FCC denied indecency complaints
against "Off Centre" episodes; 3) FCC denied indecency complaints against
"Coupling" episodes; and 4) FCC denied indecency complaints against "Keen
Eddie" episode.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
(http://www.fcc.gov)
WQAM: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254172A1.doc
"Off Centre":
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254607A1.doc
"Coupling": http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254588A1.doc
"Keen Eddie":
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254583A1.doc

CHILDREN'S PROGRAMMING OBLIGATIONS FOR DIGITAL TELEVISION BROADCASTERS
Sure it was adopted September 9, but those new kidvid rules are now
available online. See the URL below. Broadcasting&Cable provides the
following on the Order. Starting in January 2006, promos for other shows
aired during kids' TV shows will count as advertisements unless the shows
promoted are educational/informational. The FCC says the new rules apply to
cable as well as broadcasting, analog as well as digital, and it would like
to apply them to DBS, too, though that is only a tentative conclusion.
Digital broadcasters who broadcast free video services must increase that
three-hour core minimum by one-half hour for every 1-28 hours of additional
free multicast content. That would work out to an additional three hours
for every new 24/7 channel it added. Half of that material can be repeats
of the core three hours, however. Although many of the changes don't kick
in until January 2006, the rules applying to the definition of core kids
programming kick in February 1, 2005.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-221A1.doc
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA483195.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

LET THE MARKET DECIDE
A short paper from CU on the advantages of a la carte pricing options for
cable TV. CU has been critical of the recently-released FCC report on a la
carte. As cable companies across the nation hike rates yet again -- in some
cases by double-digit increases -- the FCC, CU says, missed a prime
opportunity to help put a lid on higher cable bills by skewing its report
to Congress on the benefits of letting cable customers pick and pay only
for the channels they want. Consumers Union said an FCC analysis released
on cable a la carte is dramatically flawed because it studies a model not
advocated for by consumer groups. Specifically, it focuses primarily on a
mandatory a la carte system rather than the voluntary system Consumers
Union and other public interest groups have proposed. It also inflates the
cost by assuming that everyone would have to buy or rent a special cable
box, when consumer groups have said that the proposal should target digital
cable subscribers, who already pay for the box.
[SOURCE: Consumers Union]
http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/0901%20a%20la%20carte%20white%20paper.pdf
http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_telecom_and_utilities/001656.html...

JOURNALISM

DAN RATHER STEPPING AWAY FROM ANCHOR CHAIR
The National Guard story has done in Dan Rather, he will end his 24-year
run as CBS News anchor in March. Rather's departure could signal the rise
and influence of politically motivated Internet "bloggers," who
relentlessly attacked him and the documents that were used to back up his
60 Minutes story. Some political and media analysts have said the
"Memogate" scandal damaged CBS News' reputation, especially among viewers
in largely rural, conservative states -- the network's core audience. The
moves will leave ABC's Peter Jennings as the sole survivor among the
longtime anchors at the Big Three networks at a time when their clout and
influence -- and perhaps their news divisions -- are declining as more
Americans turn to other news sources. This dramatic decline was underscored
by a post-election poll conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People
& the Press. The survey found that more voters called cable TV their
primary source of campaign news rather than the broadcast networks.
[SOURCE: USAToday]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041124/1a_dancov24.art.htm
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041124/a_hype24.art.htm

RADIO LIBERTY
[Commentary] The media are once again not free in Russia, the hand of the
government is growing heavier, and anti-Americanism is rampant. So,
perhaps, Radio Liberty, the U.S.-funded Russian-language broadcaster, is
needed now more than ever. But there's consideration now to revamp the
service with shorter programs and a greater reliance on journalists based
in Moscow instead of in Prague. Radio Liberty's president, Thomas A. Dine,
says the changes will make the station more accessible to Russians
accustomed to an FM-radio format and will provide more news about Russia
itself. His opponents within the service argue that the move from Prague to
Moscow risks putting Radio Liberty editors under greater pressure from the
Russian government and will make the station indistinguishable from
hundreds of others in Russia. The Post urges Congress to monitor the
changes and concludes: The imposition of a one-size-fits-all plan to make
American broadcasters sound more like Russian broadcasters (or worse, more
like American pop music stations) wouldn't serve the causes of human
rights, public diplomacy or anything else.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: WP Editorial Staff]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8895-2004Nov23.html
(requires registration)

INTERNET

E-RATE PROGRAM ISSUES NEW FUNDING COMMITMENTS
The Schools and Libraries Division of the Universal Service Administrative
Company has approved $24.2 million in new funding for projects and services
and expects to issue additional funding letters by the end of the
month. The commitments will fund some of the applications and appeals
remaining from 2003 and prior funding years. USAC had issued $764 million
in commitment letters for funding year 2004 before new letters were
suspended in August. Letters to be sent near the end of November will be
for additional Funding Year 2004 commitments that have been approved for
funding and for which cash is available. Additional Funding Year 2004
commitments will be issued in the future as money is available.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254540A1.doc
The American Library Association is asking for support of legislation that
could fix the E-rate's accounting problems. See the Action Alert at:
http://www.ala.org/ala/washoff/WOissues/techinttele/erate/erate.htm

BYTES AND BULLETS
[Commentary] A federal court declared that the manufacturers of the most
popular forms of peer-to-peer (p2p) file-sharing technology are not liable
for copyright infringement committed by people using their technology and
Congress considered legislation to reverse the court's ruling. The goal is
to make it clear that p2p manufacturers are indeed liable for copyright
violations committed with their products. A recent proposal from the
Copyright Office purports to hold manufacturers responsible for
"technolog[ies]" that "cause" copyright "infringement," if those
technologies 1) rely on infringement for "commercial viability," 2) derive
"a predominant portion" of their revenue from infringement and 3) rely on
infringement to "attract individuals" to the technology. Lessig opposes the
legislation but asks, "if Congress passes this bill, on what principled
basis can it then refuse to hold gun manufacturers responsible for the
crimes committed with their technologies?"
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Lawrence Lessig, Stanford University]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8882-2004Nov23.html
(requires registration)
Also see how the record industry is now embracing file swapping.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/10261238.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 11/23/04

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

With over 80,000 comments filed in the FCC's Localism inquiry, the National
Association of Broadcasters has requested and received an extension on the
due date for Reply Comments. They are now due Monday, January 3, 2005 -- so
get reading!
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-3657A1.doc

TELEVISION POLICY
Major Networks May Challenge Rationale of Media Ownership Regulation
Broadcasters, FCC Clash on DTV Plan
DTV-Deadline Push Crashes
TV Stations Slow to Invest in New Time Delay Tools
PTC, McCain Slam a la Carte Report
Congress Approves Funds for Public Broadcasting
Guard Story Not Political, Says Redstone

INTERNET
E-Rate Accounting Problem Awaits Action
Telecom Giants Oppose Cities On Web Access
Between Big Media and Brotherly Love
Growth of High-Speed Internet Disappoints Some Experts

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
Senate Passes Scaled-Back Copyright Measure
Providing Videogames, Movies In a Family-Friendly Format

TELEVISION POLICY

MAJOR NETWORKS MAY CHALLENGE RATIONALE OF MEDIA OWNERSHIP REGULATION
NBC Universal, News Corp. and Viacom on Monday informed the United States
Supreme Court that they're seriously considering urging the high court to
overturn its landmark Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC decision -- the case
that established the bedrock legal rationale for subjecting broadcasters to
media ownership regulation and other special rules. In its 1969 Red Lion
decision, the high court said that the fact that broadcasters used a scarce
government resource to deliver their programming over the air justified
special Federal Communications Commission regulation of the industry in the
public interest.
[SOURCE: TVWeek, AUTHOR: Doug Halonen]
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=6779

BROADCASTERS, FCC CASH ON DTV PLAN
The trade press is abuzz with news that broadcasters are organizing a
coalition, led by NBC Universal, dedicated to derailing a Federal
Communications Commission plan that would likely terminate analog TV in the
United States Dec. 31, 2008. An official announcement on the creation of
the coalition is expected today and will include the National Association
of Broadcasters, ABC and CBS affiliate groups, minority and rural
representatives and some broadcast unions. It will go by the name Coalition
for a Smart Digital TV Transition. [The name "Coalition for Slowing the
Digital TV Transition to a Snail's Pace" was already taken.] The Coalition
of the (un)willing is taking their message to Congress given House Energy
and Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton (R-TX) support for a Dec. 31,
2006 deadline for the transition to digital-only TV broadcasting. He
supports set-top subsidies to ensure that at least the poor continued to
have access to free TV could with funding coming from the auction of the
returned analog spectrum. The FCC is also considering a plan that would end
the transition by 2009 and is considering a December vote on that plan.
Putting the public first (as always) "[t]he Coalition is united in asking
the FCC not to act in December 2004, before the American public can weigh
in on its plan," the group told a gathering of key Hill staffers Monday.
B'casters Trying to Derail Ferree Plan
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA482700.html?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
Broadcasters Push DTV-Decision Delay
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482314.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

DTV-DEADLINE PUSH CRASHES
The intelligence reform bill stalled in Congress this week, so that means
provisions that would set a hard date for the return of analog TV licenses
for channels 62 and higher. The bill could still move in December but
disputes about other provisions are holding it up. The spectrum would be
allocated by public safety officials; their lack of spectrum is seen as a
contributing factor to the difficulties of emergency workers on 9/11.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482315.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TV STATIONS SLOW TO INVEST IN NEW TIME DELAY TOOLS
Despite recent profanity utterances during live broadcasts, which could
result in FCC indecency fines, many
TV stations are slow to adopt new technology that would automatically bleep
out indecent content, several technology
suppliers said. Smaller TV stations in particular are unprotected, largely
for financial reasons, they said. Radio stations, however, are adopting the
technology, mainly because of the view that FCC indecency enforcement comes
down harder on radio.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)

PTC, McCAIN SLAM A LA CARTE REPORT
The Parents Television Council, claiming that cable television is flooded
with obscene and pornographic content, ripped a Federal Communications
Commission report that found that the per-channel sale of cable networks
would cause more harm than good, even for subscribers who want to block
indecent content. "The FCC's report on 'a la carte' was hopelessly
inadequate, as it barely mentioned the prime reason why so many people want
cable choice: Cable is completely awash in raunch," PTC executive director
Tim Winter said in a prepared statement. Because of the PTC's
dissatisfaction with the FCC's study, Winter said his group would ask the
agency to prepare a new report on indecent cable programming and demand
that the cable industry yield on the a la carte issue. The PTC released a
study last week that included excerpts from Comedy Central, MTV: Music
Television, E! Entertainment Television, Spike TV, TBS and FX that the
group said proved that basic "cable was awash in raunch" that had to be
stopped if a la carte were not an option.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA482272.html?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)

CONGRESS A[PPROVES FUNDS FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING
Over the weekend, the Congress approved the final FY 2005 omnibus
appropriations measure. It included $400 million for CPB in FY 2007; $39.7
million in digital transition funds for FY 2005; and $40 million in public
television interconnection funds for FY 2005. In addition to the CPB
accounts, the omnibus funded the following public broadcasting programs:
Ready to Learn -- $23.5 million for FY 2005; Ready to Teach -- $14.4
million for FY 2005; and Public Telecommunications Facilities Program
(Department of Commerce) -- $21 million for FY 2005. All FY 05 funding is
subject to an .83 percent across-the-board reduction, including CPB's
current year FY 2005 appropriation, approved in 2002. In addition, three
board members who were up for confirmation were also approved over the
weekend--Claudia Puig, Univision Radio; Gay Hart Gaines, Regent, board of
Mount Vernon; Ernest J. Wilson III, professor, University of Maryland.
Wilson was for a second term, the other two had been recess appointments.
[SOURCE: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Press Release]
http://www.cpb.org/programs/pr.php?prn=388
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482435.html?display=Breaking+...

GUARD STORY NOT POLITICAL, SAYS REDSTONE
Although he keeps a distance from the decisions of CBS News, Viacom
Chairman Sumner Redstone said he does not believe 60 Minutes' story about
President Bush's National Guard service was politically motivated. If it
were, he added, everyone would be fired. [So, come on all you
conservatives, its OK to watch my TV network news again.] He also commented
on the Monday Night Football fiasco saying the intro was inappropriate, but
not illegal.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482701.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

INTERNET

E-RATE ACCOUNTING PROBLEM AWAITS ACTION
The E-rate accounting problems have not been fixed yet by Congress and
could mean steep increases in consumers' long distance bills. For E-rate
recipients this could also mean shutting down existing services that might
not be receiving subsidies soon. The problem with the legislative fix
suggested during the lame-duck Congress is that it has now been scored by
the Congressional Budget Office with Congress estimating it would increase
the program's budget.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane, Edie Herman]
(Not available online)

TELECOM GIANTS OPPOSE CITIES ON WEB ACCESS
Many cities have plans to turn their municipalities into vast Wi-Fi hot
spots with free or very low-cost wireless Internet connections. But, writes
Drucker, that's bad news for the large Bell telephone companies and cable
operators, who are looking to their digital-subscriber-line (DSL) and
cable-modem businesses for growth. Legislation awaiting the governor's
signature in Pennsylvania would make it illegal for any "political
subdivision" to provide to the public "for any compensation any
telecommunications services, including advanced and broadband services
within the service territory of a local exchange telecommunications company
operating under a network-modernization plan." Critics denounce this
legislative tactic, arguing that the U.S. lags behind other countries in
broadband Internet access because the phone and cable companies have been
slow to roll out the service in some areas. "We should be encouraging our
municipalities to take a major role in broadband, the way other countries
are doing," says James Baller, a big-hearted attorney in Washington, D.C.,
who represents local governments on telecommunications issues. The telecom
companies argue that it is unfair for them to have to compete against the
government. They say that the legislation enables them to improve service
to their customers by investing in their networks.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110116864041881375,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

BETWEEN BIG MEDIA AND BROTHERLY LOVE
[Commentary] Banish the notion that America's communications industry helps
nurture technological innovation that makes media more accessible to
average Americans. The reality today is that we live in an era where large
corporations work hand-in-hand with lobbyists and compliant legislators to
stifle any technology that returns control of our media system to the
public. The latest evidence lies hidden within proposed legislation that
would effectively kill efforts in Philadelphia to provide citywide wireless
access at little or no charge.
[SOURCE: MediaChannel.org, AUTHOR: Timothy Karr]
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert292.shtml

GROWTH OF HIGH-SPEED INTERNET DISAPPOINTS SOME EXPERTS
Some coverage of the Department of Commerce report, A Nation Online:
Entering the Broadband Age. The number of Americans using fast Internet
connections doubled from 2001 through late 2003, still below some
expectations and especially low among minority groups and people in rural
areas. Only 1 in 7 blacks and fewer than 1 in 8 Hispanics lives in a
household with broadband service while one in four white Americans used
high-speed connections at home. In urban areas, 40.4% of households used
fast connections; only 24.7% of rural users did. Significant numbers of
rural residents said they couldn't subscribe to high-speed services because
none was available. Most Americans who did not use fast connections said
service was either too expensive or they did not need it.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Ted Bridis, Associated Press]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041123/a_internet23.art.htm

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

SENATE PASSES SCALED-BACK COPYRIGHT MEASURE
The Senate has voted to outlaw several favorite techniques of people who
illegally copy and distribute movies -- secretly videotape movies when they
are shown in theaters AND hackers and industry insiders who distribute
music, movies or other copyrighted works before their official release
date. Left out were several more controversial measures that would
criminalize the actions of millions of U.S. Internet users who copy music
and movies for free over "peer to peer" networks like Kazaa. The bill also
shields "family friendly" services like ClearPlay that strip violent or
sexually explicit scenes from movies. Hollywood groups say such services
violate their copyrighted works by altering them without permission.
Gigi B. Sohn, president of Public Knowledge said, "Consumers won a major
victory when the Senate passed legislation removing the most egregious
elements of the omnibus copyright bill that had previously been under
consideration. We strongly support the version of the Family Movie Act,
included in the bill, which gives families more control over how they watch
movies and television, preserving the right to skip over commercials. The
bill will benefit consumers, both in their entertainment choices now, and
from the innovation in technology that will result in coming years."
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=DZYT5QPY22MLICRBAEZS...
See also:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482582?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
http://www.publicknowledge.org/pressroom/pressrelease.2004-11-22.6500991518

PROVIDING VIDEOGAMES, MOVIES IN A FAMILY-FRIENDLY FORMAT
eGames and other small businesses have pursued their own niche --
family-friendly entertainment -- saying there's a rising demand for games
and movies without the profanity, sex and violence often featured in the
top sellers of large movie studios and videogame publishers. While eGames
develops original content, a handful of start-ups have found a market
offering family-friendly versions of Hollywood-produced entertainment.
Principle Solutions sells a filter, TVGuardian, which mutes objectionable
words in television programming and DVDs by reading the closed-captioning
signal for the hearing-impaired. CleanFlicks Media produces edited copies
of movies for rental and sale that cut what company President Allan Erb
deems unnecessary sex and violence, as well objectionable language. Film
studios and the Directors Guild of America are suing CleanFlicks and
several other firms that sell electronic filters, alleging copyright and
trademark infringement. CleanFlicks says there has been no violation of the law
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Peter Loftus peter.loftus( at )dowjones.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110117376262381535,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. 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 11/22/04

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

WASHINGTON DECISIONS
Senate Approves Adelstein; Congress Passes SHVIA
Congress Blocks Taxes On Internet Connections
FCC GOP Seat Up for Grabs?

TELEVISION
'Private Ryan' and Public Censorship
Many Who Voted for 'Values' Still Like Their Television Sin
TV Shows Discover New Setting: Wal-Mart
Report on Cable A La Carte Pricing Model
Local Cable Wins War, Loses Election

QUICKLY: Radio One Gets Bigger; FCC Underwriting Rules Questioned; Software
Defined Radio;
Broadband from a Power Outlet; Supreme Court to Discuss Modem Case

WASHINGTON DECISIONS

SENATE APPROVES ADELSTEIN; CONGRESS PASSES SHVIA
Late Saturday evening, FCC Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein was approved
by the Senate for a new, full term at the Commission. The Satellite Home
Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA) was passed by Congress as part of the
Omnibus Appropriations bill. The legislation will renew compulsory license
agreements for DBS providers and end EchoStar's two-dish business practice
in 18 months. SHVIA will create more opportunities for DBS providers to
deliver distant digital signals, while it will impose more conditions on
DBS to take local-to-local packages. The bill also creates some
restrictions on DBS delivery of distant digital signal delivery. Both
satellite industry and broadcast sources have said they got what they
wanted in the bill.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)
For more on SHVIA see
http://news.com.com/Congress+approves+satellite+transmission+bill/2100-1...

CONGRESS BLOCKS TAXES ON INTERNET CONNECTIONS
Congress on Friday blocked state and local governments from taxing
connections that link consumers to the Internet for the next three years.
The legislation extends a previous ban that expired in November 2003. It
applies to all types of Internet-access services from traditional dial-up
services to high-speed broadband lines from cable companies and Baby Bells.
The bill also blocks multiple state and local taxes from being imposed on
merchandise purchased over the Internet.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110088866979379431,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
See also:
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041122/int_news22_5b.art.htm

FCC GOP SEAT UP FOR GRABS?
Now that Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein will be back (see story above),
speculation has turned to Republican Kathleen Abernathy term at the FCC.
Her term ended in June, but she is entitled to remain on the Commission
through next year or until a replacement is confirmed. Although she hasn't
spoken publicly about the matter, it is widely believed that she is ready
to return to the private sector. Who could replace her? Rebecca Armendariz
Klein, the former chairwoman of the Texas Public Utility Commission (PUC);
Earl Comstock, who represents Earthlink and Yahoo for Washington law firm
Sher & Blackwell -- he is a former aide to Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who
is the incoming chairman of the Commerce Committee; Michael Gallagher, head
of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, or
Janice Obuchowski, a telecommunications consultant.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482076.html?display=The+Beat&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TELEVISION

'PRIVATE RYAN' AND PUBLIC CENSORSHIP
Under new FCC rules, context, quality and parental warnings repeated ad
nauseum no longer matter when considering indecency fines. When numerous
ABC affiliates refused to air Saving Private Ryan on Veterans Day, these
broadcasters vividly demonstrated that the chilling effect of the FCC's
newly expanded indecency regulations on appropriate, important and
educational speech on free over-the-air television is no scholarly
abstraction but is very real, costly and dangerous. The real Private Ryans
and his fellow veterans of World War II fought so that their children might
continue to enjoy the freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution. Today, those
children -- and the broadcasters who serve them -- must continue that fight.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Jonathan Rintels & Peggy Charren,
Center for Creative Voices in Media]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482149?display=Opinion&referr...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

MANY WHO VOTED FOR 'VALUES' STILL LIKE THEIR TELEVISION SIN
We embrace values in a President, but, perhaps, not in our living rooms. In
interviews, representatives of the four big broadcast networks as well as
Hollywood production studios said the nightly television ratings bore
little relation to the message apparently sent by a significant percentage
of voters. The choices of viewers, whether in Los Angeles or Salt Lake
City, New York or Birmingham, Ala., are remarkably similar. And that means
the election will have little impact on which shows they decide to put on
television, these executives say.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Bill Carter]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/22/business/media/22tube.html
(requires registration)

TV SHOWS DISCOVER NEW SETTING: WAL-MART
Wal-Mart is one of the biggest spenders on television, plunking down more
than $500 million on network TV last year and almost $340 million so far
this year, according to Nielsen Monitor-Plus. On Viacom's CBS alone, the
chain spent $40.4 million on commercials in the first seven months of this
year. And although other brands spend big money for product placement
within TV programs, Wal-Mart has seen rough treatment of late in
Viacom/CBS' "Without a Trace," Fox's "King of the Hill" and Viacom/Comedy
Central's "South Park." "From PBS to 'South Park' -- it just shows you how
much a part of the culture we are," says Mona Williams, vice president of
communications for Wal-Mart.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Ann Zimmerman ann.zimmerman( at )wsj.com &
Joe Flint joe.flint( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110107835818580311,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

REPORT ON CABLE A LA CARTE PRICING MODEL
On Friday, the Media Bureau of the FCC released its report on the efficacy
of 'a la carte' pricing in the pay-television service industry. The Report
found that although an a la carte option would allow consumers to pay for
only the programming they choose, given current viewing practices, few
consumers would experience lower bills for multi-channel programming. The
Report also includes several policy recommendations that the Congress and
Commission should consider to enhance consumer choice, foster competition
and provide consumers with the tools to prevent objectionable programming
from entering their home. The Media Bureau Report found that an a la carte
regime would not produce the desired result of lower rates for most
pay-television households. The Report estimates that the impact on retail
rates of pure or mandatory a la carte sales indicates that only those
consumers who would purchase fewer than nine programming networks may see a
reduction in their monthly cable bill. Consumers who purchase at least
nine networks will likely face an increase in their monthly bills. The
average cable household watches approximately 17 channels, including
broadcast stations. If the average household purchased each of these
channels under an a la carte regime, it would likely face a monthly rate
increase under a la carte sales of between 14% and 30%.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254443A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254432A1.pdf
See also:
* Allowing Cable-Channel Choice Would Raise Rates, Study Says
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anne Marie Squeo
annemarie.squeo( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110088278769379364,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
* Report May Slow a la carte Cable Push
USAToday: "It appears the industry has been successful once again in
distracting policymakers with a 'parade of horribles,' " said Senate
Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain, R-AZ. "I will continue working to
provide (consumers) with more choices and lower prices" either through
voluntary a la carte or more pay-TV competition.
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041122/3b_cable_22.art.htm

LOCAL CABLE WINS WAR, LOSES ELECTION
Advertising spending on cable was up 14% in 2004. Several operators and
National Cable Communications (NCC), the local spot consortium owned by
Cox, Time Warner and Comcast, confirm that the industry generated about $70
million in political revenue at the national spot level. That's a drop in
the bucket compared with the more than $1 billion generated by broadcast
stations but about twice what cable generated four years ago. Operators'
biggest political disappointment occurred despite a massive effort to dent
what has long been a broadcast-industry windfall. NCC dedicated a sales
manager to the Bush-Kerry race. But neither side, particularly the Bush
camp, used much national spot cable until mid September. "They bought the
two most efficient places," TVB's Rohrs says. "Local broadcast and national
cable." Cost per thousand (CPM) on cable networks is much less than on
broadcast networks. On the other hand, he says, local broadcast CPMs are
more efficient than local cable, and there are more spots available.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Kathy Haley ]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482078?display=Special+Report...
See also:
Boom and Gloom at News Channels
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Alan Breznick]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA482079?display=Special+Report...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

QUICKLY

RADIO ONE MAKES ITS MOVE
Sixty-nine radio stations, cable TV network and, now, an Internet presence
-- BlackAmericaWeb.com -- and ownership rights to one of the nation's top
morning radio shows -- what Big Media giant is this? Radio One is the
nation's largest black-owned media company and has just purchased a
controlling stake in radio personality Tom Joyner's media company for $56
million.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Krissah Williams]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3112-2004Nov21.html
(requires registration)

WUNC(FM) EXCISES 'REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS,' FEARING FCC RETRIBUTION
A public radio station in North Carolina decided to edit the underwriting
announcement because it included the term "reproductive rights," fearing a
fine from the FCC. The station's general manager conceded there's nothing
in the FCC guidelines that says stations can't use "reproductive rights."
The problem, she said, was that "the interpretation of the guidelines is
left up to stations, and the FCC does not tell us what we can and can't
say." There's no provision for stations to approach the FCC for a ruling in
advance, she said. "They won't do that for you. The only thing we can do is
come up with our own standards of what you think the interpretation would
be and abide by them." The GM and groups critical of the decision blamed
the FCC for having rules that are "very unclear and open to interpretation."
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Dinesh Kumar]
(Not available online)

FIRST SOFTWARE DEFINED RADIO
The FCC announced Friday it has approved, for the first time, use of a
software defined radio (SDR) device in the United States. This new class of
equipment allows users to share limited airspace, increases flexibility and
reduces interference concerns. Software defined radios can change the
frequency range, modulation type or output power of a radio device without
making changes to hardware components. This programmable capacity permits
radios to be highly adaptable to changing needs, protocols and
environments. For questions regarding the SDR proceeding, contact Mr. Hugh
Van Tuyl at 202-418-7506. For questions regarding the certification of
SDRs or the Vanu applications, contact Mr. Joe Dichoso at 301-362-3024.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254463A1.doc

EASY BROADBAND -- AND SMARTER POWER
A look not just at the how but the why of broadband service delivered over
power lines. Sure it could make it easier for you to plug into a faster
Internet connection, but it can also provide power companies with ways to
better manage its core business.
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek, AUTHOR: Catherine Yang]
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/nov2004/tc20041115_8797.htm

SUPREME COURT TO HEAR MODEM CASE
The Supreme Court will meet behind closed doors Dec. 3 to decide whether to
take the case that could expose cable-modem service to open-access
requirements. The court is scheduled to announce a decision Dec. 6. It
requires the votes of four of nine justices to docket a case for oral argument.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA481618.html?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Communications-related Headlines is a free online news summary service
provided by the Benton Foundation (www.benton.org). Posted Monday through
Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments,
policy issues, and other related news events. 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 11/19/04

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

INDECENCY/BROADCASTING
Hill Takes Pass on DTV, Smut
FCC Crackdown Could Spread
Bono's New Casualty: 'Private Ryan'
FCC Must Sharpen Indecency Guidelines
A Racy TV Promo Gets Iced, and So Does 'Private Ryan'
Protect Young Eyes and Ears
Desperate Move Likely Would Get Walt's Approval
Sinclair's News Central

CABLE
FCC Report Pans a la Carte
PTC Blasts Basic
Fox News Channel Can Air In Canada, Regulator Says

INTERNET
A Nation Online: Entering the Broadband Age
Web Media Buyouts Coming? Kinda
Web Tax Holiday

QUICKLY: Karmazin to Sirius; Adelstein, CPB Nominees testify before Senate
Commerce;
Pappas get more time to appeal

INDECENCY/BROADCASTING

HILL TAKES PASS ON DTV, SMUT
Speaking after the Senate Commerce Committee hearing Thursday, Sen John
McCain (R-AZ) said Congress will not try to pass indecency legislation or a
digital TV transition plan this year. Too many lawmakers want to add
controversial provisions to a bill that would raise fines for indecency
violations and require the FCC to take the violations into account when
renewing TV and radio licenses to pass the legislation quickly.
Broadcasters can rest easy, however. "Sooner or later this is going to be
enacted," he said. On the issue of the transition to DTV, McCain said:
"It's too big an issue with the American people." Congress will pass a
non-binding resolution stating when lawmakers want TV stations to complete
the switch to DTV and return their old analog channels to the government,
he predicted. The date of the proposed deadline was still under negotiation.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell ]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481593?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

FCC CRACKDOWN COULD SPREAD
With support from both Republicans and Democrats, the FCC is poised to get
even more aggressive about enforcing moral values throughout broadcasting,
even putting cable television and satellite radio in its cross hairs. It
looks like only the courts will stand in the way of the FCC now, but
conservative judges might just say no. After all, not too long ago the
Supreme Court rejected efforts to censor the Internet. The FCC guidelines
remain vague, making it unclear exactly what is allowed. "The FCC has been
trying to hide behind ambiguity, but that ambiguity has problems," said
Andrew Jay Schwartzman, president of the Media Access Project. While
clearer rules sound good in principle, Schwartzman said they're unlikely to
pass constitutional muster. "The various pending appeals are going to force
the FCC to clarify, but once clarified I'm not sure things will stick up in
court."
[SOURCE: Wired News, AUTHOR: Randy Dotinga]
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,65734,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1

BONO'S NEW CASUALTY: 'PRIVATE RYAN'
[Commentary] What has changed since ABC affiliates aired "Saving Private
Ryan" in 2002? A government with the zeal to control both information and
culture has received what it calls a mandate. Media owners who once might
have thought that complaints by the American Family Association about a
movie like "Saving Private Ryan" would go nowhere are keenly aware that the
administration wants to reward its base. Merely the threat that the FCC
might punish a TV station or a network is all that's needed to push them
onto the slippery slope of self-censorship before anyone in Washington even
bothers to act. This is McCarthyism, "moral values" style. If these media
outlets are afraid to show a graphic Hollywood treatment of a 60-year-old
war starring the beloved Tom Hanks because the feds might fine them, toy
with their licenses or deny them permission to expand their empires, might
they defensively soften their news divisions' efforts to present the
graphic truth of an ongoing war? The pressure groups that are exercised by
Bono and "Saving Private Ryan" are often the same ones who are campaigning
to derail any news organization that's not towing the administration line
in lockstep with Fox. In this diet of "news" championed by the right,
there's no need for actual reporters who gather facts firsthand by leaving
their laptops and broadcast booths behind and risking their lives to bear
witness to what is actually happening on the ground in places like Falluja
and Baghdad. The facts of current events can become as ideologically
fungible as the scientific evidence supporting evolution. Whatever
comforting version of events supports your politics is the "news."
[SOURCE: New York Times 11/21, AUTHOR: Frank Rich]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/21/arts/21rich.html
(requires registration)

FCC MUST SHARPEN INDECENCY GUIDELINES
[Commentary] The decision by roughly a third of all ABC Network affiliates
to pull the Academy Award-winning epic movie "Saving Private Ryan" last
week because of fear of fines and other penalties by the Federal
Communications Commission is an appalling example of how the recent
campaign against so-called indecency on television is having a chilling
effect on free speech. The FCC's mixed signals and the endless posturing by
Congress and the White House have the effect of impeding free TV at a time
it is in a fight for its very existence. It is a joke for politicians to
think they can control what anyone will watch. Timid programming will just
drive even more viewers to cable and satellite TV, where movies like
"Saving Private Ryan" may be seen uncut without any problem. It is time for
the FCC and Congress to make the rules crystal clear and level the playing
field for everyone.
[SOURCE: TVWeek, AUTHOR: Editorial Staff]
http://www.tvweek.com/article.cms?articleId=26468

A RACY TV PROMO GETS ICES, AND SO DOES 'PRIVATE RYAN'
[Commentary] What's to be made of the ruckus? Perhaps just that TV viewers
are perfectly capable of expressing their distaste for content and getting
results. Were it not for the agency that sets standards for over-the-air
TV, the Federal Communications Commission, this would be just a simple
story about a minor mistake quickly corrected. But nothing is simple when
you're the taste police. Certainly TV gives parents plenty to complain
about. But the FCC's attempts to dictate taste leave only a muddled mess.
The erectile-dysfunction ads proliferate untouched. So does a wide
assortment of sexually suggestive programming. And that's before getting to
the sex on cable TV, which, thankfully, is beyond the FCC's reach.
Meanwhile, Saving Private Ryan gets canned, even though viewers could
easily be alerted to the sensitivity of the content. So pipe up, turn the
dial, organize boycotts. But don't ask Powell to be your nanny. No
government censor is up to the task.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Editorial Staff]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041119/edit19.art.htm

PROTECT YOUNG EARS AND EYES
[Commentary] ABC's Monday Night Football opener is an excellent example of
why simply changing the channel or turning off the TV is not a viable
option for the viewing public. ABC gave no rating, no warning. Nothing
prepared parents for intro when millions of kids were tuned in for a
football game. ABC and the other networks are media giants, making an
offended viewer's voice less than a blip on their radar screen. They can
ignore you, but they can't ignore the FCC. AMA believes it should be OK to
air "Saving Private Ryan" on TV -- just not during primetime. The FCC has
clearly stated that broadcasting the "F" word is illegal between the hours
of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m., when children are likely to be watching TV. ABC made
the conscious decision to violate the law. As a result, the network should
be fined for breaking the rules it agreed to when it won its broadcast
license. Breaking rules on the public airwaves should be dealt with in the
same way as breaking rules on a public street, for instance, by speeding in
a school zone. It isn't right to tell parents, "If you don't like the way I
drive, keep your kids at home."
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Randy Sharp, American Family Association]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041119/oppose19.art.htm

DESPERATE MOVE LIKELY WOULD GET WALT'S APPROVAL
[Commentary] Lots of free press and millions of people talking about the
Monday Night Football intro -- do you think executives at Disney tickled
pink by the reaction?
[SOURCE: Orlando Sentinel, AUTHOR: David Whitley]
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/orl-sptwhitley18111804nov18...

SINCLAIR'S NEWS CENTRAL
[Media Matters for America is a research and information center dedicated
to comprehensively monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative
"misinformation" in the U.S. media.] MMFA has been analyzing Sinclair's
News Central broadcasts since election day and finds a "steady diet of
pro-Bush, anti-progressive news items." "Get This" is program segment
created by News Central, Sinclair's Maryland-based nerve center that
provides national and international news coverage, as well as commentary,
to its stations. Presented each weeknight by Sinclair News Central anchors
Jennifer Gladstone or Morris Jones, "Get This" purports to cover "the news
items that deserve public attention that you probably won't see anywhere
else. They either won't make time for them, or maybe the issues are too
'sensitive' for their audience." According to News Central's website, "Get
This" claims to "play no favorites." But while the segment features many
humorous or lighthearted stories, the overall issue selection conveys a
conservative agenda, focusing on topics such as Democrats' alleged
inability to deal with electoral defeat; liberal college professors; author
and documentarian Michael Moore's comments; and even President George W.
Bush's pets.
[SOURCE: Media Matters for America]
http://mediamatters.org/items/200411180001

CABLE

FCC REPORT PANS A LA CARTE
Back in May, House Commerce Committee Chairman Joe Barton (R-TX) and Reps.
John Dingell (D-MI), Fred Upton (R-MI), Edward Markey (D-MA) and Nathan
Deal (R-GA) asked the FCC to study the per-channel sale of cable television
programming, known in French-obsessed Washington as a la carte. On
Thursday, the FCC released that report to Congress, addressing the economic
issues as well as the possible effect indecent/objectionable programming.
In short, the FCC concluded that a la carte would not lower cable bills.
"We don't come out and say that, but there are plenty of inferences that we
certainly don't recommend that," said an FCC source known only as Op Out.
"It doesn't really endorse anything. It just gives a lot of merit to the
operators -- big and, most notably, small [operators] -- and programmers
that mandatory a la carte would broadly be a problem." On rate issues, FCC
economists concluded that the purchase of nine networks a la carte would
about equal the prices consumers pay for expanded basic. A la carte would
likely lead to higher bills because the average cable home watches 17
channels, including local TV stations. In other words, consumers would pay
more to maintain access to their favorite channels. The report also
concluded that the cable and direct-broadcast satellite industries' efforts
to promote their digital blocking technologies were preferable to
program-sale mandates that would threaten pay TV's long-established
business model of grouping channels in large tiers.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA481516.html?display=Breaking+News
(requires subscription)
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481597?display=Breaking+News
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=6758
Proponents of a la carte were quick to react:
"The study was rigged against consumers in favor of large cable companies,
giant broadcasters and other media behemoths," said Gene Kimmelman, senior
director for public policy and advocacy for Consumers Union, the non-profit
publisher of Consumer Reports. "If the FCC had studied our actual proposal
- a voluntary a la carte and mixed-channel bundling approach targeting
digital cable subscribers - it would have concluded that it would lead to
lower prices, greater choice and more diverse programming for consumers."

PTC BLASTS BASIC
The Parents Television Council had its own recommendations for Congress on
cable programming: Either Congress should start regulating cable indecency,
says PTC, or it should give viewers the chance to put together their own
family-friendly lineups through a la carte offerings. PTC argues that
customers should not have to subsidize "filth" to get access to "the
wholesome, educational and family-friendly programming available on a
handful of basic cable channels."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481459.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

FOX NEWS CHANNEL CAN AIR IN CANADA, REGULATOR SAYS
Finally Canadians will can the fairness and balance they deserve. The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ruled that it
is OK for cable operators there to offer Fox News Channel because the
channel "offers little or no Canadian coverage" and said the network's
"news/talk programs are more focused on editorial opinion and discussion"
than those of Canadian channels CBC Newsworld and CTV Newsnet. What better
replacement for Saturday night hockey?
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110081952721078637,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

INTERNET

A NATION ONLINE: ENTERING THE BROADBAND AGE
The sixth report released by the U.S. Department of Commerce examining the
use of computers, the Internet, and other information technology tools by
the American people. Between the Census Bureau's Current Population Surveys
conducted in September 2001 and October 2003, the number of households with
Internet connections grew by 12.6% and a transition is underway from
dial-up to high-speed Internet connections. The use of high-speed Internet
connections grew significantly between 2001 and 2003 and more than offset
the decline in dial-up users. For this reason, this report focuses on what
Americans are doing with their high-speed connections.
[SOURCE: National Telecommunications and Information Administration]
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/reports/anol/index.html

WEB MEDIA BUYOUTS COMING? KINDA
According to Sam Whitmore, editor of Sam Whitmore's Media Survey, over the
next 12 to 24 months you will probably see big media companies scarf up
blogs, where a growing number of people are going for opinions, analysis
and community.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,65748,00.html

WEB TAX HOLIDAY
A WSJ editorial in support of the move by Congress to extend the Internet
(access) tax moratorium.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Editorial Staff]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110082815875778942,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

QUICKLY

Ex-Viacom President Mel Karmazin has agreed to be the CEO of Sirius
Satellite Radio, hooking up again with Howard Stern. Karmazin was for years
a power in the radio business, building Infinity Broadcasting into one of
the most powerful station groups before selling it to Westinghouse/CBS,
which was in turn acquired by Viacom. Karmazin was Stern's boss at
Infinity, where he went to bat for the broadcaster when he was attacked by
some legislators pushing the company to muzzle the shock jock.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481580?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

Statement of Commissioner Adelstein Before the Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Nominations Hearing
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-254395A1.doc

Gay Hart Gaines, Claudia Puig and Dr. Ernest Wilson, III testified Thursday
before the Senate Commerce Committee. The three have been nominated by
President Bush to serve terms on the nine-member Board of Directors for the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The URL below provides links to their
testimony.
[SOURCE: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Press Release]
http://www.cpb.org/programs/pr.php?prn=387

The FCC has granted Californian broadcaster Pappas additional time to
appeal the Commission's decision regarding its "gift" of free time to
legislative candidates in the state. The date for filing an Application For
Review regarding the Bureau's decision has been extended to December 17, 2004
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-3619A1.doc
--------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks for reading. We'll publish Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday next week.
Have a great weekend.
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 11/18/04

The Senate Commerce Committee holds a hearing this morning on the=20
nominations of Jonathan Adelstein (Federal Communications Commission),=20
Ernest Wilson, Claudia Puig, and Gay Gains (Corporation for Public=20
Broadcasting). For this and other upcoming media policy events, see=20
http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

MEDIA
Scientific American Hails Rereg Fight
Dean Criticizes News Media
Powell 'Disappointed' in Disney
Broadcasters=92 Actions May Be an Attempt to Attack FCC Rules
Farmers Plant Doubts About DTV Plan
Gimme That Old-Time Channel Lineup
Infomercial Group Self-Regulates
Radio Chain to Cut Ties to Promoters Paid by Labels

INTERNET
Extension of Ban On Internet Taxes Nears Approval
Now You See 'Em, Now You Don't: More Telecom Regulations Fall at the FCC
eLearning in Nonprofits and Associations

QUICKLY
Cellphone Carriers Hold Line on Fees
Exit Poll Data Will be Delayed
Hoffman Leaving FTC

MEDIA

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN HAILS REREG FIGHT
Scientific American has decided that the fight against media consolidation=
=20
was one of the 50 "outstanding acts of leadership in science and=20
technology" of the past year and the magazine has named Media Access=20
Project President Andrew Schwartzman one of the "Scientific American 50"=20
for 2004. =93As media giants extend their empires,=94 they wrote, =93local=
news=20
and a diversity of viewpoints can be lost or extinguished, depriving the=20
public of important information and dialogue.=94
Schwartzman expressed surprise to be included in a group largely composed=20
of experimental scientists, but said he was gratified that the magazine=20
recognized that media consolidation is an issue of such great magnitude. He=
=20
stressed that he realized that his selection was symbolic, saying "I was=20
just one of a team of attorneys who have worked on the media consolidation=
=20
issue for years. My colleagues Cheryl Leanza and Harold Feld and our=20
support staff were tireless in taking on the challenge of media ownership.=
=20
And Media Access Project was just a small part of a large coalition of=20
civil rights, civil liberties, consumer, artistic, labor and other citizens=
=20
groups which worked to achieve these victories."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481199.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
http://www.mediaaccess.org/SciAm.pdf
http://www.sciam.com/sa50/2004/policy_2.html

DEAN CRITICIZES NEWS MEDIA
"The media is a failing institution in this country," said former Vermont=20
Governor Howard Dean on Tuesday. "They are not maintaining their=20
responsibility to maintain democracy." Speaking at a Yale University=20
symposium, titled "The Media and the Election: A Postmortem," Gov Dean=20
stressed corporate ownership of the media and the increased focus on=20
entertainment as problems with today's media. He emphasized the importance=
=20
of diversity and regulation in fixing these problems. The television=20
networks, especially Fox News, are most to blame for the increased focus in=
=20
journalism on flash and entertainment, Dean said. But speakers at the same=
=20
symposium disagreed. Evan Thomas, an assistant managing editor for=20
Newsweek, said entertainment in the media is a necessary tool to attract=20
the public.
[SOURCE: Yale Daily News, AUTHOR: Yotam Barkai]
http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=3D27403

POWELL 'DISAPPOINTED IN DISNEY
Tsk, tsk, tsk, you global conglomerate's just don't know how to behave. FCC=
=20
Chairman Michael Powell told CNBC's Alan Murray Wednesday that he found=20
ABC's racy Monday Night Football introduction "very disappointing," adding,=
=20
"I wonder if Walt Disney would be proud." Chairman Powell suggested that=20
ABC had boiled up some of its own hot water on the indecency front. "It=20
would seem to me that while we get a lot of broadcasting companies=20
complaining about indecency enforcement, they seem to continuing to be=20
willing to keep the issue at the forefront, keep it hot and steamy, in=20
order to get financial gain from the free advertising it provides. I think=
=20
companies have to make that decision for themselves." Meanwhile, the=20
Parents Television Council, the organization that led the charge against=20
Janet Jackson's breast, announced that it will not file a complaint against=
=20
ABC, saying the intro =93grossly irresponsible,=94 but it doesn't think it=
was=20
indecent.
Also, in the same interview, Chairman Powell said once again that he has no=
=20
plans to leave the Commission anytime soon since he is still having fun and=
=20
there's "still things that are really significantly important for me to=20
complete."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481093.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481205.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA481077.html?display=3DBreaking+News
FCC to Examine ABC TV Spot
"It will be something we =85 will have to look at; but that's far from=
saying=20
what the result will be," FCC Chairman Michael Powell said.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Jube Shiver Jr.]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-fcc18nov18,1,1890490....
y?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

BROADCASTERS' ACTIONS MAY BE AN ATTEMPT TO ATTACK FCC RULES
Why did so many ABC stations decide not to air "Saving Private Ryan" last=20
week? FCC Chairman Powell thinks it may be a subtle attempt to portray FCC=
=20
indecency rules in a negative light. The movie aired twice before on the=20
network and the FCC ruled it was not indecent. But Chairman Powell said not=
=20
only do stations legally have the authority to preempt programming, =93they=
=20
contractually have that authority and they actually have public interest=20
obligations to exercise authority under the way the legal
regime for local broadcasters works.=94 Over the years, stations haven't=20
exercised that option often, but the option has always been there, he said.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)

FARMERS PLANT DOUBTS ABOUT DTV PLAN
Will DTV play in Peoria? In a meeting with Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein,=
=20
the American Corn Growers Association and the Soybean Producers of America,=
=20
joined by some unions and others, argued that the impact of a hard date for=
=20
cut-off of analog television service will adversely impact rural=20
communities with less access to cable. The groups also argue that the=20
switch to digital must include a multicast must-carry requirement to insure=
=20
that farmers get access to crucial weather information services. For=20
farmers, a weather news is far more than a guide to the day's attire or=20
recreational plans. It is a key piece of business information that affects=
=20
their livelihoods. The topic of farm broadcasting in the digital age is=20
likely to be a hot one at this week's National Association of Farm=20
Broadcasters Convention in Kansas City.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481089.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

GIMME THAT OLD-TIME CHANNEL LINEUP
Count religious broadcasters in the cast of thousands opposing a la carte=20
cable pricing. Ministers pointed out in comments filed with the FCC that=20
the General Accounting Office has already weighed in saying a la carte=20
cable could put some smaller nets, including minority targeted and=20
religious, out of business. The FCC is scheduled to report to Congress=20
Thursday on whether it thinks a la carte is a good idea.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481003.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA481169.html?display=3DBreaking+News

INFOMERCIAL GROUP SELF-REGULATES
The Electronic Retailing Self-Regulation Program (ESRP), launched this year=
=20
after the Federal Trade Commission began cracking down on bogus weight-loss=
=20
claims in ads and infomercials, said it has persuaded the marketers of=20
Slim-In-6 and 6-Day-Express Body weight-loss programs to modify their TV=20
infomercials.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481012.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

RADIO CHAIN TO CUT TIES TO PROMOTERS PAID BY LABELS
Viacom's Infinity Broadcasting, one of the nation's largest radio chains,=20
said yesterday that it planned to sever its relationships with independent=
=20
record promoters, distancing itself from a practice that critics have=20
likened to bribes. The record companies have paid middlemen for decades,=20
though the practice has long been derided as a way to skirt a federal=20
statute that outlaws bribes to radio broadcasters. The law prohibits=20
broadcasters from taking cash or anything of value in exchange for playing=
=20
a specific song, unless they disclose the payment to listeners. But in a=20
practice that is common in the record business, independent promoters pay=20
radio stations annual fees often exceeding $100,000, not, they say, to play=
=20
specific songs but to obtain advance copies of the stations' playlists. The=
=20
promoters then bill record labels for each new song that is added; the=20
practice costs the record industry tens of millions of dollars a year.=20
Record executives said yesterday that even if the termination of deals at=20
some companies means promoters can no longer bill the record labels when a=
=20
song is placed on those companies' playlists, promoters may instead ask the=
=20
labels for retainer fees to lobby specific radio programmers.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Jeff Leeds]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/18/business/media/18infinity.html
(requires registration)

INTERNET

EXTENSION OF BAN ON INTERNET TAXES NEARS APPROVAL
Although the legislation has been stalled for months, a four-year extension=
=20
of a ban on taxing Internet access services is expected to clear Congress=20
and make its way to the White House by the end of the week. The legislation=
=20
would restrict the ability of state and local governments to assess taxes=20
on Internet-access services, including high-speed wireless and broadband=20
services. It would not apply to new Internet phone technologies or to sales=
=20
taxes on products and services purchased online. A previous ban, passed in=
=20
1998, expired in November 2003. The expanded provision protecting broadband=
=20
sparked opposition from governors, mayors and other local officials, who=20
feared it would restrict or prevent their assessing existing=20
telecommunications taxes on the Internet. Such taxes bring in about $20=20
billion a year and are used to pay for numerous programs and services.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Rob Wells rob.wells( at )dowjones.com &=20
Anne Marie Squeo annemarie.squeo( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110072334736977013,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)
See also:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58613-2004Nov17.html
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3DISUTIWZSKVCQQCRBAE...
Y?type=3DinternetNews&storyID=3D6845669

NOW YOU SEE 'EM, NOW YOU DON'T: MORE TELECOM REGULATIONS FALL AT THE FCC
[Commentary] The Michael Powell deregulatory juggernaut continues to roll=20
along at the Federal Communications Commission, where regulations of=20
telephone service at the state level were the latest victim. On 9=20
November, the FCC relieved digital telephone company Vonage of the need to=
=20
adhere to state-based regulations that normally apply to traditional phone=
=20
companies.
[SOURCE: Center for Digital Democracy]
http://www.democraticmedia.org/news/washingtonwatch/FCCvonage.html

eLEARNING IN NONPROFITS AND ASSOCIATIONS
The 2004 Nonprofit and Association E-learning Survey provides the most=20
complete data to date on mission-based organizations=92 use of e-learning=20
technologies. Overall, the survey shows wide and growing adoption of=20
e-learning among nonprofit organizations and associations. More than 54=20
percent of total respondents either use elearning
or plan to in the next 12 months. Another 36 percent of respondents=20
indicate interest in e-learning, but have no definite plans to implement a=
=20
program. More than 88 percent of respondents indicated they were very or=20
somewhat satisfied with their e-learning programs. Another 10 percent=20
reported that they were somewhat
dissatisfied, while only 2 percent were very dissatisfied with their=20
e-learning programs.
[SOURCE: Isoph]
http://www.isoph.com/pdfs/2004_Nonprofit_E-learning_Survey.pdf

QUICKLY

CELLPHONE CARRIERS HOLD LINE ON FEES
If you're ready to call your Member of Congress over those regulatory fees=
=20
on your cell phone bill, redirect the complaint to your carrier. Verizon=20
Wireless and Sprint PCS said this week that they were cutting the=20
"regulatory cost recovery fees" they pass along to their customers. Those=20
are the fees that telecom providers tack on to their monthly service plans=
=20
that look like government taxes, but are really just additional revenue=20
collected by carriers, which they say goes to recoup the costs of complying=
=20
with government regulations. But carriers aren't hanging up on these=20
monthly fees just yet. Verizon Wireless and Sprint will continue collecting=
=20
the fees at scaled-back rates -- five cents and 40 cents, respectively --=20
and the country's other major wireless carriers all have kept their fees=20
intact. One reason the fees aren't likely to disappear anytime soon: Most=20
cellphone operators except Verizon Wireless, a venture of Vodafone and=20
Verizon, count the regulatory-cost-recovery fees as part of their monthly=20
average customer revenue, which is already in decline at many of the=20
wireless carriers.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110073723994877437,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)

EXIT POLL DATA WILL BE DELAYED
To avoid leaking information about early exit polls and save media=20
companies embarrassment, on future election days, news organizations that=20
pay for surveys of voters leaving polling places won't see results until=20
late afternoon or early evening. [So I'm wondering... will it be easier to=
=20
control the flow of information four years from now?]
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Mark Memmott]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041118/a_exitpoll18.art.htm

HOFFMAN LEAVING FTC
Bruce Hoffman, deputy director of the Federal Trade Commission=92s=20
competition bureau, announced Wednesday that he will be leaving the FTC=20
Nov. 24 to return to private law practice. Mr. Hoffman helped streamline=20
the commission=92s merger review process and was a lead staffer for the=20
agency=92s review of the NBC/Vivendi Universal merger
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA481090.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 11/17/04

As expected, President Bush has renominated Democratic FCC Commissioner
Jonathan Adelstein to the remainder of a five-year term expiring June 30,
2008. The Senate Commerce Committee will hold a hearing on confirmations on
Thursday (see http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1342).
Communications Daily reports that Commissioner Adelstein could be confirmed
by the Senate by Thursday evening.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480592.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also --
LA Times:
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-fcc17nov17,1,1431736....

MEDIA
Resurrect Local Radio
Minorities Seek DTV-Vote Delay
ABC Apologizes for Risqu Spot Before 'MNF' Game
U.K. Panel Urges Curbs on TV Spots For 'Junk Food'
Right-Wing Wins Take Wind Out of Talk-Show Hosts
TiVo Will No Longer Skip Past Advertisers
Network Television News Chiefs Hold Forum
Exiting Hollings Cites Media Impact

TELECOM
Can You Tax Me Now?
SBC Seeks to Levy Higher Fees On Internet Phone Companies

QUICKLY
$10 Million Clear Channel Lawsuit Delayed
Notes from CPB Board Meeting
Bush II: Paige Out, NCLB to High School
Senate May Ram Copyright Bill
CDT Comments on Peer-to-Peer Challenges in FTC Proceeding

MEDIA

RESURRECT LOCAL RADIO
[Commentary] Since the 1996 deregulation law unleashed an unparalleled wave
of monopolization, the radio service many of us grew up with has vanished.
Local newscasts are a memory. Homegrown musicians might as well play on the
sidewalk for quarters. Emergency authorities sometimes can't get bulletins
aired in small towns, whose stations are mere relays for robotic
music-feeds from half a continent away. A potential savior is low power
radio (LPFM), tiny, nonprofit radio stations with limited (~3.5 miles)
reach and low start-up costs (~$6,000). LPFM has enormous potential: To
beam to underserved localities, to provide a forum for voices that existing
broadcasters ignore, to rededicate a sliver of the spectrum to community
service, to validate local realities and plans, to remind us all that the
cornerstone of U.S. broadcasting has for 75 years been something called
localism, the geographic counterpart to the federalism that is praised as
rapturously as it is ignored. LPFM could become a reality for many more
communities across the country, but Congress needs to act to make it happen.
[SOURCE: Knight Ridder Newspapers, AUTHOR: Edward Wasserman, Washington and
Lee University]
http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/editorial/10194642.htm

MINORITIES SEEK DTV-VOTE DELAY
The Minority Media Telecommunications Council, in a recent letter to the
FCC, is asking the Commission to delay voting on a plan to speed the switch
to all-digital television broadcasting until Congress provides subsidies
for digital-TV-compatible equipment for low-income Americans. The FCC is
expected to recommend that Congress subsidize the $1 billion-plus cost of
providing digital-to-analog converters needed to keep old analog sets
working, but White House staff is on the record opposing the idea. "The
exclusion of the least fortunate Americans from the community of television
viewers would even further deepen America's seemingly intractable social
class divisions," said MMTC. "It should matter to all of us whether
low-income families receive accurate and timely information about jobs,
health care, school closings and homeland security." (Agreed, but who gets
valuable information like that watching TV?.)
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480549.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

ABC APOLOGIZES FOR RISQU SPOT BEFORE 'MNF' GAME
The FCC has received complaints about the intro to this week's Monday Night
Football telecast which included a woman seducing a player wear only a
towel and then -- um -- dis-toweling. The NFL is mad and the network, ABC,
is apologizing.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Rudy Martzke]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041117/1a_bottomstrip17_dom....
In a related story (not sure how exactly), the LA Times reports that
passage of new broadcast indecency legislation is unlikely during the lame
duck session of Congress. Sen Sam Brownback (R-KS) is expected to
reintroduce the bill in January
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-rup17.7nov17,1,383471...

UK PANEL URGES CURBS ON TV SPOTS FOR 'JUNK FOOD'
The U.K. Department of Health released a report yesterday that calls for
advertisers to limit children's and adults' exposure to food high in sugar,
salt and fat by reducing advertising after 6 p.m., a time when many
children watch television. If marketers don't voluntarily devise a plan to
limit the commercials with U.K. advertising regulatory agency the Office of
Communication, the government could impose a limit, said yesterday's
report. The U.K. government often commissions such "white papers" before
enacting legislation. The limit would affect sodas, French fries, candy and
other foods the government paper calls "junk food." Efforts to curtail
fatty-food advertising in the U.S., which also is fighting rising obesity
rates, haven't been successful. In the U.S. the Federal Trade Commission
tried banning junk-food advertising during the 1970s. It was overruled by
Congress, citing free-speech rights. Currently, a California group of
parents, the Allergy and Food Association, is lobbying for all advertising
to be banned from children's programming, schools and sports sponsorships.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Robert Guy Matthews
robertguy.matthews( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110061072914475385,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

RIGHT-WING WINS TAKES WIND OUT OF TALK-SHOW HOSTS
The President won reelection by 3.5 million votes, Republican majorities
were increased in Congress, "moral values" are suddenly in vogue -- what's
left for the Right to complain about on talk radio? Luckily, they can
always eat their own as Sen Arlen Specter is finding out. "They'll be smart
to turn on themselves and talk about which conservatives are the 'true'
conservatives," says Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers, a trade
magazine about the talk-show business. "If they keep beating up liberals,
it will ring hollow over time. People realize this isn't 1993 speaking,
it's almost 2005."
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Paul Farhi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A55425-2004Nov16.html
(requires registration)

TIVO WILL NO LONGER SKIP PAST ADVERTISERS
By March, TiVo viewers will see "billboards," or small logos, popping up
over TV commercials as they fast-forward through them, offering contest
entries, giveaways or links to other ads. If a viewer "opts in" to the ad,
their contact information will be downloaded to that advertiser --
exclusively and by permission only -- so even more direct marketing can
take place. By late 2005, TiVo expects to roll out "couch commerce," a
system that enables viewers to purchase products and participate in surveys
using their remote controls. Perhaps even more significant is TiVo's new
role in market research. As viewers watch, TiVo records their collective
habits -- second by second -- and sells that information to advertisers and
networks.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR:Gina Piccalo]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-et-tivo17nov17,1,60009...
(requires registration)

NETWORK TELEVISION NEWS CHIEFS HOLD FORUM
David Westin of ABC News, Neal Shapiro of NBC News and Andrew Heyward of
CBS News met at a forum to discuss changes to broadcast network television
news. Technology, they acknowledge, is raising people's expectations that
news will be delivered to them when/where they want it, instead of waiting
to watch nightly network TV news programs. The three said that while they
hoped to resist a push into opinionated, "edgy" news that has been the
hallmark of Fox News and other cable outlets, they realized that Fox's
success reminded them that networks needed to adapt to the new media
marketplace. All three network news chiefs also defended their decision to
run just an hour of both political parties' national conventions live each
night, saying the conventions generated little if any real news.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Beth Fouhy, Associated Press]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53374-2004Nov16.html
(requires registration)

EXISTING HOLLINGS CITES MEDIA IMPACT
After 38 years in office, there are at least 38 reasons to remember Sen
Ernest "Fritz" Hollings (D-SC) -- and his staff is providing the list. So,
from the home office in Charleston... #22: Reined in the cable TV
monopolies, as the driving force in the early 1990s for the Cable and
Consumer Protections Act. #23: Authored the 1990 Children's TV Act,
requiring stations to carry educational programming for children and
limiting the amount of commercials aired during children's programming. #37
Fighting the good fight for bills that didn't make it. They included
"legislation to protect children from violence on television; and a
constitutional amendment permitting limits on campaign expenditures." If
you poke around the Senator's website you'll find these other
accomplishments: spearheaded bipartisan efforts to reverse the FCC's recent
decision to relax broadcast ownership rules; co-authored 1996
Telecommunications Act, which deregulated the telecom industry, ended the
Bell monopolies, and began the growth of independent telecommunications
companies; served as either the Chairman or Ranking Member of the Commerce,
Science and Transportation Committee since 1981, and has been on the
Committee since 1967; authored legislation in 2000 and 2002 to strengthen
online privacy and improve individual's control over their personal data;
authored legislation, first in 1993 and then reintroduced it 7 times over
the following 10 years, to protect children from excessively violent TV
programming; authored Constitutional Amendment to grant Congress and State
Legislatures authority to set campaign expenditure limits and reduce the
influence of money in politics; and co-authored the legislation in 2002
that created the FTC's "Do Not Call" List.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480758.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
http://hollings.senate.gov/~hollings/materials/2003A15C53.html

TELECOM

CAN YOU TAX ME NOW?
As much as Congress wants to wrap up the post-election session, battles
over the Universal Service Fund could break out this week because of what
Precursor Group analyst Scott Cleland called a "self-inflicted wound" by
the Bush administration. Congressional Republicans have long delighted in
calling the fund and its E-rate portion the "Gore Tax" because of the
former vice president's support. If they don't act quickly, however, they
could be the ones responsible for this "tax" ballooning by more than 40%.
It would hit consumers next January -- the same time that regional Bell
companies might raise local phone rates. Last year, in a move to regularize
accounting by quasi-federal entities, OMB said the Universal Service
Administrative Corp. needed to change from business to government
accounting rules by Oct. 1, 2004. Additional concern about high-profile
cases of E-rate fraud prompted the FCC to take a further step, and require
USAC to collect all E-rate money from the fee before doling it out. Sens.
Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) who represent
predominately rural states, have a simple-enough amendment to be attached
to an FY05 appropriations bill that is gathering steam within a strangely
united telecom industry. It would exempt USAC from the Anti-Deficiency Act,
the obscure law that prompted the accounting changes in the first place.
The amendment does nothing to change the way money flows into or out of the
Universal Service Fund. But No one believes the USF can continue in its
current form. Consumers are making more long-distance calls on cellular
phones, and they don't make the same contributions to the fund. On the
distribution side, Sen. Gordon Smith (R-OR) complains that only 10 states
-- and specifically not Oregon - receive all of the fund's rural telecom
support. His bill changing the distribution formula passed the Senate
Commerce Committee in September. Some Commerce Committee back-benchers
question the need for the fund at all, as do many House Republicans.
[SOURCE: Technology Daily, AUTHOR: Drew Clark]
http://nationaljournal.com/about/congressdaily/columns/clark.htm

SBC SEEKS TO LEVY HIGHER FEES ON INTERNET PHONE COMPANIES
SBC plans to file a new tariff with the FCC that potentially increases the
fees paid by Internet service providers for calls completed on the
company's local-phone network. While Internet calls largely avoid the
traditional public-telephone network, they do connect to it when the
recipient of the call isn't an Internet phone user. The tariff would go
into effect immediately, the company plans to have it in place as soon as
tomorrow. The move could mark the first time a regional Bell phone giant
has tried to assess higher fees -- traditionally levied on long-distance
phone calls -- on Internet phone technologies. Currently, most providers of
Internet phone service connect to local-phone networks through arrangements
with companies that lease access to the Bell networks. Because these calls
travel over the Internet until they must connect locally to a customer
using a traditional phone, the Internet phone service companies have been
paying fees associated with local calls, not long-distance calls. These
fees for local connections are substantially lower, and SBC plans to
designate its tariff somewhere between the two amounts. With just one
day's notice, the FCC will have a limited ability to suspend the tariff
from going into effect, though the agency could open an investigation afterward
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anne Marie Squeo
annemarie.squeo( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110065122384576170,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

QUICKLY

$10 MILLION CLEAR CHANNEL LAWSUIT DELAYED
According to a report in the San Antonio Express-News, a $10 million
antitrust lawsuit against Clear Channel Communications, which was set to go
to trial Monday in Chicago, has been postponed until next year. The
lawsuit, filed in 2002 by JamSports and Entertainment of Chicago, accuses
Clear Channel Entertainment of using monopolistic practices to win a
lucrative motorcycle racing contract. JamSports sued Paradama Productions,
which does business as AMA Pro Racing, for allegedly breaching a contract
that would have given JamSports the right to produce and promote the
American Motorcycle Association Supercross Series for 2003-09. It sued
Clear Channel for competing unfairly to land the AMA Pro Racing contract.
The case would be the first antitrust lawsuit to go to court against Clear
Channel. Earlier this year, the company settled an antitrust lawsuit
brought by Nobody In Particular Presents, a Denver-based concert promoter.
[SOURCE: Radio Ink]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=125855&pt=todaysnews

NOTES FROM CPB BOARD MEETING
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting Board of Directors is meeting this
week. On Tuesday, it adopted resolutions on the following issues: 1) a
reaffirmation of both public broadcasting's statutory obligation and
longstanding commitment to non-commercial and universally available program
services for children
(http://www.cpb.org/about/corp/board/resolutions/0411_childrensprogrammin...),
2) an updated code of ethics for CPB employees
(http://www.cpb.org/about/corp/board/resolutions/0411_updatedethics.html)
and 3) funding priorities to facilitate the effective transition of public
television into the digital era
(http://www.cpb.org/about/corp/board/resolutions/0411_digitalguidelines.html).
The priorities are: a) funding of costs of analog replication and b)
requests that have been approved but cannot be met from FY04 funds may
receive priority for funding from any FY 2005 appropriation. If FY 2004
funds remain unsolicited after the above priorities have been exhausted,
and if demands on the Digital Services Fund extend beyond the amount
previously allocated, CPB may allocate remaining funds towards approved
digital services projects.
[SOURCE: Corporation for Public Broadcasting Press Release]
http://www.cpb.org/programs/pr.php?prn=386

BUSH II: PAIGE OUT, NCLB TO HIGH SCHOOL
School leaders are trying to understand what the election results will mean
for educational technology. Although much of the federal focus will remain
on using technology to implement various aspects of NCLB, the Bush
administration also will be looking to implement a few new ed-tech
initiatives announced during the campaign. These initiatives include
creating an eLearning Clearinghouse to promote online courses available to
students and adults from both public and private sources; providing $200
million to establish individualized learning plans for high school
students; and offering greater access to specialized teachers and Advanced
Placement courses through distance learning.
[SOURCE: eSchool News]
http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=5382

SENATE MAY RAM COPYRIGHT BILL
The Consumer Electronics Association, the Computer and Communications
Industry Association, the American Conservative Union and public-interest
advocacy group Public Knowledge and gearing up for a fight in Congress to
prevent passage of legislation they say could overhaul of copyright law,
radically shifting it in favor of Hollywood and record companies. During
the lame duck session of Congress which began yesterday, the Senate might
vote on the Intellectual Property Protection Act, a comprehensive bill that
opponents charge could make many users of peer-to-peer networks,
digital-music players and other products criminally liable for copyright
infringement. The bill would also undo centuries of "fair use" -- the
principle that gives Americans the right to use small samples of the works
of others without having to ask permission or pay.
[SOURCE: Wired News, AUTHOR: Michael Grebb]
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,65704,00.html?tw=rss.TOP
See statement by Public Knowledge at:
http://www.publicknowledge.org/pressroom/releases/pr111204

CDT COMMENTS ON PEER-TO-PEER CHALLENGES IN FTC PROCEEDING
The Center for Democracy and Technology filed comments for the Federal
Trade Commission's upcoming inquiry into the policy issues surrounding
popular peer-to-peer file-sharing networks. CDT's comments outlined the
challenge in preserving valuable Internet services made possible by
peer-to-peer technologies while addressing the serious privacy, spyware,
and copyright infringement problems raised by some file-sharing networks.
[SOURCE: Center for Democracy and Technology]
(http://www.cdt.org)
Federal Trade Commission Workshop on Peer-to-Peer File-Sharing:
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/workshops/filesharing/
CDT Comments to the Federal Trade Commission:
http://www.cdt.org/copyright/20041115cdt.pdf
CDT's Copyright Page:
http://www.cdt.org/copyright
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 11/16/04

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

TODAY'S QUESTION: Does the government have a bigger stake in you buying a=20
digital TV set -- or ensuring that digital TV programming is diverse and=20
includes local civic and public affairs?

MEDIA
Public Short-Shrifted in Digital TV Transition
EchoStar Thinks Locally
The Television Toddler Boom
Luring the Elusive Tween
When 'No Sex=92 Really Sells
China Formalizes Laws On TV Joint Ventures

TELECOM
Fees Paid by all Phone Customers Help Rural Phone Firms Prosper
Verizon and Sprint to Cut Fee For Transferring Cell Numbers

QUICKLY
Unused PC Power to Run Grid for Unraveling Disease
File-Swap Firm Gets License to Sell Music
Wireless to Drive Internet Growth, Tech Leaders Say
Conference on Blogs' News Impact
Privacy Groups Urge Appeals Court to Guarantee Email Privacy

MEDIA

PUBLIC SHORT-SHRIFTED IN DIGITAL TV TRANSITION
[Commentary] It's time to remind the FCC's Michael Powell that the public=20
is entitled to a fair return from its airways. The public owns the airwaves=
=20
and the broadcasters are trustees for the public good. Broadcasters get the=
=20
exclusive free use of the public airwaves, but in exchange they must serve=
=20
the public interest. The public interest is embodied in the Communications=
=20
Act and in seminal Supreme Court cases. Over the years it has meant many=20
things, but at its core, the public interest means providing local civic=20
and electoral discourse over the public airwaves. This core=20
obligation-which is fundamental to our democracy and self-governance-has=20
been languishing badly. Recent data shows that: 1) Network coverage of the=
=20
Democratic and Republican nominating conventions dropped to an all-time low=
=20
in 2004; just three hours of coverage per convention, per network. 2) A=20
viewer of local television newscasts saw an average of 2.4 minutes of=20
election coverage per half-hour of evening news in the weeks leading to the=
=20
November 2004 election; almost half (45 percent) of the coverage focused on=
=20
campaign strategy and fewer than one-third (29 percent) focused on campaign=
=20
issues, according to the Lear Center's Oct. 21, 2004, interim report. 3)=20
Nearly eight out of 10 of the campaign stories focused on the presidential=
=20
and vice presidential races as opposed to other races (also according to=20
the Lear Center interim report). These statistics show that coverage of=20
local issues in particular is lacking. Our democracy is predicated on an=20
informed citizenry. The FCC must define the public interest for digital=20
television now so that Americans, as consumers of democracy, don't miss out=
=20
on the enormous benefit of the digital airwaves.
[SOURCE: TVWeek, AUTHOR: Gloria Tristani, United Church of Christ]
http://www.tvweek.com/article.cms?articleId=3D26480

ECHOSTAR THINKS LOCALLY
EchoStar has launched a new crusade =97 one that calls on the FCC to impose=
=20
local programming quotas on TV stations. Under EchoStar=92s plan, stations=
=20
could refuse to comply, but they would forfeit their right to mandatory=20
satellite carriage in the relevant market. At a minimum, TV stations should=
=20
reserve 4% of their time to public-affairs programming and public-service=20
announcements geared toward the communities to which they=92re licensed to=
=20
serve, EchoStar says. It picked 4% because FCC rules require DBS operators=
=20
to set aside that amount for public-interest programming. The National=20
Association of Broadcasters is adamantly opposed to local programming=20
quotas, arguing that TV stations in the aggregate already offer =93vast=20
amounts of community-responsive programming=94 and help local charities=
raise=20
millions of dollars. In 1984, the FCC had rules that required a TV station=
=20
to offer local programming in order to gain staff approval of its=20
license-renewal application. The processing guidelines mandated at least 5%=
=20
local and a minimum of 10% non-entertainment programming. But broadcasters=
=20
=97 who said market conditions would force stations to provide local=20
programming =97 persuaded the FCC to drop the quotas. Over the last 20=
years,=20
EchoStar said many =97 perhaps even a majority =97 of TV stations have=
evolved=20
into nothing more than =93downlinks and distribution points for national=20
programming.=94
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA480164.html?display=3DPolicy
(requires subscription)

THE TELEVISION TODDLER BOOM
Cable networks are showing big interest in attracting the littlest viewers=
=20
these days. The expanded interest in reaching preschoolers stems from the=20
notion that there are new opportunities to be mined as little kids, and=20
their parents, are increasingly drawn to the educational and entertainment=
=20
content that can be found on digital media. What is really encouraging=20
about this boom in preschool programming, says Christy Glaubke, principle=20
associate of media watchdog Children Now, is that =93there can be some good=
=20
that comes from it =97 if it=92s educational.=94 She says, =93There have=
been=20
several studies that have found that young children =97 even=20
socio-economically-disadvantaged children who traditionally don't perform=20
as well in school =97 get a leg up by watching educational television.=94 At=
=20
the same time, she says, there is a potential downside to the programming=20
barrage. =93A concern that we have is the amount of commercialism that=20
children are exposed to on these channels,=94 says Glaubke, citing recent=20
fines levied by the Federal Communications Commission against ABC Family=20
and Nickelodeon for running excessive commercials during its children=92s=20
programming blocks. =93We realize that these networks need to make money,=
but=20
we also know that children under the age of eight are much more vulnerable=
=20
to commercial messages and unable to make a distinction between commercial=
=20
and program content. They=92re more susceptible to being swayed,=94 Glaubke=
says.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Janice Rhoshalle Littlejohn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA479862.html?display=3DSpecial+Report
(requires subscription)

LURING THE ELUSIVE TWEEN
According to Nielsen Media Research, the "tween" demographic ranges from 9=
=20
to 14 years old, but depending on the network, or even the marketing group,=
=20
tweens can fall anywhere from 6 to 14. Because of the big range and varied=
=20
interests, programmers find it hard to target this audience. The younger=20
ones are not quite full-fledged adolescents, and the older ones want to=20
step back a bit from the razor=92s edge of teenage life. They might be=20
interested in watching MTV: Music Television, but are also willing to watch=
=20
great narrative, family-style programming.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Janice Rhoshalle Littlejohn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA479863.html?display=3DSpecial+Report
(requires subscription)

WHEN 'NO SEX' REALLY SELLS
There is no doubt that when it comes to made-for-television movies, cable=20
has cleaned up at the proverbial box office. And while heightened sex and=20
violence may be key to attracting adult moviegoers, many cable channels are=
=20
finding they can pull in broader viewers, in major demos, with original=20
films aimed at families.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Janice Rhoshalle Littlejohn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA479861.html?display=3DSpecial+Report
(requires subscription)

CHINA FORMALIZES LAWS ON TV JOINT VENTURES
A wave of small-scale foreign investments is expected as China has=20
formalized laws that allow international media companies to form=20
television-production joint ventures with Chinese media firms, a move that=
=20
opens up China's burgeoning media sector but restricts the introduction of=
=20
foreign brand names. As many industry observers had expected, the laws=20
require the ventures to be at least 51% owned by a Chinese partner and=20
forbid financial investors that don't specialize in the media business,=20
such as private-equity funds. China's central government has pressed=20
broadcasters to move all viewers to a digital-broadcast pay-TV standard by=
=20
2015. The switch to digital will open more channels to consumers, but=20
broadcasters will need better content to lure those consumers to pay=20
digital-subscription fees.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Geoffrey A. Fowler=20
geoffrey.fowler( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110054559850974374,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)

TELECOM

FEES PAID BY ALL PHONE COMPANIES HELP RURAL PHONE FIRMS PROSPER
About 10% of the USA's phone lines are in rural areas, from the northern=20
plains to the Southwest. Many are run by small family-owned phone companies=
=20
and co-ops that sprang up early in the 20th century in out-of-the-way areas=
=20
shunned by big carriers because rural residents are expensive to serve. To=
=20
sustain rural providers, the government created the universal service fund=
=20
(USF). But some rural companies may milk the system. One big problem, some=
=20
say: The government guarantees the rural companies an 11.25% return on=20
their network investments. They can recoup all their operating and capital=
=20
costs, plus net a profit of 11.25%. This complex web of subsidies is coming=
=20
under close scrutiny now. The subsidies and a scarcity of competition in=20
their areas have helped rural companies fare well in a mostly bleak telecom=
=20
industry. They're losing lines -- but at only half the rate of the Bells.=20
Ninety-two percent of them offer broadband. About a third run wires outside=
=20
their home turf to compete with neighboring carriers -- something the Bells=
=20
have never done.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Paul Davidson]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041116/ruralphone16.art.htm
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041116/ruralreg16.art.htm

VERIZON AND SPRINT TO CUT FEE FOR TRANSFERRING CELL NUMBERS
Verizon and Sprint wireless customers will get a small break on their bills=
=20
soon. The companies have decided to eliminate or reduce a 40-cent-per-line=
=20
monthly charge imposed to allow customers to transfer their phone numbers=20
to new carriers. "We call on all wireless providers to reduce or eliminate=
=20
these fees as well," said Janee Briesemeister, director of a cell phone=20
consumers rights project at the Consumers Union. "We've always questioned=20
whether the fees being charged for number portability were covering the=20
actual costs of switching phone numbers or were simply being charged to pad=
=20
profits."
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Yuki Noguchi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52986-2004Nov15.html
(requires registration)

QUICKLY

UNUSED PC POWER TO RUN GRID FOR UNRAVELING DISEASE
Can you volunteer your computer to help save the world? IBM will launch the=
=20
World Community Grid today. The goal is to combine computer resources and=20
the shared knowledge of researchers to accelerate the pace of scientific=20
discovery, unlocking the genetic mysteries of illnesses like AIDS,=20
Alzheimer's disease, malaria and cancer
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Steve Lohr]
http://tech.nytimes.com/2004/11/16/technology/16grid.html
(requires registration)
http://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/

FILE-SWAP FIRM GETS LICENSE TO SELL MUSIC
In another sign of the music industry's grudging embrace of file-swapping=20
technology, Universal Music Group has agreed to license its 150,000-song=20
catalog to Snocap, a San Francisco company started by Napster founder Shawn=
=20
Fanning.
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR:Dawn C. Chmielewski]
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/10193743.htm

WIRELESS TO DRIVE INTERNET GROWTH, TECH LEADERS SAY
At the TechNet National Innovation Summit, industry leaders predicted the=20
next big growth phase for the Internet will be in wireless services. "I=20
think the Internet's largest opportunities are in bringing new services,=20
ones that we barely imagine, to billions of people around the world,=20
wirelessly," said John Doerr, one of Silicon Valley's most renowned venture=
=20
capitalists and a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. One focus of=
=20
the discussion was new ways to use wireless technology to expand the Web.=20
Wi-Fi, the popular term for wireless high-speed Internet access over short=
=20
distances, is gaining traction and other wireless technologies are in the=20
works. TechNet is a bipartisan political network of about 400 CEOs that=20
promotes technology.
News.com reports an interesting quote from Sun Microsystems co-founder Bill=
=20
Joy: "I don't think there's enough money in people knowing the truth."=20
Sorry to read that.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Duncan Martell]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3DDNZCUGZHLU5TUCRBAE...
A?type=3DinternetNews&storyID=3D6821835
http://news.com.com/Internet+leaders+ponder+U.S.+tech+policies/2100-1022...
453833.html?tag=3Dnefd.top
http://www.technet.org/innovation/national/

CONFERENCE ON BLOGS' NEWS IMPACT
Ana Marie Cox, the Wonkette for blog readers, speaking at the Online News=20
Association conference over the weekend, said blogs have spurred a quicker=
=20
response to breaking news by major media outlets and made it harder for=20
them to sit on stories. Mark Glaser, a columnist for the Online Journalism=
=20
Review who writes about Web logs said bloggers face a near-constant=20
struggle to establish the credibility enjoyed by professionals. Mindy=20
McAdams, a University of Florida journalism professor, applauded bloggers'=
=20
efforts but urged them to adhere to ethical standards held by mainstream=20
journalists. "Our credibility is suffering with so many people rushing to=20
publish things without checking them out," McAdams said after Cox's speech.=
=20
"Blogging is really great. I like that more and more people have a voice.=20
That's good ... But it doesn't give people who call themselves journalists=
=20
an excuse to not check out the information."
[SOURCE: CNN.com]
http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/internet/11/15/onlinemedia.ap/index.html

PRIVACY GROUPS URGE APPEALS COURT TO GUARANTEE EMAIL PRIVACY
In response to a federal court of appeals announcement that it would=20
reconsider its earlier decision that the wiretap laws do not apply to=20
real-time interception of email, the Center for Democracy and Technology=20
and six other public interest organizations filed an amicus brief arguing=20
that the court's initial decision had misconstrued the wiretap statute.=20
Senator Patrick Leahy, who was deeply involved in extending the wiretap law=
=20
to email in 1986, also filed an amicus brief in the case.
[SOURCE: Center for Democracy and Technology]
(http://www.cdt.org)
Supplemental Amicus Brief in Favor of Reversal of CDT and others:
http://www.cdt.org/wiretap/20041112joint.pdf
Supplemental Amicus Brief in Favor of Reversal of Senator Patrick Leahy:
http://www.cdt.org/wiretap/20041112leahy.pdf
More on United States v. Councilman email privacy case:
http://www.cdt.org/wiretap/councilman.shtml
More on wiretap laws:
http://www.cdt.org/wiretap/
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 11/15/04

NARUC and NASUCA are meeting this week in Nashville. For these and other
upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

TODAY'S QUESTION: Is "Saving Private Ryan" fit for primetime?
Communications Daily reports that the FCC received a number of complaints
about the broadcast last week.

WASHINGTON AGENDA
USF Funding Controversy Likely a Top 'Lame-Duck' Agenda
Adelstein Likely to Get New Term
CEA, NAB Look for Hard Date for Completing DTV Transition
Will Madison Avenue Be Bushwhacked?
VoIP Backers Should Celebrate Bush Win

MEDIA
Big Media Getting Bigger
Meredith Creates Duopoly-Lite
Web Publishers Move Toward Standardizing Ad-Viewership Data

WASHINGTON AGENDA

USF FUNDING CONTROVERSY LIKELY A TOP 'LAME-DUCK' AGENDA
A number of communications-related issues could be addressed as Congress
returns to town this week. Senate Appropriations Chairman Stevens
(R-Alaska) is considering taking action on the accounting problems with the
Universal Service Fund that have halted E-rate funding and could jeopardize
subsidies for rural telephone companies. A quick legislative fix may be a
temporary exemption of accounting regulations on the fund, so the new
Congress can study and act on the issue next year. Other items that may get
attention are: renomination of FCC Commissioner Adelstein (see story
below), efforts to create a spectrum relocation trust fund (HR-1320), E-911
legislation, the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act, the Internet tax
moratorium, and broadcast decency. Apparently, there's little White House
support for an overhaul of the intelligence system this session, so
adoption of the 9/11 Commission's recommendations -- including speeding the
transition to digital-only TV broadcasting (see story below) -- seems
unlikely. This lame-duck Congressional session is not expected to last more
than two weeks.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)

ADELSTEIN LIKELY TO GET NEW TERM
Unpack those bags, FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, you may be an
unexpected winner in the 2004 election. Today, President Bush is expected
to renominate Adelstein and ask Congress to include his confirmation in a
package of 85 judicial and other federal posts that lawmakers are expected
to approve by the end of the week. If that happens, Commissioner Adelstein
will have a new five-year term. There's also conflicting rumors about
another FCC Commissioner serving past an expired term. Sen John McCain
supposedly pushed to replace Commissioner Kathleen Abernathy with Commerce
Committee aide Bill Bailey, but FCC Chairman Powell and Abernathy say the
White House has not informed them of such a switch.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480196.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

CEA, NAB LOOK FOR HARD DATE FOR COMPLETING DTV TRANSITION
There's apparently growing support for setting a hard date for completing
the transition to digital-only TV broadcasting. Broadcasters apparently
favor 2009 as the date, if cable systems transmit broadcasters' full
digital signals by the end of the DTV transition and either make analog
signals available to households to households that don't adopt digital TVs.
Digital TV set makers also think it is important to set such a deadline
once and for all as a necessary step for achieving economies of scale that
would make future DTV sets affordable for the masses.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins, Paul Gluckman]
(Not available online)

WILL MADISON AVENUE BE BUSHWACKED?
What will the second term for President Bush mean for advertisers? They
might be a little nervous. Broadcast indecency and violence are likely to
get a lot of attention and a moral groundswell could have a chilling effect
on sponsorship of content for the gay and lesbian community. Many also
believe that the Bush Administration's stance on media ownership will
negatively impact Madison Avenue. Advertisers believe mega-mergers dilute
program diversity. The concentration of ownership stifles the variety of
media content, which, in turn, limits the ability of marketers to
efficiently reach targeted audiences that favor niche programming. There
may also be a crackdown on advertising aimed at children.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Joe Mandese]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480207.html?display=Advertisi...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
For concerns about marketing to children see:
How marketers hook kids, and why we should worry
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Lyn Millner ]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041115/born.art.htm

VOIP BACKERS SHOULD CELEBRATE BUSH WIN
[Commentary] The FCC's vote last week on Internet telephone service "nicely
captures the long-running discord between the Democrats' regulatory
fetishism and the Republicans' regulatory restraint." The Commission's
Republican majority, led by Chairman Michael Powell, decided "VoIP must be
freed from the clutches of busybody state utility commissioners." Democrats
decried the decision's erosion of the federal-state regulatory partnership
and the unanswered questions about issues like universal service. "The
Democrats on the commission simply have been more skeptical of markets, and
the Republicans have been more skeptical of regulation," says James
Gattuso, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation and a former deputy chief at
the FCC. "It's almost a classic situation of burden of proof: The
Republicans seem to be saying, 'Prove to us you need regulation,' and the
Democrats seem to be saying, 'Prove to us markets will work.'" McCullagh
ends: "But given today's political reality, Powell and his Republican
allies probably have done as much as they could to help nurture VoIP and
bring high-speed connections to Americans' homes. The two Democratic
commissioners have not."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Declan McCullagh]
http://news.com.com/VoIP+backers+should+celebrate+Bush+win/2010-1071-545...

MEDIA

BIG MEDIA GETTING BIGGER
Apparently the old adage "eat or be eaten" applies to Internet journalism,
too. At the fifth annual Online News Association meeting, the buzz was "Big
Media gets bigger." CBS MarketWatch was purchased by Dow Jones, a direct
competitor that has lagged, not led, the revolution to publish free news on
the Internet -- despite the potential to break news during market hours.
Now the most direct Internet competitors of the Dow Jones-MarketWatch
alliance include Street.com (a smaller Web-only outlet), Forbes, Fortune
and Business Week (all magazines) and Yahoo Finance (an aggregation site).
Sources at the conference said The Washington Post is close to acquiring
Slate, another Web pioneer of original Web content. Slate, which is owned
by Microsoft, focuses on political reporting, much like the Post does.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Jeff Pelline]
http://news.com.com/Big+media+getting+bigger/2100-1024_3-5452023.html?ta...

MEREDITH CREATES DUOPOLY-LITE
It is great to how creative corporations can be to serve their commercial
interests. Although duopolies are not allowed under FCC rules in Kansas
City, Meredith Broadcasting has purchased from Sinclair the "nonlicense
assets" of WB affiliate KSMO for $26.8 million. The company already owns
the CBS affiliate there. Those assets comprise the building, tower and
staffers, however, B&C reports, that is more like a hefty upfront payment
than the actual value of those assets. Meredith will seek a failed-station
wavier from the FCC, which can allow otherwise impermissible duopolies if
it is to save a distressed station. It will pay $6.7 million for the
license -- probably far less than it is worth -- if FCC rules ultimately
permit it to own a duopoly in KC.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA480187.html?display=Breaking+...'&referral=SUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also:
TVWeek
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=6717

WEB PUBLISHERS MOVE TOWARD STANDARDIZING AD-VIEWERSHIP DATA
The Internet is one of the few places where advertisers have relied on
publishers to tell them how widely ads are distributed, without third-party
confirmation making advertisers have been cautious about spending on the
medium. But now Web sites are agreeing to standardize the reporting of
ad-viewership numbers, also known as impressions, and for the first time
agreeing to have the numbers audited. Unlike other media, Internet
publishers don't have to rely on sampling. They can examine their Web logs
and see exactly how many times an ad was served to readers. Using the new
standards, they will use consistent methods for counting those readers
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Carl Bialik carl.bialik( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110048058975973783,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
See also:
Ad Network Monitors Web Habits
Tacoda, an online marketing company, will announce today the creation of a
network of 60 Web sites that allow its members to display ads based on how
people surf through the network. Tacoda's service, called AudienceMatch,
will not know who those surfers are, just where they visit.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Bob Tedeschi]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/15/technology/15ecom.html
(requires registration)
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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.
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