December 2004

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 12/23/04

...and we're outta here. Let's call that a year... we'll be back Monday,=20
January 3. Thanks for reading.
E-Mail Doesn't Take a Holiday
Sure Headlines takes a break, but those other spam-- um-- news services may=
=20
not. How do you manage email while on vacation? See the story below.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Joyce Cohen]
http://tech.nytimes.com/2004/12/23/technology/circuits/23vaca.html
(requires registration)

MEDIA
Media Moguls Ate Humble Pie in 2004
License Renewal Challenge
Indecency on the Air, Evolution Atop the FCC
Entercom Indecency Fine
AFI Cites 'Passion,' '9/11' Among 2004's 'Moments'

INTERNET
Free Net Access From the Mayor?
High-Speed Services for Internet Access
ICANN Contribution to the Working Group on Internet Governance
Design Mandates on VoIP

CABLE
FCC Fights Dual Decision
The FCC Frenzy Over Controlling Your Cable Box

TELECOM
FCC Raises Value of Spectrum It Seeks to Swap With Nextel
Local Telephone Competition
Verizon Settles Suit Over Rental Fee

WINDOWS
E.U. Orders Microsoft To Modify Windows

FROM APTS -- Nominations sought for 2005 EDGE Awards; Job Opening

MEDIA

MEDIA MOGULS ATE HUMBLE PIE IN 2004
The Federal Communications Commission is likely to revisit the deregulation=
=20
of media ownership rules next year after a federal court threw out most of=
=20
the proposals, but the prospects for major changes are dim. Several media=20
companies are still hoping that a ban on owning a TV station and a=20
newspaper in the same city may be eased, as well as limits on how many=20
radio or TV stations can be owned by the same company in one market. "The=20
media industry in 2002 was extremely confident that they were going to get=
=20
deregulation of ownership," said Blair Levin, a media regulatory analyst=20
with the Legg Mason brokerage firm. "I still think it's going to happen,=20
but it's going to take longer than the media thought and it's going to be=20
less significant." The industry is also dealing with technological changes.=
=20
TiVos and iPods threaten advertising-supported media. "There's really a=20
change in the network architecture," Levin said. "In five years will a TiVo=
=20
be able to store 500 movies? That tells us that the competition is getting=
=20
tougher, because you're not only competing with more channels, you're=20
competing with any program that was made over time."
[SOURCE:Yahoo!News/Associated Press, AUTHOR: Seth Sutel]
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=3Dstory&u=3D/ap/20041221/ap_on_bi_ge/ye_...
a_1
Also see --
That Was the Year That Was 2004
Leopold can't think of anything to say about 2004, but he recaps the year=20
in media with some interesting questions.
[SOURCE: CNN.com, AUTHOR: Todd Leopold]
http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/12/17/yir.entertainment/index.html

LICENSE RENEWAL CHALLENGE
Media General is asking the FCC for a waiver that would allow it to=20
continue to own both a broadcast outlet and the local newspaper in Florence=
=20
(SC). But the Media Access Project (MAP) is leading a charge (with Common=20
Cause and Free Press) to deny the waiver so Media General will have to=20
divest itself of one of the properties as a condition of renewing the=20
broadcast license. FCC rules have allowed Media General to operate the=20
combos despite the ban on local crossownership. Because acquisitions of=20
newspapers don't typically need approval of any regulator, a TV owner may=20
buy a paper in one of its markets and operate it until the local station=92s=
=20
license is up for renewal. The FCC has given MAP until January 31, 2005 to=
=20
answer the 100-page opposition pleading filed by Media General in the=20
"Petition to Deny" proceeding.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-4010A1.doc
Also see --
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488952?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP

INDECENCY ON THE AIR, EVOLUTION ATOP THE FCC
Shortly before becoming chairman of the Federal Communications Commission=20
nearly four years ago, Michael K. Powell received a Freedom of Speech Award=
=20
for saying it was time to eliminate the double standard that allowed the=20
government to subject broadcasters, unlike their competitors in cable and=20
satellite television, to indecency and other speech regulations. Now some=20
critics say he has evolved into the most heavy-handed enforcer of speech=20
restrictions in decades. Track this ...um... evolution at the URL below.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stephen Labaton]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/23/arts/television/23powe.html?oref=3Dlogin
(requires registration)
See also --
Unlikely crusader: How libertarian technocrat Michael Powell saved his=20
career -- and lost his soul
More on Chairman Powell's "evolution."
[SOURCE: Boston Phoenix, AUTHOR: Dan Kennedy]
http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/news_features/dont_quote_me/multi-pa...
ocuments/04352406.asp

ENTERCOM INDECENCY FINE
The Federal Communications Commission today issued a Notice of Apparent=20
Liability For Forfeiture against Entercom Kansas City License, LLC,=20
licensee of Stations KQRC-FM, Leavenworth, Kansas, and KFH(AM), Wichita,=20
Kansas, for willfully and repeatedly airing apparently indecent material=20
during multiple broadcasts of the "Dare and Murphy Show." The Commission=20
proposed a forfeiture in the maximum amount allowed by law at the time=20
($27,500) for each of the four apparently indecent broadcasts by the two=20
stations, for a total proposed forfeiture of $220,000. The Commission=20
concluded that the material in these broadcasts appeared to meet the=20
agency's indecency definition. Specifically, the program materials=20
included repeated, graphic and explicit sexual descriptions that were=20
pandering, titillating or used to shock the audience. The Commission=20
proposed a forfeiture for the maximum statutory amount because of the=20
egregious nature of the violations and Entercom's history of prior indecent=
=20
broadcasts. Commissioners Copps and Martin released statements suggesting=20
the Commission should have fined the station for each indecent utterance=20
during the shows.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255654A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-231A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-231A2.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-231A3.doc
See also --
* FCC Nixes Naked Twister
The article contains more details about the programming in question.
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489851?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
* FCC Posts Complaints Received About NBC=92s Olympic Coverage
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126417&pt=3Dtodaysnews

AFI CITES 'PASSION,' '9/11' AMONG 2004'S 'MOMENTS'
The American Film Institute has selected nine "Moments of Significance" as=
=20
an adjunct to its annual AFI Awards. The list includes: 1) "The Changing=20
Landscape of Television News" -- "The loss of this generation of=20
journalists raises questions about the long-term viability of evening news=
=20
broadcasts, which have been suffering from declining ratings for years due=
=20
to 24-hour news channels and immediate access to news via the Internet. It=
=20
also illustrates a more significant and worrisome trend -- the drastic=20
change in how news is packaged and presented via television." 2) "Final=20
Domino Falls in Vertical Integration of Film and TV": In the AFI's view,=20
that occurred May 12 when NBC and Universal merged, "signaling the final=20
stage of vertical reintegration in the entertainment industry." Fifty-five=
=20
years after the Paramount Decree, which prohibited movie studios from=20
owning theater chains, "studios, networks, theater chains, music labels and=
=20
home video departments are integrated to serve and support each other." 3)=
=20
"TV Thinks Outside the Box": "A second wave of convergence has begun to=20
impact the world of television as content is packaged for distribution=20
across multiple platforms," the AFI said. As examples, it cited the=20
premiere of the pilot of the WB Network's "Jack & Bobby" on the Internet,=20
the success of TV programing on DVD and the growth of video games. 4) "FCC=
=20
as Cultural Force": "The government's voice in what is suitable for the=20
airwaves is not a new concept, but the staggering rate at which the threat=
=20
of it grew during the year has had a profound effect on television," the=20
AFI said. "Unsure of how the FCC will rule on an issue, the creative=20
community has begun to self-censor their shows, a disturbing trend in a=20
country founded on free expression."
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Gregg Kilday]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=3DfilmNews&storyID=3D7152403

INTERNET

FREE NET ACCESS FROM THE MAYOR?
Cities are eager to set up wireless Internet access systems regardless of=20
whether the public gains access. Wireless communication can be used for=20
automated gas-meter reading, traffic monitoring, and police and fire=20
department communications. There's no reason for governments to wait=20
because they can quickly save money and increase productivity just in these=
=20
areas. Wi-fi is not just Internet access but "a grid that you can plug into=
=20
to run a lot of different applications," points out John Yunker, an analyst=
=20
who closely tracks emerging wireless technologies in his newsletter, The=20
Great Unwired. By "taking the litigation route instead of the innovation=20
route," existing providers "create the impression they're standing in the=20
way ... of rapid deployment," Mr. Yunker says. "Most cities don't want to=20
be in this business," but private companies just aren't moving fast enough,=
=20
he says. Though a Pennsylvania law, and those in other states, may be a=20
model for slowing installation of wi-fi systems in cities, the trend looks=
=20
unstoppable, some observers say. "What has to be worked out," says Roberta=
=20
Wiggins, a research fellow at the Yankee Group in Boston, "is who manages=20
and provides the service."
[SOURCE: Christian Science Monitor, AUTHOR: Gregory M. Lamb]
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1223/p14s02-stin.html

HIGH-SPEED SERVICES FOR INTERNET ACCESS
The Federal Communications Commission released new data on high-speed=20
connections to the Internet in the United States. For reporting purposes,=20
high-speed lines are connections that deliver services at speeds exceeding=
=20
200 kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one direction, while advanced=20
services lines are connections that deliver services at speeds exceeding=20
200 kbps in both directions. The FCC's findings include: 1) High-speed=20
lines connecting homes and businesses to the Internet increased by 15%=20
during the first half of 2004; 2) Of the 32.5 million high-speed lines in=20
service, 30.1 million served residential and small business subscribers; 3)=
=20
High-speed connections in service over digital subscriber lines (DSL)=20
increased 20% in the first half of 2004 and 16% for cable modem service;=20
and 4) Of the 32.5 million high-speed lines, 23.5 million provided advanced=
=20
services, i.e., services at speeds exceeding 200 kbps in both directions.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255669A1.doc
See the report at:
http://www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/recent.html

ICANN CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORKING GROUP ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE
The ICANN Board agreed to provide a $100,000 contribution to the Working=20
Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) Secretariat. The WGIG was established=20
by the Secretary General of the United Nations in order to "develop a=20
working definition of Internet governance" and "identify the public policy=
=20
issues that are relevant to Internet governance." The WGIG will prepare a=20
report for consideration for the second phase of the World Summit on the=20
Information Society, to be held in Tunis in 2005. The WGIG Secretariat is=20
responsible for supporting the WGIG and its work, including the preparation=
=20
of materials, reaching out to stakeholders, and preparing the draft report=
=20
of the WGIG as input to the WSIS. The WGIG consists of 40 members and=20
includes members of the ICANN community. The work of the WGIG is already=20
underway, trying to come to terms with issues such as affordable Internet=20
access for all, and cross-border cooperation on spam, cyber-security and=20
cyber-crime (see WGIG inventory of public policy issues and priorities).=20
Today's contribution demonstrates ICANN's support for the International=20
community's efforts to address these important issues. As part of that=20
understanding of Internet governance, it is particularly important that=20
there is a sound understanding of the areas for which ICANN is responsible=
=20
and its impact to date. The ICANN community is closely following the WSIS=20
and WGIG discussions, and is seeking to ensure a broader understanding of=20
how the ICANN framework functions.
[SOURCE: Internet Corporation For Assigned Names and Numbers Press release]
http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-20dec04.htm

INDUSTRY, PUBLIC INTEREST GROUPS OPPOSE FCC PROPOSAL TO IMPOSE DESIGN=20
MANDATES ON VOIP
A diverse group of companies, trade associations and public interest groups=
=20
from across the political spectrum filed two sets of joint comments at the=
=20
Federal Communications Commission arguing that extending controversial=20
wiretap design mandates to the Internet and VoIP services will seriously=20
harm technology innovation in the United States. The comments also explain=
=20
that law enforcement can already intercept Internet communications without=
=20
a design mandate, and that in any event the FCC lacks the legal authority=20
to extend the design mandate statute. December 22, 2004
Joint Reply Comments of Industry and Public Interest Groups on CALEA Notice=
=20
of Proposed Rulemaking [PDF], December 21, 2004:
http://www.cdt.org/digi_tele/20041221joint.pdf
Joint Initial Comments of Industry and Public Interest Groups [PDF],=20
November 08, 2004:
http://www.cdt.org/digi_tele/20041108indpubint.pdf

CABLE

FCC FIGHTS DUAL DECISION
Last month, the U.S. Appeals Court in Washington (DC) gave the FCC 30 days=
=20
to explain to the court why the Commission had not acted on digital=20
television must-carry regulations (see 11/24/04 Headlines). The FCC has=20
replied saying that it had already resolved the issue, and that Paxson, the=
=20
plaintiff in the case, had failed to show that its lack of a final decision=
=20
on dual carriage "warrants the drastic remedy" of a court-forced decision.=
=20
The FCC has tentatively said that it interprets the will of Congress on=20
multicasting as requiring cable to carry a digital duplicate of the primary=
=20
analog signal, not all the extra digital channels broadcasters will be able=
=20
to do. The dual-carriage issue goes to whether cable must, during the=20
transition to digital, carry both analog and digital versions. Hoping to=20
increase the value of its television stations, Paxson wants dual must-carry.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489815?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

THE FCC FRENZY OVER CONTROLLING YOUR CABLE BOX
[Commentary] As with their service, cable companies have a monopoly on the=
=20
"set-top" boxes, which allow you to get premium and digital programs and=20
haven't changed much over the past 15 years. If you want digital service or=
=20
premium channels such as HBO, you need the box, and you use the one=20
provided by your cable company. For about 10 years, policymakers in=20
Washington have been trying to break this bottleneck and give consumers=20
choice. Cable operators successfully lobbied to delay, from the beginning=20
of 2005 to mid-2006, the deadline for adopting the underlying technology=20
all competitors must use. Now, they are pushing hard to either extend the=20
deadline another 18 months or do away with the requirement. So far, the=20
FCC's media bureau has made no formal move to urge the FCC commissioners to=
=20
make a decision either way, but that is expected soon. Speculation is that=
=20
if the cable guys lose this round, it will be a key part of their agenda=20
when Congress moves to revise the 1996 Telecommunications Act governing=20
cable and telephone service, which is where a lot of this got started. But=
=20
as we get deeper into the digital age, these kinds of industry battles are=
=20
only going to grow more numerous. Trying to spur innovation and ensure=20
competition when those who control the plumbing have so much power is no=20
easy matter. The lawyers and lobbyists, it seems, are the only sure winners.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jonathan Krim krimj( at )washpost.com]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21137-2004Dec22.html
(requires registration)

TELECOM

FCC RAISES VALUE OF SPECTRUM IT SEEKS TO SWAP WITH NEXTEL
The FCC sweetened the pot in the Nextel rebanding plan aimed at ending=20
interference on frequencies used by police, fire and other public-safety=20
organizations. In an order released Wednesday, the FCC revalued frequencies=
=20
that Nextel would surrender by $452 million, to more than $2 billion. The=20
order was approved on a 4-0 vote, with a fifth commissioner, Michael Copps,=
=20
issuing a concurring opinion but suggesting the commission was too=20
imprecise in determining the new value of Nextel's spectrum. Nextel has=20
until Feb. 7 to accept the plan.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Sara Schaefer Mu=F1oz=20
sara.schaefer( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110377033278008069,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)
FCC order:=
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-294A1.doc
Copps statement:=20
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-294A2.doc
Adelstein statement:=20
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-294A3.doc

LOCAL PHONE COMPETITION
The Federal Communications Commission released new data on local telephone=
=20
service competition in the United States. Findings include: 1) End-user=20
customers obtained local telephone service by utilizing approximately 148.1=
=20
million incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) switched access lines, 32.0=
=20
million competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) switched access lines,=20
and 167.3 million mobile wireless telephone service subscriptions; 2)=20
Nationwide, mobile wireless telephone subscribers increased 7% during the=20
first half of 2004 from 157.0 million to 167.3 million; and 3) CLECs=20
reported 20.8 million (or 15%) of the 135.4 million lines that served=20
residential and small business end users and 11.2 million (or 25%) of the=20
44.6 million lines that served medium and large business, institutional,=20
and government customers.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255670A1.doc
And you were worried you would not have anything to read during the break...
http://www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/recent.html

VERIZON SETTLES SUIT OVER RENTAL FEE
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Peter D. Lichtman approved a=20
class-action settlement Tuesday allowing Verizon customers in California to=
=20
be reimbursed for 90% of the rental fees they paid between 1994 and 2001,=20
plus 6% interest per year, for rotary phones they were not using. The=20
maximum refund will be about $500 per phone. The settlement could cost=20
Verizon up to $88 million.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: David Colker]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-verizon23dec23,1,1753...
story?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

WINDOWS
E.U. Orders Microsoft To Modify Windows
EU ORDERS MICROSOFT TO MODIFY WINDOWS
Microsoft Corp. will for the first time be forced by antitrust regulators=20
to change how it designs and sells its widely used Windows computer=20
operating system, after a European Union judge yesterday rejected the=20
company's bid to postpone sanctions against it. The decision means the=20
company must create two versions of Windows for the European market. One=20
version will include programs for playing digital music and video and one=20
will not. E.U. antitrust officials hope that will give rival makers of=20
media-playing software a better chance to compete for prominence on=20
Windows-based computers.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Jonathan Krim krimj( at )washpost.com]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21144-2004Dec22.html
(requires registration)
See also:
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041223/6b_msoft_23.art.htm

FROM APTS

Nominations sought for 2005 EDGE Awards
The Association of Public Television Stations is now accepting nominations=
=20
for the 2005 EDGE Awards, due January 17, 2005. The EDGE Awards recognize:=
=20
Excellence in Digital transition; Groundbreaking partnerships; Educational=
=20
technologies.
[SOURCE: Association of Public Television Stations]
http://www.apts.org/events/capitolhillday/awards.cfm

The Association of Public Television Stations (APTS) seeks a Research=20
Analyst responsible for collecting, analyzing and presenting information=20
about the public television industry and related industries and issues.=20
General duties consist of maintaining data about the operations and=20
services of APTS member stations, and responding to requests for specific=20
information and analysis to support APTS=92 legal and APTS Action=92s=20
government relations and public communications. Please submit a cover=20
letter with salary history and resume by January 14, 2005 to: Meegan White,=
=20
APTS, 666 Eleventh Street, NW, Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20001, fax to=20
202-654-4236 or email to meegan( at )apts.org No phone calls, please.
http://www.apts.org/
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/22/04

Groups Join Forces to Advocate for Media Reform
The Alliance for Better Campaigns and the Campaign Legal Center's Media
Policy Program will merge in early 2005. The Alliance, in its new role as
the Legal Center's Media Policy Program, will continue advocating for legal
and policy reforms that reduce the cost and increase the flow of political
communication on the nation's publicly owned airwaves. It will also help
shape political broadcasting policy by promoting awareness and enforcement
of political broadcasting laws through FCC rulemaking proceedings,
congressional action and public education. Meredith McGehee, who currently
leads the Alliance, will become the director of the Legal Center's Media
Policy Program. The Campaign Legal Center is a nonpartisan, nonprofit group
working to improve and enforce the nation's campaign finance,
communications and government ethics laws.
[SOURCE: Alliance for Better Campaigns Press Release]
http://bettercampaigns.org/press/release.php?ReleaseID=67

BROADCASTING
FCC Finds Room for Faith
U.S. Bans Al-Manar, Says TV Network Backs Terror
Trust Fund Possible Only with New Unity and Broad Support
High Bidding Keeps Pubradio on Sidelines in FCC Auctions

JOURNALISM
Gallup: Online News Hasn't Beaten Old Media -- Yet
Learn from the Bloggers, My Children
Washington Post Co. Buying Web Magazine Slate

INTERNET
A National Telephone Tax?
SBC Would Like to Disconnect Broadband Plan
Competitive Industry Speaks Against BellSouth Forbearance Petition
U.S. Judge Refuses to Accept Guilty Plea on Spam
SuprNova Closes Amid Hollywood Crackdown

CABLE
SBC'S IP-Based Video Subject to Franchise Rules, Say City Lawyers
Cable Wants to Keep Dual Boxes

A SIT-DOWN WITH... FCC Chairman Michael Powell; NBC Universal head Bob Wright

BROADCASTING

FCC FINDS ROOM FOR FAITH
DBS operators were required in 1998 to set aside 4% of their channel
capacity for public interest programming and on Tuesday the FCC ruled that
noncommercial, religious channels can count towards that obligation. Media
Bureau Chief Ken Ferree dismissed a complaint brought by the Secular
Coalition for America. The group had argued that setting-aside space for
religious programmers violates the constitutional ban on government
endorsement of religion because the channels are publicly subsidized. The
FCC countered, however, that there is no direct public subsidy, and that
permitting the channels to count toward the set-aside quota does not
constitute a government bias in favor of religious programming.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489733.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

US BANS AL-MANAR, SAYS TV NETWORK BACKS TERROR
State Department officials placed the satellite television network
Al-Manar, one of the most popular television networks in the
Arabic-speaking world, on its Terrorist Exclusion List on Friday because of
what they described as its incitement of terrorist activity. The
designation means foreign nationals who work for the network, run by the
Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, or provide it any support can be barred
from the United States. The U.S. action had the effect of banning al-Manar
in the United States, where its programming had been beamed via GlobeCast,
a company that sells access to foreign television programs by satellite.
"As of Friday last week, that channel is no longer on the satellite," a
GlobeCast spokesman said. "It's not a question of freedom of speech," State
Department spokesman Richard A. Boucher said. "It's a question of
incitement of violence. We don't see why, here or anywhere else, a
terrorist organization should be allowed to spread its hatred and
incitement through the television airwaves." Osama Siblani, publisher of
the Arab American News, a newspaper in Dearborn (MI), said al-Manar is
popular in this country in part because of its strong support for
"resistance against Israeli occupation." "I disagree with the State
Department that it incites violence," he said. "By that standard, they
should shut Fox News for inciting violence against Muslims."
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: John Mintz]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A18011-2004Dec21.html
(requires registration)

TRUST FUND POSSIBLE ONLY WITH UNITY AND BROAD SUPPORT
At the University of Chicago's Cultural Policy Center's conference "The
Future of Public Television" everyone was talkin' trust fund. There's a
fleeting chance in coming months that Congress could heed pleas for a trust
fund -- endowing it with proceeds from FCC auctions of the TV spectrum to
be declared surplus when TV broadcasting goes all-digital. To establish
that elusive trust fund -- first envisioned by the Carnegie Commission on
educational television in 1967 -- public broadcasters must unite behind a
plan and marshal a broad coalition to campaign for it. See what proposals
are out there at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Current, AUTHOR: Karen Everhart]
http://www.current.org/funding/funding0423trustfund.shtml

HIGH BIDDING KEEPS PUBRADIO ON SIDELINES IN FCC AUCTIONS
Last month's Auction 37 at the FCC gained bids from 10 public radio
licensees, but just one won a new FM channel. The bids for available
channels went much higher than expected and raise questions on whether
public broadcasters will be able to compete in future auctions as well.
[SOURCE: Current, AUTHOR: Mike Janssen]
http://www.current.org/

JOURNALISM

GALLUP: ONLINE NEWS HASN'T BEATEN OLD MEDIA -- YET
Gallup released poll results Tuesday finding 51% of respondents get news
from local TV every day, 44% get it from local newspapers (additional 14%
say they get news from newspapers several times a week, bringing that total
to 58%), 39% get it from cable news channels and 36% from network TV
newscasts. But every source has fallen somewhat since 2002, with only news
on the Internet gaining, from 15% going there every day two years ago to
20% doing so today.
[SOURCE: Editor & Publisher, AUTHOR: Greg Mitchell
gmitchell( at )editorandpublisher.com]
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_con...

LEARN FROM THE BLOGGERS, MY CHILDREN
What can blogging teach traditional journalism? 1) Be more personal. 2) Let
the public in on news decision-making. 3) Be more focused and intentional
-- stop trying to be everything to everybody. 4) Print the truth, not just
the facts. 5) Don't just report, teach... Become a resource and not just a
product. 6) Be more local. 7) Give readers access to source material (like
the full text of interviews). 8) Add multiple RSS feeds to web sites. 9)
Add email addresses to stories. 10) Learn to change in response to the flow
of news or market conditions. Don't think of this article as a primer for
journalists, think of it as an outline of what to expect from your source
of news.
[SOURCE: First Draft, AUTHOR: Tim Porter]
http://www.timporter.com/firstdraft/

WASHINGTON POST CO. BUYING SLATE WEB MAGAZINE
The Washington Post Company will buy Microsoft's online magazine, Slate, in
an effort to boost the newspaper company's online traffic. According to
ComScore Media Metrix, washingtonpost.com drew 4.5 million unique visitors
last month, while Slate drew 4.8 million. Much of Slate's traffic is driven
by being part of the Microsoft Network, whose home page will continue to
feature Slate headlines under the agreement. Post executives say that
Slate's home page will include some reference to the newspaper's Web site
and that washingtonpost.com will also promote certain Slate stories. Cliff
Sloan, general counsel of Washington Post Newsweek Interactive, called the
acquisition "a great fit" in part because advertisers could be offered a
package that would include The Post and Newsweek sites as well as Slate.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Howard Kurtz]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16216-2004Dec21.html
(requires registration)
See also --
http://news.com.com/Washington+Post+picks+up+Slate+from+Microsoft/2100-1...
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-slate22dec22,1,197674...

INTERNET

A NATIONAL TELEPHONE TAX?
[Commentary] Members of the National Governors Association, the National
Conference of State Legislatures, the National League of Counties, the
National League of Cities and the U.S. Conference of Mayors desperately
wants to tax Internet use. And they're hoping that Internet phone calls,
the latest hot Web application, will pave the way. They want the Internet
classified as one giant telephone for tax purposes. That's because telecom
levies are some of the highest in the country, averaging 17.9%, according
to the Council on State Taxation, and producing a cool $20 billion or so
every year for state and local coffers. Since the Internet is making
everyone more productive, it deserves some credit for the economic growth
that has led to greater tax collections. Taxes are unlikely to help this
trend, let alone encourage faster broadband deployment. If the politicians
see a budgetary "crisis" at the state level, they might consider addressing
the expenditure side of the ledger for a change before making Internet
telephony their next revenue gusher.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110367932686306775,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

SBC WOULD LIKE TO DISCONNECT SOUTH BEND'S BROADBAND PLAN
South Bend (IN) plans to spend $600,000 next year to lay new fiber optic
lines to bring lower prices and easier access to high-speed data users, a
critical ingredient in growing high-tech jobs. SBC, the area's dominant
local phone company, already offers the high-speed Internet service using
the infrastructure from its phone network. The company says
government-subsidized competition is not fair since these telecommunication
providers are exempt from paying taxes, have unfettered access to rights of
way, can raise capital through the issuance of tax-exempt bonds and are not
required to turn a profit. But Mayor Stephen Luecke says the city is not
getting into the telecommunications business. It will be St. Joseph Valley
Metronet -- a nonprofit group comprising representatives from area
businesses and Project Future, the local economic development agency -- not
the city, owning the fiber optic lines. The city is merely entering into a
reciprocal agreement with the nonprofit to allow it use of city pipes, or
conduit, that will carry the lines.
[SOURCE: South Bend Tribune, AUTHOR: Jeff Parrott]
http://www.southbendtribune.com/stories/2004/12/19/local.20041219-sbt-FU...

COMPETITIVE INDUSTRY SPEAKS AGAINST BELLSOUTH FORBEARANCE PETITION
Competitive Internet Service Providers and Internet telephone service
providers spoke with one voice, urging the FCC to deny a BellSouth petition
seeking forbearance from application of Computer Inquiry and Title II
common carrier requirements to the transport component of its broadband
services. They said the market for underlying broadband transmission
services isn't competitive, contrary to the BellSouth claims. They said
Bells retain significant market power in the wholesale telecom services
broadband market, and competitive carriers have to acquire such services
from them. Many agreed there was little or no intermodal competition to
give competitors an alternative, since satellite, wireless and other
technologies have less than 8% of the combined market.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Susan Polyakova]
(Not available online)

US JUDGE REFUSES TO ACCEPT GUILTY PLEA ON SPAM
U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein refused to accept a guilty plea from
a former America Online employee accused of selling the Internet provider's
customer list to a "spammer," saying he was unsure a crime had been
committed. At issue, the judge said, is whether the actions rose to the
level required by a new antispam law, which states that spam must be not
only annoying but deceptive.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=7152902

DOWNLOAD SITE SUPRNOVA CLOSES AMID HOLLYWOOD CRACKDOWN
Slovenia-based SuprNova.org, one of the Internet's most popular sites for
finding links to download pirated movies, has been taken offline by its
creator amid a legal crackdown by Hollywood's copyright cops.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Adam Pasick]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=7152343

CABLE

SBC'S IP-BASED VIDEO SUBJECT TO FRANCHISE RULES, SAY CITY LAWYERS
If SBC's proposed Internet Protocol-based video programming services offers
broadcast and traditional cable programming such as ESPN and CNN, it would
be subject to local franchising requirements, lawyers for municipalities
say. SBC has taken the position that just as cable's Internet telephone
service is exempt from traditional phone regulations, its Internet
Protocol-based video offering should be exempt from legacy video regulations.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Dinesh Kumar]
(Not available online)

CABLE WANTS TO KEEP DUAL BOXES
The FCC is expected to rule in early January on dual-function boxes. The
National Cable & Telecommunications Association wants to eliminate a rule
that will require cable operators to stop providing by July 2006 these
set-top boxes that combine both security and channel-surfing functions. The
rules were imposed to encourage a competitive retail market for set-top
navigation boxes that could contain a variety of new interactive features
and NCTA is arguing that the market is competitive enough already.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489739.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

A SIT-DOWN WITH...

THE RELUCTANT PLANNER
An August interview with FCC Chairman Michael Powell. He speaks about
broadcast indecency enforcement, spectrum ownership, media ownership rules,
diversity and localism, low power radio, unlicensed spectrum and much much
more.
[SOURCE: Reason Online, AUTHOR: Drew Clark, Nick Gillespie, and Jesse Walker]
http://www.reason.com/0412/fe.dc.the.shtml

Wright's Hollywood Script
Bob Wright, Chief Executive of NBC Universal, talks about what it is like
going from TV mogul to TV, movie, production mogul.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Brooks Barnes brooks.barnes( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110366109828506287,00.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 12/21/04

TODAY'S QUESTION: Has reality TV hit rock bottom?

CONGRESS
Vitter, DeMint in, Brownback Out at Senate Commerce Committee

BROADCASTING
Justice Delays Firing at Prometheus
Big Media and Diverse Media?
Broadcasters, Cable Seek More Time to Comply with Website Rules
The 'Daddy' of TV Tastelessness

CABLE
NCTA Bids Farewell to 2004, Sachs

TELECOM
Cellphones in Flight: The Story Is Data, Not Chatter
Mobile Phone Radiation Harms DNA, New Study Finds

INTERNET
The Electronic Library
P2P Battle Shifts to High Court

QUICKLY -- Sinclair & Elections; What Happened to Fairness?; Funding Rural
Telemed;
A Ban for US/French Media?

CONGRESS

VITTER, DEMINT IN, BROWNBACK OUT AT SENATE COMMERCE COMMITTEE
The organizational plan for the new Congress is starting to leak out.
Democrats are likely to have two fewer seats than the GOP on each Senate
committee after the Republicans strengthened their majority in the
election. For the Senate Commerce Committee, this means that even though
three Dems are leaving the panel -- ranking Hollings (SC) and member Breaux
(LA) retired while Sen Wyden (OR) has announced a move to the Fiance
Committee -- only two seats will be filled. They are likely to be filled by
Sens Nelson (Neb) and Pryor (Ark). More interesting, perhaps, is that Sen
Brownback, the chamber's champion for tougher broadcast indecency
enforcement, will leave the Commerce Committee for the Judiciary Committee.
His departure and that of former Sen. Fitzgerald's (IL) creates two
openings for the majority that are likely to be filled by first-term Sens.
Vitter (R-LA) and DeMint (R-SC). Neither has a deep background in
telecommunications.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)

BROADCASTING

JUSTICE DELAYS FIRING AT PROMETHEUS
To appeal or not to appeal -- that is the question. Whether 'tis nobler in
the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous public opinion, or
to take arms against a sea of lawyers, and by opposing the lower court's
ruling end ownership rules? The FCC and the US Solicitor General's Office
still can't decide whether they will appeal a Philadelphia appeal's court
ruling throwing out the FCC's changes to media ownership rules. They have
asked the Supreme Court for more time to decide. Media lawyers following
the broadcast ownership case say the FCC has no clear path to a Supreme
Court challenge and may be having trouble coming up with a rationale likely
to succeed. The Philadelphia ruling does not conflict with any other court
rulings and there are no constitutional arguments the FCC could make
without putting a huge portion of its media regulation at risk of being
overturned. On the other hand, a number of high profile media companies
wouldn't mind putting that huge portion at risk, recognizing that the case
offers a long-shot chance of eliminating burdensome ownership rules and
possibly other regulations. They have indicated that they will ask the
court to strike down broadcast ownership regulation as unconstitutional. In
previous filings to the court, several broadcasters hinted they will ask
the court to review whether its 1969 Red Lion decision upholding scarcity
as a rationale for regulation, continues to apply.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489257?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

BIG MEDIA AND DIVERSE MEDIA?
Diversity consultant DiversityBusiness.com polled 18,000 minority business
owners online and asked them to identify the companies that "best promote
multicultural business opportunities." Among the top 50 were several of the
biggest communications companies in the business. Congratulating the
companies was FCC Chairman Michael Powell, who said in a statement: "These
companies have realized that diversity can be a commercial advantage that
should be cultivated in order to prosper in the marketplace. I commend them
for the vision that will ensure that our communications industries are as
diverse as the nation that they serve." For its part, the FCC did not make
the list of the top 20 government agencies that help develop minority
businesses. Number one on that list: The Minority Business Development Agency.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489159?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
Chairman Powell's statement
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255509A1.doc

BROADCASTERS, CABLE SEEK MORE TIME TO COMPLY WITH WEBSITE RULES
Major media companies including Turner, Disney, NBC/Telemundo, Viacom and
Discovery told the FCC it would be "difficult" to comply with new rules
restricting the display of website addresses during children's programming
by Feb. 1, 2005. The rules, which were released in Sept., surprised
broadcasters and cable systems. They would like an extension of the
deadline 'til January 1, 2006. Children Now said it understood there were
administrative issues in meeting the requirement quickly, but
hoped the issue would be resolved quickly. "The longer it takes, the longer
our children may not be protected," said Patti Miller, Director of the
Children & Media Program
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)

THE 'DADDY' OF TV TASTELESSNESS
"Reality TV" does not capture reality. Instead it creates fantasies
(whether beautiful or grotesque) designed to appeal to dreamers, cynics and
voyeurs. And, because those traits run though most people's personalities,
millions tune in to watch all sorts of mortifying, salacious and
occasionally heartwarming programs. A new show is bubbling up from the
bottom of the barrel. In "Who's Your Daddy?", a woman who was adopted as an
infant wins $100,000 if she can determine which of eight men is her
biological father. But if she guesses wrong, the impostor who fools her
gets the cash. The producers of "Who's Your Daddy?" contend critics should
hold their fire until they've seen the show, which they describe as a "fun
and healthy way" for adopted people and their birth fathers to get to know
each other. But you don't have to watch something racist, sexist or
homophobic to understand that it's a problem.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Adam Pertman, executive director of
the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-oe-pertman21dec21,1,...
(requires registration)

CABLE

NCTA BIDS FAREWELL TO 2004, SACHS
So long, farewell, auf Wiedersehen, good night... National Cable &
Telecommunications Association President Robert Sachs held a year-end
briefing for reporters Monday -- his last in the position. He touted the
industry's ~$95 billion investment in infrastructure, leadership in
providing Internet telephone service, and distribution of high definition
television. Sachs also reviewed the industry's key legislative and
regulatory issues of the year, including the Janet Jackson Super Bowl
fiasco, which prompted cable systems nationwide to run more than 3 million
public-service announcements throughout the year explaining the parental
controls available on cable. And he noted that efforts to implement a la
carte cable pricing "did not materialize" after the Federal Communications
Commission released a study that found that a la carte pricing "would lead
to less choice and higher pricing for consumers."
Communications Daily reports that the Brand X cable modem case is one of
the major policy issues facing the cable industry for 2005. NCTA is nervous
about reopening the Telecom Act but supports selective targeting of issues.
The organization expects to see Congress take up both a digital television
transition plan and regulation of Internet telephone service.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Steve Donohue]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA489305.html?display=Breaking+News&...
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA489324?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Anne Veigle]
(Not available online)
See NCTA Press Release at
http://www.ncta.com/press/press.cfm?PRid=562&showArticles=ok

TELECOM

CELLPHONES IN FLIGHT: THE STORY IS DATA, NOT CHATTER
As regulatory authorities seek comment and study the technological and
safety implications, no one expects the existing ban on using cellphones on
commercial flights to be eased for at least two years, if ever. More
important, it appears there is not a great deal of support for in-flight
cellphone chatter among business travelers, whom most airlines regard as
their most valuable customers. Leisure travelers are even less enamored.
That does not mean there is not wide support for the decision by the
Federal Communications Commission last week to seek formal public comment
on easing the ban on in-flight use of wireless devices such as cellphones.
In fact, there is overwhelming support for changing the rules to allow the
use of wireless communications devices in the air. It just does not
manifest itself as a vote of approval for "suffering through some
blabbermouth on a transcontinental yak-fest." Instead, airline passengers
mostly want the ability to stay in touch by text-messaging - using
cellphones, wireless communications devices like BlackBerrys and other
personal digital devices, or laptop Internet connections.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Joe Sharkey]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/21/business/21connected.html
(requires registration)

MOBILE PHONE RADIATION HARMS DNA, NEW STUDY FINDS
This is your brain. This is your brain on a cell phone. A new study
majority-funded by the European Union finds that radio waves from mobile
phones harm body cells and damage DNA in laboratory conditions. The
research project, which took four years and which was coordinated by the
German research group Verum, studied the effect of radiation on human and
animal cells in a laboratory. After being exposed to electromagnetic fields
that are typical for mobile phones, the cells showed a significant increase
in single and double-strand DNA breaks. The damage could not always be
repaired by the cell. DNA carries the genetic material of an organism and
its different cells. "There was remaining damage for future generation of
cells," said project leader Franz Adlkofer. This means the change had
procreated. Mutated cells are seen as a possible cause of cancer.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=ZU2Q1ZFAIS2ASCRBAEKS...

INTERNET

THE ELECTRONIC LIBRARY
[Commentary] Last week, Google announced an ambitious new plan to start
converting millions of books into digital files in partnership with several
major libraries, including the New York Public Library and the libraries at
Harvard, Stanford and Oxford. This is a logical step for Google, which says
its mission "is to organize the world's information and make it universally
accessible and useful." The idea of making books available online is not
new, but this plan represents an enormous shift in scale, so enormous that
if it is carried out successfully, it may redefine the nature of the
Internet and the university. Digital technology is only a few years old,
and even in that brief time, the digital world has produced dozens of
incompatible, and often unreadable, media formats. The Google project will
enhance the usefulness of the books it encompasses, but it in no way will
render them obsolete.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: NYT Editorial Staff]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/21/opinion/21tue2.html
(requires registration)

P2P BATTLE SHIFTS TO HIGH COURT
By deciding to hear the so-called Grokster case, the Supreme Court will
finally clarify the entertainment industry's ability to control
peer-to-peer technology through existing law. The Justices will have two
concerns as they review this case: 1) they will focus on whether the P2P
services facilitate a blatant way for users to defeat copyright laws,
threatening this important form of intellectual property and 2) they also
will be sensitive to the fact that its ruling may have dramatic effects in
the marketplace for technology and entertainment. Expect the Court to hear
oral arguments in March.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Susan Butler]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=7131330
See also
BitTorrent File-Swapping Networks Face Crisis
http://news.com.com/BitTorrent+file-swapping+networks+face+crisis/2100-1...
Statement from Public Knowledge
http://www.publicknowledge.org/pressroom/releases/pressrelease.2004-12-1...

QUICKLY

SINCLAIR'S HISTORY OF DECEPTION
Two years ago, Sinclair Broadcasting Group aided the campaign of Maryland
GOP gubernatorial candidate Robert Ehrlich while its two stations in the
state attacked Kathleen Kennedy Townsend.
[SOURCE: The Free Press, AUTHOR: Jason Leopold]
http://freepress.org/departments/display/19/2004/999

WHAT HAPPENED TO FAIRNESS?
The short happy life of the Fairness Doctrine.
[SOURCE: NOW with Bill Moyers]
http://www.pbs.org/now/politics/fairness.html

FUNDING FOR RURAL TELEMEDICINE SERVICES
On December 15, the FCC adopted an order to expand its program to bring
up-to-date medical services and information to rural areas through
telecommunications. The order is now available at the URL below.
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-289A1.doc

LEBANON MAY RETALIATE AGAINST U.S., FRENCH MEDIA
Since Hezbollah's Al Manar TV broadcasts have been banned in Europe and
North America, Lebanese Information Minister, Elie Ferzli, said that "at
the recommendation of parliamentary foreign affairs committee, we are
studying the possibility of taking retaliatory measures against the U.S.
and French media." Farif Abboud, Lebanon's ambassador to the U.S., said "It
is unacceptable to censor a media just because it defends positions in
which it believes by taking a stand in the Arab-Israeli conflict." He
accused Washington of "seeking to liquidate a media by accusing it of being
the voice of Satan."
[SOURCE: Al Jazeera]
http://www.aljazeera.com/me.asp?service_ID=6284
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/20/04

CORRECTION: The web address for the new Consumer Union telecom site is=20
www.hearusnow.org Many apologies.

BROADCASTING
MAP Fights Media General Waiver
Coalition Continues Anti-Indecency Push
HD Radio Offers Tantalizing Hope for Niche,
Hyperlocal Radio Content
FCC May Soon Adopt Rules for Distributed
Transmission Systems
LPM Fault Rates Are 'Staggering'

MEDIA/JOURNALISM
The Media Crisis at Year's End
Bloggers Scapegoated Over Kerry Miscall?
Religion is Big News on the Net

INTERNET
On the Open Internet, a Web of Dark Alleys
ICANN Partying Like It's 1999
ISP Wins $1 Billion in Spam Suit

TELECOM
Fewer Cellular Carriers, but Not Fewer Services
Why Sprint And Nextel Got Hitched
Sprint-Nextel Deal Could Raise Price For Cable Ventures
Local Governments Brace for Rough 2005
Sprint, Qwest, Level 3, Williams May Face $3 Billion
In Class Action Suits
CTIA Asks High Court to Sanction Zoning Board Damages
Telco Video, Then and Now: What's Different, or Same?
Two New Commissioners Could Help to Energize California PUC

MEDIA MEN OF THE YEAR -- Stern; Stewart

BROADCASTING

MAP FIGHTS MEDIA GENERAL WAIVER
Media General is asking the FCC for a waiver that would allow it to=20
continue to own both WMBB-TV and the Jackson County Floridian in Panama=20
City, Florida. But the Media Access Project is leading a charge to deny the=
=20
waiver so Media General will have to divest itself of one of the properties=
=20
as a condition of renewing WMBB=92s license. FCC rules have allowed Media=
=20
General to operate the combos despite the ban on local crossownership.=20
Because acquisitions of newspapers don't typically need approval of any=20
regulator, a TV owner may buy a paper in one of its markets and operate it=
=20
until the local station=92s license is up for renewal. On behalf of Common=
=20
Cause and Free Press, MAP has already asked the FCC to breakup the=20
company=92s combo in Myrtle Beach, where it owns WBTW-TV and the Florence=20
(SC) Morning News. Over the next three years, every TV station in the=20
country must apply for renewal. Media General also must obtain waivers next=
=20
year for combos in Columbus (GA) and Johnson City (TN).
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488952?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

COALITION CONTINUES ANTI-INDECENCY PUSH
The 2005 "to Do" list for the Christian Coalition includes religious speech=
=20
and political speech (getting rid of McCain-Feingold ad restrictions in the=
=20
run-up to elections). Is indecent speech on the agenda? Last year the=20
coalition pushed hard for indecency legislation which would have boosted=20
fines for indecency and it is likely to restart that push when Congress=20
returns next month. The coalition also plans to support the Parent's=20
Empowerment Act, a bill from California Republican and House Armed Services=
=20
Committee Chairman Duncan Hunter which would allow parents to bring civil=20
suits against the media for interstate or foreign transmission of=20
entertainment product deemed harmful to minors. Content providers would be=
=20
liable for a $10,000 fine for each instance. And Oklahoma Republican Rep.=20
John Sullivan wants to pass a Sense of Congress resolution urging the=20
Justice Department to enforce obscenity laws, primarily targeted to online=
=20
porn.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488407?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
Also see an editorial on indecency:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488906.html?display=3DOpinion...
erral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also --
FCC Receives Record Number Of Complaints, Issues Record Amount In Fines
CNN/Money reports that as 2004 draws to a close, the FCC has so far=20
received more than a million complaints about radio and television=20
programming. That's a record and so is the close to eight million dollars=20
in fines levied, half of them against Clear Channel Communications and=
Viacom.
[SOURCE: Radio Ink]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126368&pt=3Dtodaysnews

HD RADIO OFFERS TANTALIZING HOPE FOR NICHE, HYPERLOCAL RADIO CONTENT
A look at radio's transition to digital technology (HD Radio). Backers of=20
the new technology say that AM radio in HD sounds like FM radio, and FM=20
radio is CD quality. But perhaps the most exciting part of HD Radio is that=
=20
one station on one frequency could serve multiple digital streams --=20
meaning a public station could have news on one channel, classical music on=
=20
another and public affairs programming on another. Plus, there's the=20
possibility of rich data services such as local weather and news beamed to=
=20
portable devices in the future, as well as audio on demand and=20
time-shifting similar to TiVo on televisions. Learn more at the URL below.
[SOURCE: Online Journalism Review, AUTHOR: Mark Glaser]
http://www.ojr.org/ojr/stories/041214glaser/
See also:
Greater Media Commits All Stations To Be On-Air In HD By Year-End 2005
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126365&pt=3Dtodaysnews

FCC MAY SOON ADOPT RULES FOR DISTRIBUTED TRANSMISSIONS SYSTEMS
Distributed transmission system (DTS) operation is a method of transmitting=
=20
broadcast signals. Instead of one large tower, DTS employs multiple=20
lower-power transmitters similar to cellular networks. For broadcasters=20
covering areas that include large populations in valleys, DTS can greatly=20
improve TV reception. The FCC appears likely to move quickly on approving=20
DTS and while it works on the proceeding will rule on a case-by-case basis=
=20
for any station that applies to use DTS.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)

LPM FAULT RATES ARE 'STAGGERING'
The Don't Count Us Out Coalition is renewing its call for federal oversight=
=20
of Nielsen saying there are "gaping discrepancies" between the fault rates=
=20
(when Nielsen fails to get data from a home) for Blacks and Hispanics vs.=20
the general population in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco=
=20
where Nielsen has been rolling out its local people meters.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting& Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488975?display=3DBreaking+News

MEDIA/JOURNALISM

THE MEDIA CRISIS AT YEAR'S END: SUMMING UP AND MOVING FORWARD
[Commentary] How did the media, an institution with a brave history of=20
safeguarding democracy, become a threat to its survival? The Committee for=
=20
Excellence in Journalism's State of the Media Report shows a system that is=
=20
devolving and losing credibility: 1) A growing number of news outlets are=20
chasing relatively static or even shrinking audiences for news; 2) Much of=
=20
the new investment in journalism today is in disseminating the news, not in=
=20
collecting it; 3) In the 24-hour cable and online news format, there is a=
=20
tendency toward a jumbled, chaotic, repetitive and partial quality in some=
=20
reports, without much synthesis or even the ordering of the information;=20
and 4) Journalistic standards now vary even inside a single news=20
organization. While some trivialize media as a problem, others are trying=20
to do something about it. That is one of the big stories about the media=20
not yet in the media: the emergence of a media and democracy movement.=20
Watch for a year of media activism and advocacy from such groups as Media=20
For Democracy, MediaChannel, Free Press, Common Cause, Media Matters for=20
America, the Center for Digital Democracy, the Consumers Union, FAIR and,=20
possibly, MoveOn.org.
[SOURCE: MediaChannel.org, AUTHOR: Danny Schechter)
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert301.shtml

BLOGGERS SCAPEGOATED OVER KERRY MISCALL?
On Election Day 2004, early projections for 11 states were off by as much=20
as 20%, a mistake that had news outfits misallocating resources to report a=
=20
win for Sen Kerry. What went wrong? At first, bloggers were blamed for=20
releasing the early results. But why were those polls so off? In=20
mid-January, expect a report from the National Election Pool (NEP), the=20
news organizations that paid for the polls, reviewing its election=20
performance.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting& Cable]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488986?display=3DBreaking+News

RELIGION IS BIG NEWS ON THE NET
News media generally treat religion either as an aspect of a larger story,=
=20
like religion in politics, or seasonally, like the recent article in=20
Newsweek about the birth of the historical Christ. Religion is rarely a=20
story in its own right. But a survey by the Pew Internet and American Life=
=20
Project earlier this year found that of 64 percent of 128 million surfers=20
used the Internet for some form of spiritual or religious activity. That's=
=20
82 million adult Americans. "The Internet is perhaps the most remarkable=20
tool ever in finding out information about religion," according to Pastor=20
Paul Raushenbush, Associate Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University.=
=20
"For good and ill. You can find anything, but you don't know how credible=20
it is," said Raushenbush. Newspapers are just picking up on the interest=20
sparked in part by "The Passion" and the 2004 election.
[SOURCE: Online Journalism Review, AUTHOR: Daith=ED =D3 hAnluain]
http://www.ojr.org/ojr/stories/041216ohanluain/

INTERNET

ON THE OPEN INTERNET, A WEB OF DARK ALLEYS
George Tenet, the former director of central intelligence, speaking on the=
=20
vulnerabilities of the nation's computer networks at a technology security=
=20
conference on Dec. 1, noted the ability of terrorists to "work anonymously=
=20
and remotely to inflict enormous damage at little cost or risk to=20
themselves." He called for a wholesale taming of cyberspace. "I know that=20
these actions would be controversial in this age where we still think the=20
Internet is a free and open society with no control or accountability," Mr.=
=20
Tenet said, "But, ultimately, the Wild West must give way to governance and=
=20
control." Even if the government is able to shore up its networks against=20
attack -- one of many goals set forth by the intelligence reform bill=20
passed last week -- the ability of terrorists and other dark elements to=20
engage in covert communications online remains a daunting security problem,=
=20
and one that may prove impossible to solve.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Tom Zeller Jr.]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/20/technology/20covert.html
(requires registration)

ICANN PARTYING LIKE IT'S 1999
[Commentary] The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers=20
(ICANN), the international organization that oversees domain names,=20
believes it needs a bigger budget funded by domain name fees -- and plans=20
to start charging domain name owners in a process that will begin next=20
year. But ICANN had a similar plan back in 1999 and "Everyone from=20
presidential perennial Ralph Nader to Republican insider Grover Norquist=20
castigated ICANN for levying an 'illegal tax.'" McCullagh ends: "ICANN has=
=20
a clear incentive to adopt common-sense guidelines. Otherwise it risks=20
reliving the backlash it suffered in 1999."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Declan McCullagh]
http://news.com.com/ICANN+partying+like+its+1999/2010-1071_3-5495758.htm...
g=3Dnefd.ac

ISP WINS $1 BILLION IN SPAM SUIT
An Internet service provider in Iowa has been awarded more than $1 billion=
=20
in what is believed to be the largest lawsuit judgment ever against=
spammers.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com ]
http://news.com.com/ISP+wins+1+billion+in+spam+suit/2100-1028_3-5497211....
?tag=3Dnefd.top

TELECOM

FEWER CELLULAR CARRIERS, BUT NOT FEWER SERVICES
The rapid consolidation in the mobile phone industry raises a compelling=20
question: With fewer carriers, has power in the industry shifted away from=
=20
consumers? Not to worry, the authors say. Eighty percent of American adults=
=20
now use cellphones, so carriers have to reach ever-narrower segments of the=
=20
population. To do that, they are expected to expand the number of service=20
plans they offer, not reduce them. Though carriers are not necessarily=20
cutting the price of their service plans, they are offering consumers more=
=20
minutes and, in Cingular's case, allowing subscribers to roll over unused=20
time from month to month. With the extra time, wireless subscribers are=20
finding it easier to use their cellphone for long-distance calls that they=
=20
previously would have made on their home phones.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Matt Richtel & Ken Belson]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/20/technology/20newcon.html
(requires registration)

WHY SPRINT AND NEXTEL GOT HITCHED
The proposed merger of Sprint and Nextel is aimed first and the continued=20
survival of the two companies, but there's more. The deal leaves Sprint=20
Nextel poised to play a pivotal role in the coming convergence between=20
traditional and wireless phones, Web access, and video services. As the=20
Bells race against the cable operators to sell consumers everything from=20
voice to data to video, both sides need wireless phone services to sweeten=
=20
their bundle of offerings. The Bells already own their own wireless=20
companies -- but cable companies don't. Sprint Nextel can provide a=20
ready-made wireless offering for cable's four-fer pack. "The cable=20
companies are clearly looking for a wireless play," says Nextel CEO Timothy=
=20
M. Donahue, who will be chairman of the new company. "This [merged] company=
=20
is going to be remarkably successful in attracting partners." And the two=20
wireless carriers together own enough airwaves, stretching coast-to-coast,=
=20
to offer voice, data, and even video over next-generation wireless=20
broadband technology, such as the much-ballyhooed, upcoming WiMax standard.
[SOURCE: BusinessWeek, AUTHOR: Roger Crockett, Catherine Yang, Tom Lowry]
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/dec2004/tc20041217_6024.htm

SPRINT-NEXTEL DEAL COULD RAISE PRICE FOR CABLE VENTURES
The Sprint-Nextel deal will create the third-largest wireless carrier in=20
the nation, behind Cingular Wireless and Verizon Wireless, both owned by=20
Bell giants. With added muscle, a combined Sprint-Nextel could prove to=20
drive a hard bargain with cable operators intent on adding a wireless=20
component to their bundle of voice, video and data products. Cable=20
operators were not expected to be seriously looking to add a wireless=20
component to their voice offerings until the bulk of the VoIP rollout is=20
completed toward the end of 2005. =93The likelihood of a wireless venture=20
really hinges on whether customers demand wireless in the bundle,=94 Moffett=
=20
said. =93The Sprint-Nextel merger has one big pro -- a deal with=20
Sprint-Nextel would allow a more competitive offering down the road than=20
either could offer on their own -- and one big con -- the cable industry=92s=
=20
negotiating leverage would be diminished if they had to negotiate with the=
=20
two companies as one. But the question that remains is if this is something=
=20
that customers really have an appetite for.=94
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Mike Farrell]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA489007.html?display=3DTop+Stories
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

LOCAL GOVERNMENTS BRACE FOR ROUGH 2005
The Local Government Telecommunications Alliance is predicting that both=20
Congress and state legislatures will continue efforts to limit local=20
oversight of Internet-protocol services, whether voice, video or data. The=
=20
Senate is expected to take the lead in drafting new legislation designed to=
=20
overhaul the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA488941.html?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also --
States Must Update Communications Laws
State regulatory regimes for communications services are "no longer=20
sustainable," Progress & Freedom Foundation President Ray Gifford argues in=
=20
a new study.
[SOURCE: Progress & Freedom Foundation Press Release]
http://www.pff.org/news/news/2004/121704modelstate.html
http://www.pff.org/issues-pubs/pops/pop11.21modelstate.pdf

SPRINT, QWEST, LEVEL 3, WILLIAMS MAY FACE $3 BILLION IN CLASS ACTION SUITS
Sprint, Qwest, Level 3 and Williams asked the 7th U.S. Appeals Court=20
(Chicago) on Friday to stay a decision handed down last week reversing a=20
controversial nationwide class action settlement favored by the telecom=20
companies and lifting an injunction to allow other class action lawsuits to=
=20
go forward. The defendant companies said they had installed fiber on more=20
than 36,000 miles of railroad rights of way, comprising their core=20
infrastructure. But more than 30 class actions nationwide claim that the=20
subsurface rights belong to the landowners, and that the telecom companies=
=20
are intentional trespassers. Liability for the suits could reach $3 billion.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Susan Polyakova]
(Not available online)

CTIA ASKS HIGH COURT TO SANCTION ZONING BOARD DAMAGES
In January the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear Abrams v. City of Rancho=
=20
Palos Verdes, a case in which the Court will decide whether an amateur=20
radio operator should be reimbursed for his legal fees after winning a=20
dispute over a 50-foot antenna. The crux of the matter is a statute=20
originally intended to protect
plaintiffs in civil rights cases, that requires the losing side to cover=20
the legal fees of the prevailing party. The statute essentially flips a=20
central principal of US jurisprudence, the American Rule, that in most=20
cases both sides pay their own fees. The wireless industry lobby, CTIA, has=
=20
filed a brief in the case citing five zoning cases where it said carriers=20
were hurt by spurious decisions by local boards. Each represent =93bald=20
denials of federal rights by officials acting under color of state law,=94=
=20
CTIA said.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk]
(Not available online)

TELCO VIDEO, THEN AND NOW: WHAT'S DIFFERENT, OR SAME?
Ten years ago, the subject of telco-delivered video was just as hot, if not=
=20
hotter, than it is now. Monthlies wrote cover stories about it. Conferences=
=20
sprang up to attend to the growing video plans of the then-Big Six phone=20
companies. A lot was going on. But not much was ever accomplished. It took=
=20
a decade for telco video not to happen the last time. Now, the question=20
could be if it will take that long this time.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Leslie Ellis]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA488992.html?display=3DBroadband+We...
eferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TWO NEW COMMISSIONERS COULD HELP TO ENERGIZE CALIFORNIA PUC
The California Public Utilities Commission regulates companies that provide=
=20
power, telephone and water service in the state. With the appointment last=
=20
week of two new members to the PUC, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger can expect=20
solid support from the agency as he attempts to revamp the state's energy=20
market.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Marc Lifsher and James S. Granelli]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-puc20dec20,1,6346913....
y?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

MEDIA MEN OF THE YEAR

Media Web's Newsmaker of the Year is Howard Stern
http://www.investors.com/breakingnews.asp?journalid=3D24451335&brk=3D1

I Want Media's 2004 Media Person of the Year is Comedy Central's Jon Stewart
http://www.iwantmedia.com/mediapersonoftheyear.html
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/17/04

CONTEXT IS GOD
Google and God's Mind
PTC: Nets Still Diss Religion
Ryan Indecent, Says NRB Chief
Attention, FCC: You've Got Mail

POLICYMAKERS
Sununu Sees Telecom Act Ready for Vote by Mid-2006
Governor Picks Two to Replace PUC Members
Consumers Union Launches Telecom, Media Web Site

MEDIA
MoveOn.org Accepts Sinclair Challenge
Media Wish List for 2005
FCC Denies LPFM License

CABLE
Cable Rate Increases No Surprise, But Consumer Groups Angry
On-Demand TV Expands Via Underused Fiber Highways

QUICKLY -- SBC & the E-Rate; Report on Telephone Service Quality;
Report on Do-Not-Call List; Al Manar television a terrorist org

CONTEXT IS GOD (or, at least, King)

GOOGLE AND GOD'S MIND
[Commentary] Google is digitizing library holdings to create the electronic
equivalent of "the mind of God." Could this digital system be the death of
libraries? Don't count on it. There's a big difference between
"information" and "knowledge" and you can't deliver the latter with short
passages of books. The books in great libraries are much more than the sum
of their parts. They are designed to be read sequentially and cumulatively,
so that the reader gains knowledge in the reading. Gorman writes: "I am all
in favor of digitizing books that concentrate on delivering information,
such as dictionaries, encyclopedias and gazetteers, as opposed to
knowledge. I also favor digitizing such library holdings as unique
manuscript collections, or photographs, when seeing the object itself is
the point (this is reportedly the deal the New York Public Library has made
with Google). I believe, however, that massive databases of digitized whole
books, especially scholarly books, are expensive exercises in futility
based on the staggering notion that, for the first time in history, one
form of communication (electronic) will supplant and obliterate all
previous forms."
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Michael Gorman is president-elect of
the American Library Association]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-oe-nugorman17dec17,1...
(requires registration)

PTC: NETS STILL DISS RELIGION
According to Parents Television Council's sixth annual study of television
and religion, the television networks are including more religion in their
programming, but references to organized religion were overwhelmingly
negative. "Negative depictions of personal faith are systemic in much of
the creative community," said Frank Wright, president of the National
Religious Broadcasters. TV and film writers appear to be vying for an
industry "merit badge for attacking religious faith." Regardless of the
motivations, the consequence of overwhelmingly negative depictions could
seed widespread antipathy towards people of faith throughout society. "This
results in a dehumanization of people that tends to produce the potting
soil that leads to persecution." He compared the media climate towards
religious to the degradation of Jews before the Holocaust or black
Americans during slavery and Jim Crow. PTC President Brent Bozell said
there's nothing wrong with occasional negative depictions of religion, but
that the degree of unfavorable depictions today is way out of balance with
Americans' general positive outlook on faith and does not accurately
reflect the role of religion in American life. "When overall coverage is
negative, that coverage is out of sync with public opinion." Currently the
Catholic Church, still reeling from the clergy scandals, bears the brunt of
snide jokes on TV but similar attacks were levied against fundamentalist
Christians in years past. Christians are easier game for these sort of
characterizations, he surmised, because Jews and other religious minorities
have suffered so much persecution in the past that unfavorable depictions
would generate a torrent of backlash in society. Christian faith is due the
same the level of respect, he said.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting and Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488288?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

RYAN INDECENT, SAYS NRB CHIEF
Frank Wright, president of the National Religious Broadcasters, said that
stations should not have an open-ended right to air "Saving Private Ryan,"
which includes extreme violence and soldiers swearing, in hours when
children are likely to be watching. "Chairman Powell asserts that context
is crucial in deciding whether a show is indecent. While that is certainly
true, it is incomplete." The likelihood that children would have been in
the audience when the show aired should have been the deciding factor, he
said. "When there are children likely in the viewing audience, indecency
must be restricted." The FCC's Media Bureau has recommended dismissing the
complaint and FCC chairman Michael Powell has voted in favor of the
bureau's recommendation. The other four commissioners have not cast their
votes.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488607?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

ATTENTION, FCC: YOU'VE GOT MAIL
[Commentary] Readers are responding the Goodman's call to contact the FCC
and say they are offended by the Parents Television Council's attempts to
decide what is indecent broadcasting. So he's asking his audience to rise
again -- or for the first time -- to clog the FCC with protests against
programming that's "Creatively indecent:" Hope & Faith -- 7th Heaven --
Listen Up -- The Swan...
[SOURCE: San Francisco Chronicle, AUTHOR: Tim Goodman]
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/1...

POLICYMAKERS

SUNUNU SEES TELECOM ACT READY FOR VOTE BY MID-2006
Sen John Sununu (R-NH) predicts comprehensive telecommunication reform
including a plan on the digital television transition could be ready for a
vote by June 2006. But he also predicts that "Nothing will be agreed to
until everything is agreed to." Concerning Universal Service, he said the
fund was not intended to benefit surburban schools or upper-class people
living in rural areas. He thinks funds should be restricted to Americans
who really need the subsidy. He sees 6-8 sessions held by Sens Stevens and
Inouye with "grassroots" and consumer organizations during early 2005
followed by drafting of legislation. Asked about the FCC's phone
competition order adopted Wednesday, he said it was "almost entirely bad
news" for competitive carriers.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane]
(Not available online)
See also --
Sununu: New Bill to Address IP Video
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: ]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA488567.html?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

GOVERNOR PICKS TWO TO REPLACE PUC MEMBERS
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) is remaking the California Public Utilities
Commission in his image appointing "twin" Danny DeVito -- hold it! back on
script -- nominating Silicon Valley businessman and Steve Poizner (R) and
San Francisco attorney Dian Grueneich (D) to the five-member PUC to replace
outgoing Commissioners Loretta M. Lynch and Carl Wood. Pundits believe Gov
Schwarzenegger can expect a more friendly reception from the commission, a
powerful entity that regulates companies that provide electricity, natural
gas, telephone service and water to homes and businesses across the state.
But consumer activists are worried. "He apparently worships at the church
of deregulation," said Mindy Spatt, spokeswoman for the Utility Reform Network.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR:Marc Lifsher]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-puc17dec17,1,968372.s...
(requires registration)

CONSUMERS UNION LAUNCHES TELECOM, MEDIA WEB SITE
Consumers Union launched a web site (www.hearus.now.org) that is designed
to provide consumers with information on telecom and media industry
developments, help them shop for products and services, and make it easier
to lobby lawmakers and policy-makers on issues. "This web site addresses
the explosion of activist groups and energized consumers who are frustrated
by the government's hands-off approach when it comes to dealing with their
concerns over higher bills, poorer
service, and the fact a handful of companies control their communications,"
said Gene Kimmelman, senior director-public policy for Consumers
Union. "It's important consumers have one place to go where they can
understand how policies affect their pocketbooks. . . . HearUsNow.org not
only explains these issues, it gives consumers the tools to fight for their
interests. Our goal is to have success stories, where a consumer in San
Francisco can learn from someone in Philadelphia the methods and
challenges of creating an open wireless network in their community," said
Morgan Jindrich, director of HearUsNow.org. "We want to link consumers
throughout the nation so they have the power to take on these major issues
and big corporations. We want to put the power back in consumers' hands."
[SOURCE: TR Daily, AUTHOR: Paul Kirby pkirby( at )tr.com]

MEDIA

MOVEON.ORG ACCEPTS SINCLAIR CHALLENGE: "WE'LL GLADLY SEND AN EMAIL WITH A
SINCLAIR MESSAGE"
MoveOn.org, a SinclairAction.com supporter, accepted a challenge from
Sinclair Broadcast Group to allow Sinclair to produce a message that
MoveOn.org would email to its members. "If Sinclair will agree on a way to
share its license to broadcast into millions of homes, we'll gladly send
our members an email with a Sinclair message," said Eli Pariser, executive
director of MoveOn.org. In accordance with the terms of the license
agreements for the 62 television stations it owns or operates, Sinclair
Broadcast Group is able to broadcast over the public airwaves at no cost.
In return, Sinclair has a responsibility to provide reasonable opportunity
for the discussion of conflicting views on issues of public importance.
"The largest owner of television stations in the country is now equating
itself with an advocacy organization, rather than a media outlet," said
David Brock, President and CEO of Media Matters for America. "This
highlights a pattern we've seen with members of the conservative media
attempting to draw false equivalencies in order to support their arguments.
The real issue is that Sinclair Broadcast Group is abusing its stewardship
of the public airwaves by not providing airtime for opposing viewpoints."
[SOURCE: Media Matters for America]
http://mediamatters.org/items/200412160005

MEDIA WISH LIST FOR 2005
What are the five things Penenberg would most like to see in 2005? 1)
Google News should become a for-profit enterprise so it can be sued and the
courts can determine what is "fair use" when it comes to posting headlines
and lead paragraphs, 2) Bloggers break news, 3) Dismantle the FCC so the
campaign against indecency ends, 4) The end of Nielsen and comScore, and 5)
Media reasserts its role as government watchdog: It's time for news
organizations to stop chasing the almighty dollar and reassert themselves
as righters of wrong. This means reinstituting walls between the editorial
and marketing sides of the business, and staying away from money grabbers
like IntelliTxt, a product that embeds advertising links into the bodies of
news stories. Journalism is more than a business, it's a calling. Media
organizations must treat it that way -- otherwise Americans' trust of the
news media will continue to plummet, and we'll all lose.
[SOURCE: Wired.com, AUTHOR: Adam L. Penenberg]
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,66048,00.html

FCC DENIES LPFM LICENSE
The FCC denied Angelo State University's petition application for review of
a decision to deny the university a low-power FM radio license.
Commissioners Copps and Adelstein issued a joint statement: "We concur
that, under our rules, Angelo State University's request is a major
change. Nevertheless, our action today prevents the University from
contributing to localism, diversity and competition on the airwaves in the
San Angelo community. To promote the broadest use of the spectrum, we
should consider granting additional flexibility or opening another filing
window for the many schools and other noncommercial entities that, like
Angelo State University, want to offer new low power FM radio services
wherever possible."
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-233A1.doc
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-04-233A2.doc

CABLE

CABLE RATE INCREASES EXPECTED, BUT CONSUMER GROUPS ANGRY
Cable companies are planning to increase rates in 2005 about the same
percentage as last year, but many hikes will exceed the annual 3.2%
inflation rate. Although companies said they're offering more services and
higher quality along with price hikes, consumer groups are disgruntled with
the pace of increases and packaging of high-end service. "I've become
adamant about this -- the cost of monthly service has doubled since the
Telecom Act. The companies say you get double the amount of channels, but
people have not increased the time they watch," said Mark Cooper, Director
of Research at the Consumer Federation of America. Cooper's complaint is
that the cable company packaging forces consumers to pay for more channels
than they may want or would have time to watch. "While they've more than
doubled the offerings, they don't give me the choice." Consumer groups are
holding out hope for action in Congress next year on a la carte, a plan
that the FCC may have quashed when it released a report casting doubt on
the amount of money consumers would save with the pay-per-channel scheme.
"We think a la carte is the way to go -- we're hoping Sen. Stevens will
look at it," said Consumers Union analyst Susanna Montezemolo. "I think
there is support at a bipartisan level to do something," she said, adding
that her group is "slowly" starting to plan for next year.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Anne Veigle, Terry Lane]
(Not available online)

ON-DEMAND TV EXPANDS VIA UNDERUSED FIBER HIGHWAYS
"All services, all devices, one network." Cable companies are renting
unused fiber optic networks to deliver television, telephone and high-speed
Internet services using Internet technology. Until now, cable systems have
relied primarily on satellite technology to deliver programs and movies to
their thousands of distribution points, known as "head ends," that are the
nerve center of each local cable system. Cable programming networks such as
ESPN and HBO transmit content via satellite to satellite "dish farms"
attached to the head ends, which pipe the programming through fiber-optic
and coaxial cable to homes. The move is another sign that cable companies
are shifting away from traditional scheduled programming to shows that are
available whenever viewers want to watch them. The fiber-optic networks
will make it possible for digital-cable subscribers to click their remotes
to view tens of thousands of hours of content stored on cable company
servers -- the same way Internet users click on a mouse to get Web pages
and other online content stored on distant servers.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Peter Grant peter.grant( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110324155837102806,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

QUICKLY

SBC CONSENT DECREE
SBC Communications agreed to pay the U.S. government $500,000 to end an
investigation into how the company used federal subsidies for Internet
access in schools.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-rup17.3.2dec17,1,6493...
(requires registration)
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-3893A1.doc

FCC RELEASES REPORT ON QUALITY OF TELEPHONE SERVICE
The FCC has released a report entitled Quality of Service of Incumbent
Local Exchange Carriers. This report summarizes quality of service data
for 2003 submitted by major incumbent local exchange carriers (regional
Bell operating companies and Sprint), as well as smaller price-cap
incumbent local exchange carriers. The following are highlights of some key
quality of service indicators for 2003: 1) Overall, the percent of switches
with outages in the major incumbent holding companies has steadily declined
over the past 5 years; 2) Average complaints per million lines were
comparable for all individual major incumbent holding companies in 2003
following declines for the past two reporting periods; 3) Smaller carriers
on average had consistently longer installation intervals than major
incumbent carriers, but had comparable average repair intervals; 4) Average
residential installation intervals declined or remained the same for all
but one major incumbent holding company, while residential repair intervals
increased for all but one major incumbent holding company; and 5) This
year's summary report includes data from all reporting incumbent local
exchange carriers for the first time.
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255389A1.doc
http://www.fcc.gov/wcb/iatd/recent.html

ANNUAL REPORT ON THE NATIONAL DO-NOT-CALL REGISTRY
The FCC released a report on the list aimed at blocking unwanted
telemarketing calls. As of September 30, 2003, *51,968,777* telephone
numbers had been placed on the national do-not-all registry.
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-3890A1.doc

State Department May Designate TV Channel Terrorist
The State Department plans to designate Al Manar television -- the channel
of the Lebanon-based anti-Israel extremist group Hezbollah -- a terrorist
organization.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Reuters]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-tv17dec17,1,1406...
(requires registration)
--------------------------------------------------------------
...and we are outta here. Do NOT shop until you drop... this is supposed to
be fun. We have a break coming: Dec 24-Jan 2.
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/16/04

Today Consumers Union is launching an innovative new Website,=20
www.HearUsNow.org to help consumers navigate issues like cell phone mergers=
=20
by providing consumer tips, how-to advice and policy analysis on the full=20
array of communication issues, including traditional phones, wireless=20
service, the Internet and broadband, radio-TV-cable, and digital content.

NEWS FROM THE FCC
FCC Rolls Back Network Sharing Rules for Bells
FCC to Examine Ban on Using Cellular Telephones on
Airborne Aircraft
FCC Paves the Way for New Broadband Services in the Air
Wideband & Ultra-wideband Devices
Funding for Rural Telemedicine Services
Deployment of Broadband Communications on Weasels

MORE FCC-RELATED NEWS
FCC Won't Stifle Satellite Stern
The FCC=92s Five Years of Inaction on Public Interest Obligations
of Digital Broadcasters
800 MHz Rebanding Order Near Decision at the FCC
Covad, Verizon Rework DSL Deal
The Internet's Biggest Foe

BROADCASTING
Pubcasters Struggle to Agree on Unified Trust Fund Proposal
TV's Future May Be Web Search Engines That Hunt for Video

QUICKLY -- Spam Law is Unconstitutional; Media Campaign for Gov Openness
Digital Radio Rollout; Restricting Video Game Sales;
The Fight of a Local Paper; Is the Internet truly Global?

REACTION TO NEXTEL-SPRINT MERGER ANNOUNCEMENT

NETWORK UNBUNDLING OBLIGATIONS

NEWS FROM THE FCC

FCC ROLLS BACK NETWORK SHARING RULES FOR BELLS
In a 3-2 vote, the FCC has decided Baby Bells are not required to share=20
their telecommunications switching gear with competitors. By limiting=20
unbundling the Commission aims to "provide incentives for both incumbent=20
carriers and new entrants to invest in the telecommunications market in a=20
way that best allows for innovation and sustainable competition," as the=20
Press release reads. Without the discounts on switch leasing, competitors=20
will have to buy their own switching equipment or re-negotiate leases with=
=20
the Bells. The FCC plans to ease the transition into the new rules over the=
=20
next year, setting the beginning of 2006 as its target to complete the=20
changes. During this period, competitors will not be allowed to add new=20
customers piggybacking on the incumbent's switches. Commissioners Copps and=
=20
Adelstein dissented; the decision "effectively dismantles wireline=20
competition," Copps wrote warning that "consumers will face less=20
competition, higher rates and fewer service choices." Adelstein wrote that=
=20
the decision "officially cuts the cord on the local competition provisions=
=20
of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, the companies and investors which=20
sought to deliver on the promise of the Act, and the American consumers -=20
to whom that promise was made."
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Jim Hu]
http://news.com.com/FCC+rolls+back+network+sharing+rules+for+Bells/2100-...
_3-5492092.html?tag=3Dnefd.top
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255344A1.doc
There's a lot of coverage and reaction to this decision which you will find=
=20
under the "Network Unbundling Obligations" at the end of this email.

FCC TO EXAMINE BAN ON USING CELLULAR TELEPHONES ON AIRBORNE AIRCRAFT
The FCC proposed to relax its current ban on the use of cellular telephones=
=20
on airborne aircraft. The Commission addressed policy and technical options=
=20
for permitting controlled use of cellular handsets and other wireless=20
devices in airborne aircraft as a means to increase communication options=20
available to the traveling public as well as public safety personnel. The=20
Commission's rules currently require that cellular handsets be turned off=20
once an aircraft leaves the ground to avoid interfering with terrestrial=20
cellular systems. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations also=20
currently restrict the use of mobile telephones and other portable=20
electronic devices (PEDs) on aircraft to ensure against interference to=20
onboard communications and navigation equipment. The Commission cautioned=20
that any steps it ultimately takes with respect to the use of cellular and=
=20
other wireless devices aboard aircraft would be subject to the rules and=20
policies of the FAA and aircraft operators. Specifically, the Commission=20
proposed to permit the airborne operation of "off the shelf" wireless=20
handsets and other devices so long as the device operates at its lowest=20
power setting under control of a "pico cell" located on the aircraft, and=20
the operation does not allow unwanted radio frequency emissions to=20
interfere with terrestrial cellular systems. The Commission asked for=20
public comment on whether the proposal should apply only to devices=20
operating in 800 MHz cellular spectrum, or whether devices operating on=20
other spectrum bands, such as the PCS band or Advanced Wireless Services=20
bands, should be included. The Commission also asked for public comment on=
=20
ways that the 800 MHz cellular spectrum could be used to provide a=20
communications "pipe" between airborne aircraft and the ground. This could=
=20
include whether the current FCC restriction could be replaced by an=20
industry-developed standard that would guard against harmful interference=20
to both airborne and terrestrial systems through appropriate technical and=
=20
operational limitations.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255246A1.doc
This item has gotten a lot of press a la "ya wanna sit next to a baby or an=
=20
obnoxious cell phone user during a long flight." But we are likely a year=20
or more away from a change in FCC rules no less FAA rules.
Also see:
Feds move on wireless Web, cell phones in flight
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Marguerite Reardon and Ben Charny]
http://news.com.com/Feds+move+on+wireless+Web%2C+cell+phones+in+flight/2...
1039_3-5491802.html?tag=3Dnefd.top

FCC PAVES THE WAY FOR NEW BROADBAND SERVICES IN THE AIR
The FCC adopted a plan for help bring broadband services to the traveling=20
public onboard aircraft by licensing the 4 MHz of spectrum in the 800 MHz=20
band currently dedicated to commercial air-ground service. The=20
Commission's action aims at to greater technical, economic, and marketplace=
=20
efficiency for this spectrum. Under the licensing approach adopted by the=20
Commission, the final band configuration will be determined by the winning=
=20
bidders at auction. New licenses will be awarded to high bidders for the=20
two licenses comprising the configuration that receives the highest=20
aggregate gross bid, subject to review of post-auction license=20
applications. The Commission decided to auction new licenses for this=20
spectrum in three possible band plan configurations and proposed auction=20
rules for this spectrum. To further competition and ensure maximum use of=20
the frequency band for air-ground services, the Commission imposed an=20
eligibility limitation to prevent a single entity from holding new licenses=
=20
for all 4 MHz of air-ground spectrum. Commissioner Copps warned that the=20
plan could mean one company can lock up the only license that can support a=
=20
true broadband air-to-ground service. The "result might be a feast for the=
=20
monopolist," he wrote, "but it's famine for consumers."
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255345A1.doc
Read statement from Commissioner Copps at:
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255246A3.doc
Coverage --
WSJ
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110312683433800925,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_personal_journal

WIDEBAND & ULTRA-WIDEBAND DEVICES
The FCC adopted rules aimed at further facilitating the introduction of new=
=20
unlicensed wideband devices. These devices will include radar systems to=20
improve automotive safety and tracking systems for personnel location, such=
=20
as hospital patients and emergency rescue crews, as well as for functions=20
such as inventory control. The Commission previously established=20
regulations that permit the marketing and operation of certain types of new=
=20
products incorporating ultra-wideband (UWB) technology. UWB technology can=
=20
be employed for a vast array of new applications that have the potential to=
=20
provide significant benefits for public safety, businesses and consumers.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255351A1.doc
See also:
FCC to Monitor Cable=92s UWB Concerns
Cable programmers argued that without proper restrictions, UWB could cause=
=20
harmful interference to cable signals sent via satellite to 9,000 cable=20
headends around the country. Some broadcasters raised identical concerns.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA488241.html?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

FUNDING FOR RURAL TELEMEDICINE SERVICES
The FCC expanded its program to bring up-to-date medical services and=20
information to rural areas through telecommunications. The Rural Health=20
Care Support Mechanism program is authorized to provide up to $400 million=
=20
in telemedicine funding annually to ensure that health care providers=20
serving rural communities pay no more than their urban counterparts for=20
telecommunications essential to the provision of services. The program=20
provides discounts on monthly telecommunications charges, satellite=20
services for mobile medical clinics in rural areas, and Internet access.=20
With program expenditures below the annual limit, the Commission has taken=
=20
numerous steps to increase use of the program. The Commission: 1) Redefined=
=20
what constitutes a rural area to better target small towns and villages=20
while still maintaining a focus on the areas with the most need; 2)=20
Increased discounts available to mobile rural health care providers for the=
=20
purchase of mobile satellite telecommunications services; and 3)=20
Streamlined the application process by setting an annual June 30 deadline=20
for applications. The Commission also launched a further rulemaking=20
examining whether a flat 25% discount for Internet services is sufficient=20
and whether network infrastructure should be funded under the rural health=
=20
care mechanism.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255348A1.doc

DEPLOYMENT OF BROADBAND COMMUNICATIONS ON WEASELS
Oh, whoops, make that "vessels" -- not that we're against broadband for=20
weasels... we want broadband for all carnivorous mammals.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255347A1.doc

MORE FCC-RELATED NEWS

FCC WON'T STIFLE SATELLITE STERN
The FCC declined to open a proceeding on whether satellite radio is=20
indecent, saying that it is a subscription service and that the agency has=
=20
already ruled that such services "do not call into play the issue of=20
indecency." L.A.-based Mt. Wilson FM Broadcasters asked the FCC to modify=20
its Satellite Digital Audio Radio Service Rules to include an indecency=20
provision analogous to that for over-the-air broadcasters, or alternately=20
to loosen the restrictions on those traditional broadcasters.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/CA488198.html&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also:
Satellite-Radio Ruling a Break for Cable
The FCC=92s decision, issued by Media Bureau chief Kenneth Ferree, was a=
boon=20
for cable because the extension of indecency rules to pay radio could have=
=20
set the stage for spreading them to pay TV providers.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA488210.html?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
* TVWeek
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=3D6925

THE FCC'S FIVE YEARS OF INACTION ON PUBLIC INTEREST OBLIGATIONS OF DIGITAL=
=20
BROADCASTERS
Yesterday the Public Interest, Public Airwaves Coalition [which includes=20
the benton Foundation] marked an unhappy anniversary: It is five years to=20
the day since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a Notice=20
of Inquiry into the public interest obligations of broadcasters in the=20
digital age. Five years =AD and the FCC has issued notices and asked for=20
updates, but has refused to issue final rules that address core elements of=
=20
these obligations. The FCC=92s failure to act is an abdication of its=20
responsibility to ensure that the public airwaves benefit the American=20
people. The FCC=92s inaction also flies in the face of the public=92s=
increased=20
alarm with a media landscape controlled by half a dozen corporate giants=20
whose sole goal seems to be increasing profits, and when broadcast coverage=
=20
of local news, public affairs and state and local elections is at an=20
all-time low. The Public Interest, Public Airwaves Coalition calls on FCC=20
Chairman Michael Powell to make a New Year=92s Resolution to schedule action=
=20
in January on a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) regarding the public=20
interest obligations of digital broadcasters. Putting this matter on the=20
January Commission meeting agenda is the very least the Chairman can do to=
=20
demonstrate that he understands that his agency=92s first responsibility is=
=20
to the American public.
[SOURCE: Alliance for Better Campaigns Press Statement]
http://bettercampaigns.org/press/release.php?ReleaseID=3D66

800 MHZ REBANDING ORDER NEAR DECISION (AGAIN) AT THE FCC
AN order addressing changes to the FCC=92s 800 MHz rebanding order sought by=
=20
Nextel has started to circulate at the Commission. Sources said the order,=
=20
initiated by the FCC, addresses the key =93decisional=94 issues raised by=20
Nextel in its objections to the order and will likely result in Nextel=20
having to pay $452 million less than originally projected.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk]
(Not available online)

COVAD, VERIZON REWORK DSL DEAL
With the FCC voting to discontinue requirements for the Bells to share=20
their phone switching gear with competitors, start-up phone services still=
=20
have access to the Bells' copper lines, but they can't lease the Bells'=20
switching equipment at government-set rates. Instead, they'll have to buy=20
their own equipment or negotiate new deals. For little guys such as Covad,=
=20
DSL will be a more difficult market to conquer. While Covad still owns DSL=
=20
lines in some markets, the lion's share of its DSL subscribers use a local=
=20
Bell operator's network. Covad has since turned its attention to the=20
already crowded business of selling phone service to broadband Internet=20
subscribers. Covad will continue to pay government-set leasing rates for=20
the lines it provides to customers who subscribed before November. To serve=
=20
newer customers, Covad will have to pay Verizon the newly negotiated rate.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Jim Hu]
http://news.com.com/Covad%2C+Verizon+rework+DSL+deal/2100-1037_3-5492668...
l?tag=3Dnefd.top

THE INTERNET'S BIGGEST FOE
[Commentary] Despite his self-professed claim of being a "techno-geek," FCC=
=20
Chairman Michael Powell has done everything in his power to restrict=20
American citizens' choice of information and entertainment. He launched a=20
censorship campaign against broadcasting and allowed the near total=20
reconcentration of the broadcast industry into a very few hands. He is=20
championing policies that will gut the nation's market-opening provisions=20
telecommunications law. Several Wall Street analysts predict that in=20
another 12 months, the Bells will recapture 80 percent of the 20 million=20
customers that had chosen to take their business to phone companies that=20
better met their needs. While Powell may point to wireless and Internet=20
telephone service as competitors to the Bells, but the Bells serve over 70%=
=20
of all U.S. consumers who take service from a national wireless carrier and=
=20
alternative competitive platforms all need access to Bells' network lines=20
for the last mile to America's homes and businesses. Throughout his tenure,=
=20
Powell has paid lip service to the benefits of the Internet and new=20
technology. But his policies conflict with his rhetoric. In truth, he has=20
been captured by the four Bell companies and done their bidding. Because=20
Powell's record proves conclusively that he is hostile to President Bush's=
=20
stated goals of promoting entrepreneurship, technology deployment and, most=
=20
important, individual freedom and liberty, Powell clearly does not deserve=
=20
to serve in the second Bush administration.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Lawrence Spiwak, president of the Phoenix=
=20
Center for Advanced Legal and Economic Public Policy Studies]
http://news.com.com/The+Internets+biggest+foe/2010-1028_3-5491523.html?tag=
=3Dnefd.ac

BROADCASTING

PUBCASTERS STRUGGLE TO AGREE ON UNIFIED TRUST FUND PROPOSAL
Public broadcasters share a common goal: they want more money. But they=20
can't seem to agree on how to get it. The Association of Public TV Stations=
=20
(APTS) has been spearheading a proposal for a trust fund proposal created=20
by voluntary, early return of stations=92 analog spectrum. APTS wants the=20
fund to supplement federal appropriations, be directed to stations and be=20
used to create digital educational content. PBS has created an advisory=20
committee to examine ways to increase funding looking at a possible trust=20
fund, but other options as well. The panel could issue recommendations=20
before April including the size of the fund, the voluntary nature of early=
=20
spectrum return by public TV stations and to what extent public radio=20
stations would benefit. Former PBS President Larry Grossman and former FCC=
=20
Chairman Newton Minow have also worked tirelessly on a trust fund proposal;=
=20
they believe Congress won't accept a trust fund that focuses only on public=
=20
broadcasters.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Dinesh Kumar]
(Not available online)
See also:
* Broadcasting&Cable
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488249?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TV'S FUTURE MAY BE WEB SEARCH ENGINES THAT HUNT FOR VIDEO
The startup search engine Blinkx today will begin allowing users to search=
=20
the Web for selected video clips from 15 television channels. Today, these=
=20
offerings are novelties in the competitive and expanding Web-search=20
industry. But the long-term implications go far beyond the search function.=
=20
Some search companies aspire to offer video programs directly to consumers=
=20
via their computer screens and eventually on TV, potentially competing with=
=20
TV networks and other video distributors. But to fulfill these larger=20
ambitions, Internet companies will have to resolve legal and licensing=20
issues with creators and distributors of TV and other video, who closely=20
guard the dissemination of their wares over the Internet.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Kevin J. Delaney=20
kevin.delaney( at )wsj.com and Martin Peers martin.peers( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110314966721301333,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)

QUICKLY (OK, the irony of using that word today is not lost)

Antispam Law Ruled Unconstitutional
A Maryland judge has tossed out a lawsuit against an alleged spammer,=20
saying a state law restricting unsolicited e-mail is unconstitutional=20
because it unfairly restricts interstate commerce.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Declan McCullagh]
http://news.com.com/Antispam+law+ruled+unconstitutional/2100-1030_3-5491...
html?tag=3Dnefd.top

Media To Campaign For Government Openness
Starting on March 13, newspapers, magazines, radio stations, Web sites and=
=20
television stations will participate in "Sunshine Week," an unprecedented=20
national effort to educate the public about the importance of government=20
openness.
[SOURCE: Radio Ink]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126323&pt=3Dtodaysnews

Broadcast Execs To Unveil Accelerated HD Radio Rollout Plans At CES
Broadcast industry leaders from Bonneville, Clear Channel, Cox, Entercom=20
and Radio One will disclose nation-wide high-definition radio conversion=20
plans during a press conference on January 5, 2005 at the International=20
Consumer Electronics Show.
[SOURCE: Radio Ink ]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=3D126324&pt=3Dtodaysnews

A Push to Restrict Sales of Video Games
Decrying violence in fast-selling video games, Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D)=20
wants Illinois to make it illegal for anyone younger than 18 to buy violent=
=20
or sexually explicit games. Among the targets would be the Grand Theft Auto=
=20
series, Halo 2 and Mortal Kombat.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Peter Slevin]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3131-2004Dec15.html
(requires registration)

Letting Story, Not Money, Guide Light
A local newspaper struggles financially, a community responds.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Michael Hiltzik]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-golden16dec16,1,75599...
olumn?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business
(requires registration)

Is the Internet truly Global?
Isn't it time the Internet started handling non-Roman characters?
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Winston Chai]
http://news.com.com/Is+the+Internet+truly+global/2010-1038_3-5491681.htm...
g=3Dnefd.ac

REACTION TO NEXTEL-SPRINT MERGER ANNOUNCEMENT

Taking On Giants, Sprint Nextel Seeks to Exploit Wireless Growth
Behind the $35 billion merger deal between Sprint and Nextel is a powerful=
=20
force: Many people want to drop their phone lines. The biggest cellphone=20
service providers are also in the fixed-line business, so it isn't in their=
=20
interest to encourage customers to cut their wires. But the new Sprint=20
Nextel won't have that entanglement because wireless will account for about=
=20
80% of its revenues. The company, a combination of two former also-rans=20
that reversed their fortunes in the past two years, will urge customers not=
=20
only to unplug their phones but also to try high-speed wireless Internet=20
access.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com,=
=20
Almar Latour almar.latour( at )wsj.com & Dennis K. Berman dennis.berman( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110316035776401667,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)
Also --
Can Sprint Keep
Nextel Customers Happy?
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110315036403601355,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace

Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3547-2004Dec15.html

USA Today
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20041216/1a_lede16.art.htm
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041216/1b_sprintnextel.art.htm

LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-sprintel16dec16,1,470...
.story?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business

NYTimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/16/business/16phone.html

Communications Workers of America Calls for Scrutiny of Sprint, Nextel=20
Wireless Merger
http://www.cwa-union.org/news/PressReleaseDisplay.asp?ID=3D469

Sprint-Nextel Merger is Another Blow to Consumers' Pocketbooks
"This merger will do little for consumers, but most importantly, it signals=
=20
the likely end to the possibility of building vibrant wireless competition=
=20
to the dominant, local Bell telephone companies,=94 said Gene Kimmelman,=20
senior director of public policy for Consumers Union. =93In giving a green=
=20
light to Cingular-ATT Wireless, the government effectively established a=20
=91three companies is enough=92 standard for wireless competition,=94=
Kimmelman=20
added. =93Under this approach we fear the cell phone market will start to=20
function the way the cable and satellite market has, where prices go up=20
year in and year out due to lack of competition.=94
=93The fact that Sprint and Nextel customers=92 phones likely won=92t be=20
compatible on the combined network will be a major headache and expense for=
=20
consumers,=94 said Janee Briesemeister, Consumers Union senior policy=20
analyst. =93Given this enormous consumer expense, and the fact that=20
competitive pressures diminish substantially in this consolidated market,=20
we=92re renewing our call on the FCC to ensure that all new cell phones that=
=20
come into the market can be used by all providers.=94
http://www.consumersunion.org/pub/core_telecom_and_utilities/001731.html...
e

NETWORK UNBUNDLING OBLIGATIONS

Small Telecoms Losing Mandated Line Discounts
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3545-2004Dec15.html

Local phone competition ruling could raise rates
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041216/phone16.art.htm

FCC Deals Blow to Bell Rivals
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-phones16dec16,1,50604...
tory?coll=3Dla-headlines-pe-business

Big Bells Allowed to Charge Rivals More for Line Access
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/16/technology/16rates.html

FCC Votes to End Many Discounts Bells Give Rivals
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110316093190501689,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace

Assistant Secretary Gallagher's statement on FCC rules authorizing=20
deployment of ultrawideband technology.
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/press/2004/mdgstatement_12152004.html
National Telecommunications and Information Administration

Association for Local Telecommunications Services Criticizes the FCC For=20
Failing to Adopt a Bipartisan Order that Promotes Facilities-Based=
Competition
http://206.161.82.210/altsbiz/webmodules/articles/ispviewer.asp?a=3D1225&z=
=3D41

CompTel/ASCENT disappointed that the FCC could not reach an acceptable=20
compromise in this critical proceeding.
http://www.comptelascent.org/news/recent-news/121504.html

FCC Order Continues Eight Year Regulatory Two-Step
http://www.usta.org/news_releases.php?urh=3Dhome.news.nr2004_1215
United States Telecom Association
--------------------------------------------------------------

Benton's Communications-related Headlines for 12/15/04

Two big items on the agenda today: a FCC open meeting in which we'll try to=
=20
consolidate the local phone market (see story below) and a discussion on=20
the future of public TV. For these and other upcoming media policy events,=
=20
see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

NEXTEL-SPRINT
Directors Approve Sprint-Nextel Merger
Nextel=ADSprint Merger Raises Regulatory Issues
Telecom Merger Might Be What Consumers Need

MORE ON WIRELESS
Looking to Wireless for Growth, Tech Giants Seek More Spectrum
CTIA to Spend Tens of Millions Rallying Cell-Caller Lobbying Army
Wireless Firms Fight Taxation In Maryland

MORE ON TELECOM
The Proper Direction for Telecommunications Reform Legislation
FCC Rule Changes May Cut Local Phone Choices
Sachs: Watch Out for SBC Redlining
Telecom Competition Rules: D=E9j=E0 Vu All Over Again?

MEDIA
Sinclair to MoveOn: 'You First'
Stop the Parents Television Council Before it Gets Beyond TV
PBS' Future Post-Moyers
MPAA Targets Core BitTorrent, eDonkey Users
Linking Independent Producers and Local Public Television Stations

FCC
Consumer Advisory Committee

NEXTEL-SPRINT

DIRECTORS APPROVE SPRINT-NEXTEL MERGER
Expect an announcement today that directors of Sprint and Nextel agreed=20
yesterday to merge the companies in a deal that would create a new wireless=
=20
telecommunications giant. A combined Sprint-Nextel would have 39 million=20
customers, making the company the third-largest wireless firm, behind=20
Cingular Wireless and Verizon Wireless. Cingular, which acquired AT&T=20
Wireless Services seven weeks ago, has about 47 million subscribers;=20
Verizon Wireless has 42 million. The merged company is expected to spin off=
=20
Sprint's local phone holdings in a transaction analysts said could bring in=
=20
as much as $19 billion.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Ben White and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64847-2004Dec14.html
(requires registration)
Additional coverage in...
* Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110306450959500171,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
* USA Today
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041215/sprintnextel15.art.htm

NEXTEL-SPRINT MERGER RAISES REGULATORY ISSUES
An announcement on a Nextel merger with Sprint could come today, but will=20
the companies ever combine. Industry analysts seem to think the merger=20
would pass regulator review as it is smaller than the Cingular-AT&T=20
Wireless deal. One concern is that as the industry moves to=20
third-generation services, regulators want to ensure that there are=20
competitors with sufficient spectrum to compete with Cingular and Verizon=20
Wireless. A combined Nextel-Sprint would need more spectrum to be able to=20
compete. The combined company would also dominate what's called "MMDS=20
spectrum," which could be used to provide wireless phones with fast=20
Internet connections. Critics of the deal might suggest divestiture, but=20
the new company could make a case that its holdings could be used to create=
=20
a new, wireless pipe into the home. There's also network compatibility=20
issues, but don't get us started... this is a policy-focused news summary=20
service. [SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk, Susan=20
Polyakova]
(Not available online)

TELECOM MERGER MIGHT BE WHAT CONSUMERS NEED
[Commentary] It tells you something about the state of competition in the=20
telecom sector -- or the lack of it -- that consumers should cheer the=20
widely expected merger between the No. 3 and the No. 5 wireless companies.=
=20
Sprint-Nextel could provide a strong and independent competitor to the=20
local cable and phone companies that are desperately trying to leverage=20
their existing monopolies to lock themselves in as your one-stop supplier=20
of basic telephone, wireless, Internet and cable television service. With=20
the prospect that consumers will have only a choice between one cable and=20
one phone company for all their telecom services -- a duopoly in which both=
=20
sides will see the folly of getting into a price war -- wireless remains=20
the last hope for robust telecom competition. Unfortunately, with the FCC=20
and the Justice Department's antitrust division on extended holiday, the=20
two largest wireless providers are now in the hands of Baby Bells: Verizon=
=20
Wireless, which Verizon actually owns with Europe's Vodafone, and=20
Cingular-AT&T, owned jointly by SBC and BellSouth.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Steven Pearlstein]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A288-2004Dec14.html
(requires registration)
See also:
* Merger Puts Nextel at Crossroads
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Ellen McCarthy]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64856-2004Dec14.html
(requires registration)
* USA Today
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041215/maney15.art.htm
* NYTimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/15/technology/15phone.html

MORE ON WIRELESS

LOOKING TO WIRELESS FOR GROWTH, TECH GIANTS SEEK MORE SPECTRUM
The world's biggest technology companies are stepping up their lobbying in=
=20
Washington with the same goal: spectrum for wireless communication. The=20
Bush Administration, responding to industry criticism that it has largely=20
ignored technology issues during much of the president's first term, is=20
stepping up efforts to get more radio waves in the hands of commercial=20
entities as they develop and market new technologies. Such steps are=20
overdue, industry analysts and academics say. They say the way spectrum has=
=20
been doled out in the past -- letting recipients hold on to their slice=20
indefinitely -- has left large portions of spectrum underused amid surging=
=20
demand from the commercial sector. Meanwhile, entrenched lobbies --=20
broadcasters, the Department of Defense -- are fighting hard to keep what=20
they have.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Anne Marie Squeo=20
annemarie.squeo( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110307918491400590,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_page_one
(requires subscription)

CTIA TO SPEND TENS OF MILLIONS RALLYING CELL-CALLER LOBBYING ARMY
Nothing helps strengthens those grassroots that some big time corporate=20
money so CTIA, the wireless industry lobby, will spend tens of millions=20
rallying masses of wireless users and industry employees to lobby the FCC,=
=20
Congress and particularly the states against regulation and taxation. Much=
=20
of the initiative will go into =93kind of a =91did you know?=92 campaign to=
=20
inform subscribers, says CTIA president Steve Largent. The organization's=20
research shows that 25% of respondents would contact a policy maker to=20
oppose a measure that would raise bills. If that level of activism=20
materialized, =93you=92re talking about 30 or 40 million people, which would=
=20
put us on par with the AARP,=94 said ex-Congressman Largent. =93That is a=20
powerful weapon.=94 Largent said he didn't expect that much participation,=
=20
but even a million subscribers would create an influential lobbying force.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Louis Trager]
(Not available online)
See CTIA press release:
http://www.ctia.org/news_media/press/body.cfm?record_id=3D1480

WIRELESS FIRMS FIGHT TAXATION IN MARYLAND
Cingular, T-Mobile, Sprint and Verizon Wireless are challenging the right=20
of Montgomery County and the City of Baltimore to impose local taxes on=20
wireless telephone lines. The companies want a tax refund of $12 million=20
[don't we all]. The companies cited two reasons for their challenge. First,=
=20
the county and city can impose sales taxes only on utilities, and cellular=
=20
phones are not defined as utilities and only the state can impose taxes on=
=20
anything else. Also, the county and city can't tax activities that occur=20
outside its boundaries and cell phones can be used outside the county.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Annys Shin]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A273-2004Dec14.html
(requires registration)

MORE ON TELECOM

THE PROPER DIRECTION FOR TELECOMMUNICATIONS REFORM LEGISLATION
How would a phone giant executive like telecom law reformed next year? Glad=
=20
you asked, Congressman... BellSouth Chairman Duane Ackerman says keep a=20
telecom bill rewrite short and simple with fewer resulting regulations so=20
we can all avoid more litigation and get this thing done in months rather=20
than years. Ackerman proposed
a system where regulation is broken into 3 areas: 1) Retail regulation:=20
basic local service rates would remain regulated, but if a customer added=20
other services features, they wouldn't be regulated; 2) Wholesale=20
regulation: nonrural phone companies should be limited to requiring=20
unbundled local copper loops at negotiated rates. =93This
obligation also should sunset after a few short years in order to=20
facilitate commercially negotiated network access arrangements,=94 Ackerman=
=20
said; and 3) Public safety: 911, Communications Assistance for Law=20
Enforcement Act (CALEA) and consumer protections are enforced on all=20
carriers. Ackerman stressed that these requirements should be =93baseline=94=
=20
and avoid any =93free rider effects, where one group of competitors can palm=
=20
off responsibilities and costs on another group.=94 He also proposed=20
reforming Universal Service funding by decreasing the burden on telecom=20
users/subscribers and instead using general tax revenue. [Paging Peter and=
=20
Paul.]
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Terry Lane, Edie Herman]
(Not available online)
For more on this presentation/event, see
http://www.aei.org/events/eventID.863,filter.all,type.upcoming/event_det...
asp#
http://www.usta.org/news_releases.php?urh=3Dhome.news.nr2004_1214

FCC RULE CHANGES MAY CUT LOCAL PHONE CHOICES
Regulators are expected today to pass new rules that would curtail local=20
phone competition. The new rules, championed by FCC Chairman Michael=20
Powell, would allow the Bells in six months to sharply raise the prices=20
they charge long-distance companies to lease their networks. AT&T, MCI and=
=20
others use the discount leases to offer packages of local and long-distance=
=20
service to 20 million consumers. Powell also had proposed sharply limiting=
=20
the ability of the Bells' rivals to serve small businesses. That would=20
raise retail rates about 33%. Under his plan, a competitor would lose=20
discount access to the wires linking Bell call-routing centers that serve=20
at least 15,000 to 20,000 business lines.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR:Paul Davidson]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041215/2b_fcc15.art.htm

SACHS: WATCH OUT FOR SBC REDLINING
Speaking to an audience of Congressional aides and Federal Communications=20
Commission staff, National Cable & Telecommunications Association president=
=20
Robert Sachs warned Tuesday that phone giant SBC is planning to deploy=20
high-speed fiber lines in wealthy communities and to ignore less-affluent=20
enclaves. You may know this business strategy as redlining which federal=20
law prohibits cable companies from pursuing. Sachs=92 redlining charge was=
=20
based on an SBC bar graph presented to unnamed institutional investors=20
showing that the Baby Bell planned to serve 5% of so-called low-value=20
customers. Redlining is considered an action that denies service to=20
low-income and minority consumers. Sachs also suggested that efforts to=20
overhaul communications law next year should be limited to a few discrete=20
issues, such as funding nationwide affordable phone service (called=20
Universal Service); reforming access charges paid by long-distance=20
companies to local carriers; and establishing a deadline to end the=20
broadcasters=92 transition to digital-only transmission.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487999.html?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See a NCTA Press Release:
http://www.ncta.com/press/press.cfm?PRid=3D561&showArticles=3Dok
...and coverage in TVWeek
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?newsId=3D6914
and Broadcasting & Cable
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488006?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TELECOM COMPETITION RULES: DEJA VU ALL OVER AGAIN?
[Commentary] Today the FCC is expected to vote -- for the fourth time -- on=
=20
regulations requiring telephone companies to lease, or =93unbundle,=94 parts=
of=20
their networks to competitors. Gattuso says the FCC needs to get it right=20
this time by limiting mandatory unbundling rules to markets where=20
competition otherwise could not feasibly exist. The Commission=92s goal, he=
=20
writes, should be a competitive marketplace, not the protection of=20
individual competitors.
[SOURCE: Heritage Foundation, AUTHOR: James Gattuso]
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Regulation/wm621.cfm
For more of same, see
FCC Must Relax Unbundling Requirements
http://www.pff.org/news/news/2004/121404mayunbundling.html

MEDIA

SINCLAIR TO MOVEON: 'YOU FIRST'
Sinclair Broadcast Group lobbyist and commentator Mark Hyman has a response=
=20
for the media activists who would like to see opposing views aired on the=20
company's stations: "As soon as MoveOn.org allows me to use their e-mail=20
lists and post to their Web site, maybe then we will have a conversation."=
=20
[Oh, is MoveOn a licensed trustee of the public airwaves now, too?]=20
Activists argue that Sinclair is misusing the airwaves. Hyman counters that=
=20
it is "just public discourse" and that his commentaries deal with a range=20
of issues, like say the periodic failure of Congress to pass appropriations=
=20
bills in a timely fashion. He also says that if the groups are concerned=20
about public service, "I would feel better if they were writing letters to=
=20
our troops in Iraq. There are 168 programming hours on our stations every=20
week and I am on for 10 to 15 minutes," he says, "It seems their priorities=
=20
are a little skewed."
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA487927?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

STOP THE PARENTS TELEVISION COUNCIL BEFORE IT GETS BEYOND THE TV
Picking up on earlier reports that the Parents Television Council has=20
generated nearly all the indecency complaints at the FCC the last couple of=
=20
years, Goodman asks readers to take hold of their mice and send FCC=20
Chairman Michael Powell a message: "Hey Mike, I'm an adult who knows how to=
=20
work my television's remote control. I may not like everything I see, but I=
=20
want you to know that I am disinterested in creating some McCarthyesque=20
chill factor in the creative community. Yours sincerely." Does it matter=20
where indecency complaints come from? Goodman says "Yes" because the FCC=20
"is supposed to be a sounding board for people who view a TV show, are=20
upset about the content and seek a place to complain outside of the network=
=20
that aired it. But the process is being hijacked by people who in all=20
likelihood aren't even watching the shows but are responding to a group=20
that tells them the content is wicked."
[SOURCE: San Francisco Chronicle, AUTHOR: Tim Goodman=
tgoodman( at )sfchronicle.com]
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=3D/c/a/2004/12/13/DDG79AA71B...
L

PBS' FUTURE POST-MOYERS
[Commentary] Public broadcasting's new "Enhanced Funding Initiative"=20
advisory committee will soon hold its first public meeting, looking for a=20
way to secure ongoing and independent funding for noncommercial radio and=20
TV. Chester asks what committee members probably will not -- why does=20
public broadcasting deserve this gift? What will the American public=20
receive in the deal? Before any discussion of raising new revenues, we=20
should be assured that the spirit of the original mission of public=20
broadcasting is fully honored. Where is the commitment to producing serious=
=20
news and public affairs? How will significant programming slots be=20
controlled by persons of color ? How much of the schedule will be=20
controlled by independent producers? Will ad-like underwriting vanish from=
=20
PBS, especially its news and children's programs? How will the governance=20
of public broadcasting change so it becomes more democratic? What new=20
innovative programming ventures will be created that can harness the more=20
than 2,000 digital channels soon to be available to public TV? Unless there=
=20
is public pressure on PBS and the Congress to ask such questions, they=20
won't be on the agenda.
[SOURCE: AlterNet, AUTHOR: Jeffrey Chester]
http://www.alternet.org/story/20741/
NOW with Bill Moyers
PBS Airdate: Friday, December 17, 2004 at 9PM (check local listings)
On Friday December 17, 2004, at 9 p.m. on PBS (check local listings), Bill=
=20
Moyers signs off as host and managing editor PBS's weekly newsmagazine NOW=
=20
with Bill Moyers after three seasons at the helm by continuing NOW's=20
ongoing coverage of the impact of media consolidation on democracy. The=20
program looks inside the Republican media machine that the conservative New=
=20
York Times columnist David Brooks called a "dazzlingly efficient ideology=20
delivery system" and examines how conservatives exploited the demise of the=
=20
fairness doctrine to produce a vast echo chamber that is admittedly=20
partisan and powerfully successful.

MPAA TARGETS CORE BITTORRENT, EDONKEY USERS
The Motion Picture Association of America launched a new legal campaign=20
Tuesday targeting the BitTorrent and eDonkey file-swapping networks, two=20
technologies widely used to trade movies online.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: John Borland]
http://news.com.com/MPAA+targets+core+BitTorrent%2C+eDonkey+users/2100-1...
3-5490804.html?tag=3Dnefd.lede
Also see:
Broadcasting&Cable
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA488008.html?display=3DBreakin...
ws&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

LINKING INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS AND LOCAL PUBLIC TELEVISION STATIONS
The Independent Television Service (ITVS) announced Local Independents=20
Collaborating with Stations (LInCS 2005), a unique funding initiative that=
=20
gives independent producers and local public television stations the=20
opportunity to work together. LInCS funding provides up to $100,000 and may=
=20
be matched by station in-kind as well as producer's secured cash (from=20
grants, underwriting, individual donors and/or out-of-pocket cash=20
contributions to the production). Projects may be in any stage of=20
development and all genres are eligible, including documentary, drama,=20
animation and innovative combinations. The deadline for applications is May=
=20
26, 2005.
[SOURCE: Independent Television Service Press Release]
http://www.itvs.org/pressroom/pressRelease.htm?pressId=3D254

FCC

CONSUMER ADVISORY COMMITTEE
The FCC is looking for a few good men and women to serve on its Consumer=20
Advisory Committee. The Commission established the Committee in November=20
2000 for the purpose of making recommendations regarding consumer issues=20
within the jurisdiction of the Commission and to facilitate the=20
participation of consumers (including people with disabilities and=20
underserved populations, such as American Indians and persons living in=20
rural areas) in proceedings before the Commission. The topics to be=20
addressed by the Committee will include, but are not limited to, the=20
following areas: Consumer protection and education (e.g., cramming,=20
slamming, consumer friendly billing, detariffing, bundling of services,=20
Lifeline/Linkup programs, customer service, privacy, telemarketing abuses,=
=20
and outreach to underserved populations, such as Native Americans and=20
persons living in rural areas). Access by people with disabilities (e.g.,=20
telecommunications relay services, video description, closed captioning,=20
accessible billing and access to telecommunications products and services).=
=20
Impact upon consumers of new and emerging technologies (e.g., availability=
=20
of broadband, digital television, cable, satellite, low power FM, and the=20
convergence of these and emerging technologies).
The Commission seeks applications from interested organizations or=20
institutions, from both the public and private sectors, that wish to be=20
considered for membership on the Committee. Selections will be made on the=
=20
basis of factors such as expertise and diversity of viewpoints that are=20
necessary to address effectively the questions before the=20
Committee. Applications should be received by the Commission no later than=
=20
January 31, 2005, and should be sent to the Federal Communications=20
Commission, Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau, Attn.: Scott Marshall,=
=20
via e-mail to scott.marshall( at )fcc.gov or, via facsimile to 202-418-6509.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-04-3892A1.doc
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/14/04

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

MEDIA
FCC Complaints To Deny Licenses Must Be Local, UCC Leaders Explain
Protest Launched Against Sinclair
Powell Urges No Action on 'Ryan' Airing
Public Loses Twice: FCC Promotes Indecency, Then Censors It
Net News Lacks Latinos
Local TV News Looks Overseas
Hezbollah's TV Station Is Ordered Off the Air
Recommendations from FCC's Committee on Diversity for
Communications in the Digital Age
WFED, Radio Free Bureaucrat

TELECOM
A Telecom Frenzy Over Sprint
Sprint's Planned Nextel Deal Builds on Wireless Strength
Fliers Fear Cellular Blab, Hot-Air Planes

QUICKLY -- Lots of Challenges Await new FTC Head; Digital Divide Network Launch

MEDIA

FCC COMPLAINTS TO DENY LICENSES MUST BE LOCAL, UCC LEADERS EXPLAIN
Last week, the United Church of Christ filed petitions to deny the license
renewals of two Miami stations owned and operated by the CBS and NBC
television networks because the networks refused to run a UCC ad aimed at
diversifying local congregations. Gloria Tristani, a former FCC
commissioner (1997-2001) and managing director of OC Inc., said, "It's
important to remember that owned and operated stations are, quite
literally, owned and operated by their respective networks. These two local
stations bring the networks' damaging decisions 'front and center' for
those in the Miami viewing audience." She added, "We believe the church has
a strong case." In its petition, the United Church of Christ argues that,
in addition to the networks' silencing of the church's distinctive
religious and moral voice, it is "impractical, burdensome and expensive"
for the networks to reject the ads and then to intimate that the church
could pursue ad buys in each and every local CBS or NBC market.
[SOURCE: Radio Ink]
http://www.radioink.com/HeadlineEntry.asp?hid=126255&pt=todaysnews

PROTEST LAUNCHED AGAINST SINCLAIR
A coalition led by Media Matters for America will announce today a
nationwide protest against Sinclair Broadcast Group, charging that the
62-station TV broadcaster is misusing public airwaves with partisan news
programming. The coalition includes MoveOn.org, Free Press, Campaign for
America's Future, Working Assets, Alternet, and MediaChannel. The main
focus of the protest is the nightly "The Point" commentary by Mark Hyman,
who is Sinclair's spokesman and also oversees the company's Washington
lobbying. A recent Media Matters analysis of "The Point" editions from Nov.
2 to Dec. 1 found that the commentaries repeatedly attacked former
Democratic candidate John F. Kerry, former President Clinton and other
Democratic politicians. Hyman has referred to Democrats as the "Angry
Left," charged that there is a liberal bias in the media and expressed
support for Bush administration policies. The commentary airs on about 40
of the 62 stations that Sinclair owns, programs or manages, reaching about
one-fourth of U.S. homes with televisions. The anti-Sinclair campaign will
be run through a new website, SinclairAction.com.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Elizabeth Jensen]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-sinclair14dec14,...
(requires registration)
Also see http://mediamatters.org/items/200412140002

POWELL URGES NO ACTION ON 'RYAN' AIRING
Sixty-six ABC affiliates refused to air the uncut version of "Saving
Private Ryan" on Veterans Day last month, citing concerns that they could
face fines for profanity and graphic violence from the FCC, which has been
cracking down on broadcast indecency. But FCC Chairman Michael Powell has
concluded that the agency should not take action against the other 159
stations that aired the acclaimed movie because the language was part of
accurately portraying the story. Powell's recommendation will go to the
four other FCC commissioners for a vote.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Reuters]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-fcc14dec14,1,6421629....
(requires registration)

PUBLIC LOSES TWICE: FCC PROMOTES INDECENCY, THEN CENSORS IT
[Commentary] The authors respond to a New York Times Op-Ed by FCC Chairman
Michael Powell, pointing out that Powell has championed policies that have
led to the growth of indecent programming. They identify those policies as
the relaxation of FCC rules on media outlet and content ownership. They
also fault Powell by responding to questionable content with ambiguous
enforcement when less restrictive alternatives -- television ratings, the
V-Chip, etc -- are available. They conclude: "Mr. Powell has got his
responsibilities under the First Amendment backwards. Over tremendous
public protest, he foisted upon the American public an
excessively-concentrated media that restricts free expression. Then, when
that excessively-concentrated media inevitably produces indecent material,
he censors it. The public loses both ways. Rather than criticize the
legitimate outcry against his heavy-handed policies as "rant," Mr. Powell
would do well to consider the words offered to another well-intentioned but
ultimately misguided public servant in Julius Caesar; 'The fault, dear
Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.'"
[SOURCE: MediaChannel.org, AUTHOR: Peggy Charren and Jonathan Rintels,
Center for Creative Voices in Media]
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert298.shtml

NET NEWS LACKS LATINOS
The National Association of Hispanic Journalists released its 9th Annual
Network Brownout Report and found that out of 16,000 stories that aired on
the network evening newscasts in 2003, only 131 stories, or 0.82%, were
exclusively about Latinos. Latinos appeared as sources in an estimated 285
non-Latino stories (1.8 percent). Interviews with Gen. Ricardo Sanchez,
California Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson
accounted for 40% of this total. Latinos make up close to 14 percent of the
U.S. population. The Brownout report also found that the majority of Latino
stories that aired in 2003 covered a limited number of topics. Overall, 44%
of Latino stories were about immigration (30 stories) and crime (27
stories). That figure climbs to 55% when human-interest stories (15
stories) are included and to 73% when the topics of election politics (11
stories) and celebrities (12 stories) are added.
[SOURCE: National Association of Hispanic Journalists Press Release]
http://www.nahj.org/nahjnews/articles/2004/december/121304_networkbrowno...
See also:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA487540?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

LOCAL TV NEWS LOOKS OVERSEAS
According to a new study by the Radio-Television News Director's
Foundation, local television newspeople want to provide more international
news. but news managers say it would be too expensive; producers don't know
enough about international affairs; and viewers "don't care about global
perspectives." Currently a quarter of international stories on local TV
stations are about Iraq.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA487765.html?display=Breaking+...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See http://www.rtndf.org/resources/globalperspectives.pdf

HEZBOLLAH'S TV STATION IS ORDERED OFF THE AIR
France's highest administrative body ordered the TV station of Lebanon's
militant Hezbollah group off French airwaves within 48 hours for
broadcasting hateful content in some shows and posing risks to public order.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Wire Reports]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-briefs14.4dec14,...
(requires registration)

RECOMMENDATIONS FROM FCC'S COMMITTEE ON DIVERSITY FOR COMMUNICATIONS IN THE
DIGITAL AGE
The Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the Digital Age
held its fifth meeting on Friday, December 10, 2004, at Florida Memorial
College, a Historically Black College in Miami, Florida. During the meeting
the Committee adopted recommendations from its subcommittees. Those
recommendations included: 1) establishing a web site that will serve as a
diversity resource directory; 2) modifying the Commission's current EEO
rules to include separate "menus" for recruitment and for career
advancement; 3) urging the Commission to issue a declaratory ruling
concerning foreign investment in broadcast properties that could enhance
access to capital for minority entrepreneurs; 4) urging the Commission to
issue a policy statement that divestiture remedies should be fashioned to
promote practical opportunities for small businesses, women and minorities
to own and operate media and telecommunications services; and 5) adopting a
follow-up report on the best of Best Practices to promote diversity.
Information concerning the activities of the Diversity Committee can be
reviewed at the Committee's Web site http://www.fcc.gov/DiversityFAC.
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255277A1.doc

WFED, RADIO FREE BUREAUCRAT
Decide yourself, calling all of the medias too fast. Radio Free Fed,
radio... No, REM has not rewritten the tune, but WFED-AM has launched in DC
targeting our underserved federal bureaucrats. If you can't get enough
CSPAN-2, if you devour every issue of the Federal Register, if you know
your FEC from your FERC, WFED (1050) could be your one-stop spot on the
dial. It's all about the federal government -- its management, pay and
personnel policy, "procurement" and people -- from morning till quitting
time. Not in DC? Don't fret, try FederalNewsRadio.com
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Paul Farhi]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62111-2004Dec13.html
(requires registration)

TELECOM

A TELECOM FRENZY OVER SPRINT
Don't pop that Nextel-Sprint champagne just yet. Verizon Communications,
the nation's biggest phone company, has gained the backing of its wireless
partner, Vodafone Group, for a potential bid for Sprint. A Verizon-Sprint
deal would 1) create the largest player in the wireless industry with more
than 65 million customers (Cingular-AT&T Wireless has 47 million), 2)
Verizon would get stronger in its fast-growing wireless business, as well
as long distance and services for big businesses, known as enterprise
services, 3) Verizon would likely sell off many of its roughly 55 million
traditional local lines as it reduces its exposure to that struggling part
of the industry and 4) leave Nextel alone in the cold facing a $3 billion
infrastructure upgrade.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Latour almar.latour( at )wsj.com, Berman
dennis.berman( at )wsj.com, Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com & Pringle
david.pringle( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110298004512599036,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)

SPRINT'S PLANNED NEXTEL DEAL BUILDS ON WIRELESS STRENGTH
A look at Sprint CEO Gary Forsee who may be the driving force behind the
proposed merger with Nextel. When he took the helm of Sprint less than two
years ago, the phone company was reeling from the telecom bust, burdened by
debt and grappling with bigger competitors on three fronts: local,
long-distance and wireless calling. He now has the company betting on a
wireless and long distance future.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Ellen McCarthy and Ben White]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62250-2004Dec13.html
(requires registration)

FLIERS FEAR CELLULAR BLAB, HOT-AIR PLANES
The FCC tomorrow begins a review of its 20-year-old rule prohibiting cell
phone use at 30,000 feet. The Commission will seek to determine whether
recent advances in technology relieve earlier concerns about the use of
cell phones aboard airlines. So business travels are excited, right? More
like anxious about creating flying chatter boxes.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Keith L. Alexander]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62417-2004Dec13.html
(requires registration)

QUICKLY

LOTS OF CHALLENGES AWAIT NEW FTC HEAD
Deborah Platt Majoras, recently confirmed by the Senate as Federal Trade
Commission Chairman, faces an agenda that includes deceptive ads and
persistent spammers, along with a possible merger wave and alleged
antitrust violators.
[SOURCE: USAToday, AUTHOR: Jayne O'Donnell]
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041214/majoras14.art.htm

DIGITAL DIVIDE NETWORK LAUNCHES NEW ONLINE COMMUNITY
In celebration of the fifth anniversary of the Digital Divide Network
(DDN), the Center for Media & Community yesterday launched a new
interactive website for activists working to bridge the digital divide. The
new Digital Divide Network website provides a unique, free online space for
technology advocates, Internet activists, educators and policymakers to
collaborate on bridging the divide. DDN now boasts a wide array of
interactive tools, encouraging activists to share resources, publish
articles, host virtual discussions, establish online communities, and
publish their own commercial-free Web journals, popularly known as
"blogs." These resources can be used for communication and collaboration
between the diverse groups who have a common cause to eliminate the digital
divide.
http://www.digitaldivide.net
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/13/04

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

AT THE FCC
Important Rules for Phone Market Face FCC Vote
Airborne Cell-Phone Ban Likely to Remain for Now
Local Activists Urge FCC to Curb Media Mergers
Sachs: DTV Plan a $28B Cable Tax
FCC Pushes DBS Powers Out of Auction
Could Ultrawideband Fuzz Cable Images?

WIRELESS
Sprint, Nextel May Close Deal By Wednesday
Cellular Carriers Face a Future When Wi-Fi Will Cut Into Revenue

INTERNET
Supreme Court to Hear P2P Case
Schools to Receive 2004 eRate Letters
Where the Listeners Are
Net Communities May be key to Future of Politics
This Just In, From The Guy Next Door

QUICKLY
Inouye Sees Chance to Regulate Telecommunications
Ranking TV Network Revenue
Tab for Chicago Political Ads Hits $5 million
Innovator Awards
In the Age of the Wireless Phone, a Louisiana Town Awaits the Real=
=20
Thing

AT THE FCC

IMPORTANT RULES FOR PHONE MARKET FACE FCC VOTE
At its meeting on Wednesday, the FCC will issue new rules that will permit=
=20
the four large regional telephone companies in many instances to charge=20
their rivals more to lease parts of their networks. Apparently,=20
Commissioners Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps have reservations about=
=20
the new rules being put forth by FCC Chairman Michael Powell. They are=20
telling Powell that the proposed changes would be devastating for phone=20
competition, would lead to significant price increases and would harm small=
=20
businesses that rely on the services of the rivals to the Bell companies.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Stephen Labaton]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/13/technology/13fcc.html
(requires registration)

AIRBORNE CELL-PHONE BAN LIKELY TO REMAIN FOR NOW
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday plans to seek=20
public comment on whether to ease or lift its prohibition on the use of=20
wireless phones and two-way communications devices like Blackberrys while=20
in the air. FCC officials stressed that it could take at least a year to=20
lift the agency's ban. And there still is a prohibition by the Federal=20
Aviation Administration, which could take another year to ease. The=20
agencies are moving cautiously because of concerns the communications would=
=20
interfere with operating a plane and could overwhelm wireless systems on=20
the ground. There are also questions about whether it's technically=20
feasible to support thousands of calls from the air.
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Jeremy Pelofsky]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=3D2BARPECVLMTIOCRBAE...
A?type=3DtechnologyNews&storyID=3D7065632

LOCAL ACTIVISTS URGE FCC TO CURB MEDIA MERGERS
A report on Thursday night's forum on media concentration in St Paul (MN).
[SOURCE: Minneapolis Star-Tribune 12/10, AUTHOR: Eric Black]
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=3D3807943&url_num=3D1...
rl=3Dhttp://www.startribune.com/stories/484/5129607.htmlhttp://www.startrib=
une.com/stories/484/5129607.html

SACHS: DTV PLAN A $28B CABLE TAX
In a December 9 letter to FCC Chairman Michael Powell, National Cable &=20
Telecommunications Association President Robert Sachs said the digital=20
transition plan offered by the National Association of Broadcasters would=20
impose set-top costs on cable customers that could run as high as $28=20
billion. The NAB plan would deny cable systems the right to downgrade=20
digital-TV signals to analog at the headend. The broadcaster plan would=20
effectively require cable to provide a digital set-top for every analog-TV=
=20
set or to carry each TV station in both analog and digital, and effectively=
=20
require cable to provide a digital set-top for every analog-TV set or to=20
carry each TV station in both analog and digital.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487230.html?display=3DBreaking+New...
ferral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

FCC PUSHES DBS POWERS OUT OF AUCTION
The FCC is going to auction off the last two remaining unassigned DBS=20
channels with nationwide reach and the Commission has decided to exclude=20
from the auction EchoStar and DirecTV because they already have a national=
=20
presence. The agency said it believes there is a benefit to excluding=20
EchoStar and DirecTV, citing increased competition, development of new=20
services and technological innovation. Consumers stand to benefit in=20
markets where DBS operators and cable systems compete and where they do not.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Glenn Maffei]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487159.html?display=3DPolicy&refer...
=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

COULD ULTRAWIDEBAND FUZZ CABLE IMAGES?
On the FCC's agenda this week: A coalition of numerous cable programmers --=
=20
including C-SPAN, A&E Network, Home Box Office and Showtime Networks --=20
wants the Federal Communications Commission to modify rules adopted in 2002=
=20
to eliminate potentially crippling interference from ultrawideband (UWB)=20
providers. A nascent technology, UWB offers a data rate that could reach as=
=20
high as 1,000 Megahertz per second, perhaps making the service a potential=
=20
rival to cable, broadcasting and wireless providers. UWB is so fast that it=
=20
can download a Hollywood movie in just a few seconds.
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: ]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487181.html?display=3DPolicy&refer...
=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

WIRELESS

SPRINT, NEXTEL MAY CLOSE DEAL BY WEDNESDAY
Sprint and Nextel have tentatively agreed on key terms in a $35 billion=20
merger deal that would create a giant cellular carrier with nearly 39=20
million subscribers. An announcement could be made as soon as Wednesday.=20
The future of the telecom business is increasingly a wireless one. And=20
should a deal between Sprint and Nextel be clinched, the cellphone=20
landscape is likely to be locked in position for years, with three large=20
players dominating the market. A Wall Street Journal editorial concludes:=20
"The usual suspects will gripe about all the consolidation, which by the=20
way probably isn't over. We can only hope that antitrust cops at the=20
Justice Department and regulators at the Federal Communications Commission=
=20
tune out these doomsayers. Despite all the coupling -- or rather, because=20
of it -- he wireless sector is more competitive today. Consumers are=20
enjoying better calling plans at cheaper prices, and a Sprint-Nextel merger=
=20
could help continue this free-market trend."
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Dennis K. Berman=20
dennis.berman( at )wsj.com and Almar Latour almar.latour( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110290370594698106,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_money_and_investing
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110290465595398119,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_opinion
Also see an analysis of the deal at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110289232199197859,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
(requires subscription)

CELLULAR CARRIERS FACE A FUTURE WHEN WI-FI WILL CUT INTO REVENUE
Internet telephone service is already seen as some as a threat to=20
traditional landline telephone companies -- can the threat be extended to=20
wireless, too? Last month, Japan's largest cellular carrier, NTT DoCoMo,=20
started selling a cellphone that uses the cellular network when a=20
subscriber is out and about. But when a person is sitting at her desk at=20
work, the phone can use the company's Wi-Fi network to place calls over the=
=20
Internet. The giant sucking sound, in this case, is the revenue wireless=20
carriers get from used subscriber minutes. About one-third of all wireless=
=20
calls are place from the office or home. That's a lot of minutes that could=
=20
be "free" over the Internet.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Jesse Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110289088097797788,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_marketplace
Also see:
Wi-Fi or Cellular?
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110261737269595830,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_the_journal_report
(requires subscription)

INTERNET

SUPREME COURT TO HEAR P2P CASE
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday said it would hear a controversial case on=
=20
whether file-sharing software companies could be held legally responsible=20
for copyright infringement on their networks. At the core of the case is an=
=20
interpretation of a 20-year-old decision that made VCRs legal despite their=
=20
ability to copy TV shows and movies, which ultimately helped pave the way=20
for a host of technologies ranging from CD burners to Apple Computer's=20
iPod. That case, known as the Sony-Betamax decision, set out rough=20
guidelines under which technology used to make illegal copies of=20
copyrighted material could be distributed without the manufacturer being=20
responsible for the resulting piracy, as long as the product was also=20
capable of "substantial noninfringing uses."
Statement of Gigi B. Sohn, president of Public Knowledge: =93While we are=20
disappointed that the Court has taken the case, we believe strongly that at=
=20
the end of the day, the 1984 Sony Betamax doctrine, which has done so much=
=20
to promote technological innovation to improve the lives of consumers, will=
=20
be reaffirmed. The big content companies are trying to accomplish in this=20
case what they have failed to do in the 20 years since Betamax, and what=20
they have failed this year to accomplish in Congress =AD to put restrictions=
=20
on new technologies that suit their purposes not the needs of consumers.=20
The evidence that file-sharing has significantly hurt the large content=20
companies is very thin. But the trade-off of giving content companies more=
=20
control over the development of technologies and of overturning Betamax,=20
would be very significant and very harmful to consumers and to our economy.=
=20
The content companies have a long history of harnessing new technologies to=
=20
their financial benefit. As the 9^th Circuit recognized, =91The introduction=
=20
of new technology is always disruptive to old markets, and particularly to=
=20
those copyright owners whose works are sold through well established=20
distribution mechanisms. Yet, history has shown that time and market forces=
=20
often provide equilibrium in balancing interests, whether the new=20
technology be a player piano, a copier, a tape recorder, a video recorder,=
=20
a personal computer, a karaoke machine, or an MP3 player.=92 We hope the=20
Supreme Court will bear this in mind.=94
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: John Borland ]
http://news.com.com/Supreme+Court+to+hear+P2P+case/2100-1027_3-5487491.h...
tag=3Dnefd.top
http://www.publicknowledge.org/pressroom/releases/pressrelease.2004-12-1...
72112210

SCHOOLS TO RECEIVE 2004 ERATE LETTERS
eRate funding commitments for the 2004 program year will begin flowing=20
again as soon as President Bush signs a bill passed unanimously by the=20
Senate on Dec. 8 that exempts the eRate from the Anti-Deficiency Act (ADA)=
=20
for a period of one year. Decisions on several thousand school and library=
=20
applications -- worth about $400 million total -- had been held up since=20
August because the Universal Service Administrative Co. (USAC), which=20
administers the eRate, was forced in mid-stream to adhere to the ADA, a=20
federal law requiring government entities to have the money in hand before=
=20
promising it. Though the exemption was passed, Congress, the Federal=20
Communications Commission (FCC), and the Bush Administration still have=20
more work to do, because the exemption is temporary and only lasts until=20
Dec. 31, 2005. Either Congress will need to make the ADA exemption=20
permanent, or the eRate will need to be completely overhauled to come into=
=20
line with federal accounting standards.
[SOURCE: eSchool News, AUTHOR: Cara Branigan]
http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/showStoryts.cfm?ArticleID=3D5412

WHERE LISTENERS ARE
What new medium is the biggest competitor for traditional radio listeners?=
=20
No, not satellite radio... it is the Internet. While just 3.4 million=20
Americans subscribe to satellite radio, about 19 million listen to Internet=
=20
radio each week. That's still tiny compared with the 277 million who listen=
=20
to regular radio each week, but the number of Internet listeners has grown=
=20
fast. Just three years ago, only 11 million listened to Internet radio each=
=20
week. The real boom in Internet radio should unfold over the next few years=
=20
with the development of technology that would allow Internet users to=20
travel around large areas and keep their connections, much like cellphone=20
users can. Widespread mobile Internet access eventually could even allow=20
consumers to get online right from their moving cars. Internet radio=20
receivers could wind up on the dashboard right alongside regular radio=20
tuners, much as satellite radio receivers are becoming standard in-car=20
options today.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Sarah McBride sarah.mcbride( at )wsj.com ]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110261810998395846,00.html?mod=3Dtoda...
s_the_journal_report
(requires subscription)

NET COMMUNITIES MAY BE KEY TO FUTURE OF POLITICS
A panel of Internet gurus gathered Friday at the fifth annual Votes, Bits &=
=20
Bytes conference, held by the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at=20
Harvard Law School to discuss the impact of Internet business models on=20
online politics. The panelists said the most valuable lesson online=20
campaigners may be able to garner from Web-based companies is that building=
=20
a sense of trust remains at the center of winning loyalty from customers or=
=20
political followers.
[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Matt Hines]
http://news.com.com/Net+communities+may+be+key+to+future+of+politics/210...
28_3-5487855.html?tag=3Dnefd.top

THIS JUST IN, FROM THE GUY NEXT DOOR
A look at hyper-local journalism -- made possible by the Internet.
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Howard Kurtz]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60249-2004Dec12.html
(requires registration)
See also:
Dan Gillmor, longtime technology columnist for the San Jose Mercury News,=20
is leaving the paper to work on a venture that aims to allow the public to=
=20
report and publish on the Internet.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/10379872.htm

QUICKLY

INOUYE SEES CHANCE TO REGULATE TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii) is expected to be a major player next year=20
when Congress considers rewriting the landmark 1996 Telecommunications Act.=
=20
Beginning as early as January, Sen Inouye and expected-Senate Commerce=20
Committee Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) will hold public meetings around=
=20
the country to hear from consumers and members of the communications=20
industry about changes to the law.
[SOURCE: Honolulu Star-Bulletin, AUTHOR: Richard Borreca=20
rborreca( at )starbulletin.com]
http://starbulletin.com/2004/12/12/news/story3.html

RANKING TV NETWORK REVENUE
Broadcasting & Cable annually ranks the top 25 television networks based on=
=20
revenue. The Top 25 networks represent 79% of the $52 billion that TV=20
programmers are expected to generate this year. This year's Top 5 are NBC,=
=20
CBS, QVC, ABC and ESPN. Three of the 10 largest networks sell no=20
advertising at all: shopping networks QVC and Home Shopping Network and pay=
=20
movie channel Home Box Office. ESPN's average audience is just a fraction=20
of ABC's, but the two networks' revenues are nearly equal because the cable=
=20
sports network collects giant license fees from cable and DBS operations=20
while ABC is dependent solely on advertising.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Higgins]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA487193.html?display=3DSpecial...
ort&referral=3DSUPP
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

TAB FOR CHICAGO POLITICAL ADS HITS $5 MILLION
Despite an election with few surprises, candidates still spent over $5=20
million for political ads in the fall campaign on Chicago stations, running=
=20
over 2,000 30-second spots during October and November.
[SOURCE: Illinois Campaign for Political Reform]
http://ilcampaign.org/analysis/reports/2004/TVAds2004.html

MULTICHANNEL NEWS 2004 INNOVATOR AWARDS
Cable TV operator Cox has won this year's Multichannel News 2004 Innovator=
=20
Award for Community Service for the August launch of =93Take Charge!=94 a=20
program designed to raise awareness and the use of parental controls and=20
filtering tools for TV and Internet services that are already available in=
=20
most homes. See www.cox.com/takecharge
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487156.html?display=3DSpecial+Repo...
eferral=3DSUPP
Cable TV operator Adelphia won this year's Multichannel News 2004 Innovator=
=20
Award for Education for supplying connectivity, video and online content to=
=20
more than 400 schools and libraries in Maine.
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487161.html?display=3DSpecial+Repo...
eferral=3DSUPP
Satellite TV operator EchoStar has won this year's Multichannel News 2004=20
Innovator Award for Ethnic Programming and Distribution for adding services=
=20
and language-specific channels to meet the programming needs of the U.S.=92s=
=20
immigrant population.
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA487162.html?display=3DSpecial+Repo...
eferral=3DSUPP
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Mike Reynolds]
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

IN THE AGE OF THE WIRELESS PHONE, A LOUISIANA TOWN AWAITS THE REAL THING
Yes, the telephone is not everywhere. In fact, televisions are more common=
=20
in American homes today. Alexander Graham Bell's invention of 1876 never=20
reached Mink, Louisiana, a onetime trappers' paradise in the Kisatchie=20
National Forest in west-central Louisiana, although neighbors just down the=
=20
road on Highways 117 and 118 were wired for telephones in the 1970's. But=20
now the 19th century is catching up with Mink and other isolated areas.=20
Pushed by the state's Public Service Commission, BellSouth, at what it says=
=20
is enormous expense, is wiring Mink for telephone service scheduled to=20
start by March.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Ralph Blumenthal]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/12/national/12phones.html?adxnnl=3D1&oref...
ogin&adxnnlx=3D1102888414-bAYhhkypmzUxouz5sW/AGw
(requires registration)
--------------------------------------------------------------
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 12/10/04

Today, the FCC Advisory Committee on Diversity for Communications in the
Digital Age meets. Next week, the FCC has an open meeting and there will be
a discussion about funding public television's digital future. For these
and other upcoming media policy events, see http://www.benton.org/calendar.htm

MEDIA
UCC Wants Two Miami TV Licenses Yanked For Not Running Ad
Copps Pushes Ownership Rewrite
Powell Aide Praises Congress on DTV
Who Owns the Media?
TV Trash? Just Stop Watching
TV Stations Adjusting to New Restrictions
EU Wants to Make Internet Safe for Children
Sony-MGM Deal Cleared by Regulators

TELECOM
Spectrum Bill Will Transform U.S. Wireless Industry
Sprint and Nextel Discuss Merging As Cellular Giant
Cellphones Aloft: The Inevitable Is Closer
Mobile Phone Users Double Since 2000

MEDIA

UCC WANTS TWO MIAMI TV LICENSES YANKED FOR NOT RUNNING AD
Can you give me an "Amen!"? The United Church of Christ (UCC) filed a
petition to deny the license renewal of two Miami TV stations for rejecting
the group's controversial ad (CD Dec 2 p12). The group asked the FCC to
deny WFOR-TV (Ch. 4, CBS) and WTVJ (Ch. 6, NBC) renewals for failing to
recognize the UCC's limited right of access to purchase air time in the
absence of the fairness doctrine. "How can it be in the public interest for
television stations to exclude a church's message of inclusion?" asked
Gloria Tristani, managing director of the UCC's Office of Communication.
Media Access Project President Andrew Schwartzman, who helped file the
petition, said that policy was illegal in the absence of a fairness
doctrine. Tristani said the petition wasn't based on fairness doctrine
rights but on policies inherent in the Communications Act's public interest
standard. "Repeal of the fairness doctrine was supposed to result in the
airing of more, not less, controversial programming," said Angela Campbell,
Director of Georgetown U. Law Center's Institute for Public Representation.
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Tania Panczyk-Collins]
(Not available online)
* Petition against CBS station WFOR:
http://www.mediaaccess.org/WFORPetitionToDeny.pdf
* Petition against NBC station WTVJ:
http://www.mediaaccess.org/WTVJPetitiontoDeny.pdf
More coverage:
* Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA486541?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
* MediaChannel.org
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/dissector/affalert297.shtml
* People for the American Way
http://www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/default.aspx?oid=16842&action=1477
Also see:
Accessible Airwaves
http://www.accessibleairwaves.org/

COPPS PUSHES OWNERSHIP REWRITE
By Jan 2 the FCC must decide whether to seek Supreme Court review of a
lower court's order to require the FCC to rewrite its 2003 deregulation of
broadcast ownership limits. Commissioner Michael Copps is urging FCC
Chairman Michael Powell to skip the litigation and start the process of
crafting new rules. "Now is the time to come up with media concentration
protections that will expand the voices and choices that support our
marketplace of ideas and sustain American democracy and creativity," Copps
aide Jordan Goldstein told a public forum on media ownership in St. Paul
(MN) Thursday. Copps is also urging Powell and other commissioners to hit
the road and host more public forums to gather input from Americans. Copps
wants the Commission not to rewrite the individual rules one by one but to
tackle broadcast ownership review as one package. "Some have also suggested
that the Commission should move to eliminate or loosen the media
concentration rules one by one, rather than look at their collective effect
on our media," he wrote. "I can only surmise that this strategy to further
erode media concentration protections step by step would be designed to
accomplish gigantic changes to our media landscape while minimizing public
scrutiny of the overall impact." Chairman Powell isn't expected to address
how a rewrite is pursued until the possibility of a Supreme Court appeal is
resolved.
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Bill McConnell]
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA486900?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)

POWELL AIDE PRAISES CONGRESS ON DTV
Congress Wednesday approved a resolution calling for a new law next year
designed to end the digital-TV transition as soon as Dec. 31, 2006. Current
law allows the transition to run until 85% of TV households in a market
have digital-reception equipment. In support, FCC Chairman Powell's senior
legal assistant, Jon Cody, said, "With the substantial benefits that will
flow to the public with the end of the DTV transition, including more
spectrum for public safety and broadband deployment and billions of dollars
to the U.S. Treasury, it is no surprise that Congress agrees that setting a
firm deadline for the end of the transition is a priority."
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA486891.html?display=Breaking+News&...
(free access for Benton's Headlines subscribers)
See also Powell's statement on passage on a package of telecom bills
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission]
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-255180A1.doc

WHO OWNS THE MEDIA?
[Commentary] The nation's founders, particularly Madison, believed that it
was important for the public, not merchants, to own and support the major
media distribution mechanism of the day -- the post office. Public
ownership of media remains an important part of U.S. communications policy,
but going back as far as the days of the robber barons and the trusts
battling against Teddy Roosevelt and Louis Brandeis, corporations have
sought to diminish public media. While most of us rely on corporate media
(the New York Times, Verizon, Comcast, NBC, etc.), publicly-owned media
continues to struggle for the place the founders established for it. This
struggle is illustrated by two seemingly different examples. One involves
the future of public broadcasting; the other involves the efforts of the
City of Philadelphia to provide its citizens with an alternative means of
communication.
[SOURCE: Center for American Progress, AUTHOR: Mark Lloyd]
http://www.americanprogress.org/site/pp.asp?c=biJRJ8OVF&b=262672

TV TRASH? JUST STOP WATCHING
[Commentary] The real reason that our culture is getting dirtier, trashier,
and more inclined toward garbage of all kinds? It sells. It is sold in bulk
to us by large corporate media companies, which have supported the Bush
Administration's deregulation of the communications industry. They make
tons of money peddling this scummy material. So the solution, Harris
writes, is to just turn it off -- don't let your kids listen to/see it and
don't consume this media yourself. If we do this, the upshot will be
breathtakingly simple: The media conglomerates will take this stuff off the
air because unwatched programs do not make money for them. Period.
[SOURCE: Toledo Blade, AUTHOR: David Harris, University of Toledo]
http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041208/OPINION04/412...

TV STATIONS ADJUSTING TO NEW RESTRICTIONS
Some Venezuelan television stations began altering their programs, citing
fears of penalties under a new law restricting violence and sexual content.
The law limits broadcasts deemed to be obscene or violent and details a
range of offenses for which the government may fine media organizations.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times]
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-briefs10.4dec10,...
(requires registration)
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/10/international/americas/10venez.html

EU WANTS TO MAKE INTERNET SAFE FOR CHILDREN
The European Union has launched a $60 million plan to protect children from
pornography and racist sites when they surf the Internet. The money will go
to 1) expanding the number of hotlines where parents can report illegal
content found on the Internet, 2) financing technology to filter out
pornography and 3) raising awareness among parents and children.
[SOURCE: Reuters]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=7041976

SONY-MGM DEAL CLEARED BY REGULATORS
A consortium led by Sony on Thursday cleared U.S. antitrust hurdles in its
efforts to buy film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The deal will still face
review from European regulators next year, however. The Sony group includes
Providence Equity Partners, Texas Pacific Group, Comcast and DLJ Merchant
Banking Partners.
[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times]
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-mgm10dec10,1,776344.s...
(requires registration)

TELECOM

SPECTRUM BILL WILL TRANSFORM US WIRELESS INDUSTRY
With passage of HR-5419 by the Senate late Wednesday night, the bill awaits
just President Bush's signature to become law. Within 18 months of that,
the FCC must auction spectrum for third-generation wireless services. FCC
Chief of Staff Bryan Tramont said the FCC is ready to move to notify
National Telecommunications and Information Administration (part of the
Department of Commerce) of its intention to have an auction. "We are
thrilled that Congress has cleared the way for next-generation broadband
wireless services," Tramont said. "We look forward to putting this spectrum
into commercial hands as soon as practicable." Former NTIA Director Greg
Rohde said that 10 years from now the bill will be viewed as the most
critical telecom legislation since the 1996 Telecom Act. "This is a
long-term piece of legislation," he
said. "If we want to regain leadership in telecom...the only way we're
going to remain competitive is we have to find a way to allocate more
spectrum into the commercial sector and make better use of spectrum." Rohde
said a major problem the U.S. faces is that government users take up so
much spectrum. "The only way to bring [the Department of Defense] and other
agencies to the table is they have to have the assurance that they're going
to have their costs reimbursed and the funding is available," he said: "The
significance of this legislation I don't think can be overstated long term."
[SOURCE: Communications Daily, AUTHOR: Howard Buskirk]
(Not available online)
See also statement from NTIA Director Michael D. Gallagher
[SOURCE: National Telecommunications and Information Administration]
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/press/2004/mdgstatement_12092004.html

SPRINT AND NEXTEL DISCUSS MERGING AS CELLULAR GIANT
Sprint and Nextel Communications are in discussions about a potential
merger that would top $30 billion. Such a deal would create the nation's
third-largest cellphone operator with about 38.5 million customers,
narrowing the U.S. cellular industry into a business dominated by three
giants. Cingular Wireless, Verizon Wireless and a combined Sprint-Nextel
would control about 75% of the market, though a host of other entrants also
compete. The talks come just six weeks after Cingular became the country's
largest cellphone operator, following its completed acquisition of AT&T
Wireless Services. "This is the signal of an ongoing trend to reduce
competition," says Gene Kimmelman of Consumer's Union.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Dennis K. Berman
dennis.berman( at )wsj.com & Jesse Drucker jesse.drucker( at )wsj.com]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB110262093331795896,00.html?mod=todays...
(requires subscription)
See also:
* Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53244-2004Dec9.html
(requires registration)
* USAToday
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20041210/1b_phonedeal10.art.htm
* LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/business/printedition/la-fi-sprintel10dec10,1,194...
* NY Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/10/technology/10tele.html

CELLPHONES ALOFT: THE INEVITABLE IS CLOSER
Federal regulators plan next week to begin considering rules that would end
the official ban on cellphone use on commercial flights. Technical
challenges and safety questions remain. At next Wednesday's Federal
Communications Commission meeting, the agency is expected to approve two
measures. One, an order that is expected to be adopted, would try to
introduce more price competition among phone companies to offer telephone
and high-speed Internet services from the seatback and end-of-aisle phones
that are now on many planes. The second measure will begin the regulatory
process of considering whether there are technical solutions to some of the
current obstacles to passengers' using their own mobile phones on planes.
Safety will be a major consideration in any rule changes. The Federal
Aviation Administration and Boeing, the nation's largest builder of
airliners, both support the FCC's ban, arguing that cellphones can
interfere with navigation systems.
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Ken Belson & Micheline Maynard]
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/10/technology/10phone.html
(requires registration)

MOBILE PHONE USERS DOUBLE SINCE 2000
Mobile phone subscribers around the globe totaled nearly 1.5 billion by the
middle of this year, about one quarter of the world's population, the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) said on Thursday
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Robert Evans]
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=G3KSWADR10ZW2CRBAEOC...
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...and we are outta here. Have a great weekend.
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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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