Monday, 16 May 2011

{Political_Views} Comcast and the FCC Just Got a Tad too Cozy



Media Reform Daily
News of the movement for May 16, 2011
Comcast and the FCC Just Got a Tad too Cozy

Instead of looking out for what is best for democracy and the nation, the FCC has become little more than a handmaiden for the mega-corporations that control America's media.

Ryan Blethen, Seattle Times
FCC Commissioner's Comcast Dash Triggers Wave of Disgust

It's fair to say that media and the public have responded with disgust to news that FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker had cut short her public duties to lobby for Comcast, the company whose takeover of NBC Universal she just approved. But the criticism hasn't been limited to one bureaucrat's shameless decision to abandon her 2009 oath to serve the American people.

Timothy Karr, Huffington Post
Congress Ignored FCC Commissioner's Comcast Gig

Media advocacy group Free Press slammed a congressional subcommittee for ignoring the controversy surrounding a FCC's commissioner's resignation to become a top lobbyist for Comcast.

Brent Lang, The Wrap
Lawmakers Consider Probe of FCC Member's Move to Comcast-NBC

House members in both parties are concerned about the decision by FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker to leave the agency for Comcast-NBC Universal. Baker's decision has prompted questions on whether she was considering that post while reviewing the Comcast merger, which she voted to approve. She has denied any overlap between the review and her discussions with Comcast, and has stated that she followed ethics rules.

Sara Jerome, The Hill
Switching Sides

There's something particularly unsettling about a regulatory official who voted only four months ago to approve the $13.75 billion merger of Comcast and NBC Universal turning around to take a high-profile job with that firm. The move threatens to further undermine public confidence in the government's ability to make objective decisions that put ordinary citizens' interests first.

Philadelphia Inquirer
Public Interest, Personal Gain

FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker isn't the first government regulator to charge through the revolving door to reap riches from a regulated enterprise. But her case is particularly blatant and sadly illustrative.

Times-Tribune
How the Top One Percent Capture Our Regulators -- and the American Dream

In describing the intense lobbying efforts by Comcast last year to close its merger with NBC Universal, legal scholar Susan Crawford put it this way: "It's about as subtle as a wet fish in the face." That makes last week's announcement by FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker the proverbial Mack truck. Baker is resigning to take a top lobbying position at NBC Universal in Washington, just months after she voted to approve the deal.

Linda Keenan and Janine R. Wedel, Huffington Post
Markey to FCC: Allowing AT&T-Mobile Merger Would Be Historic Mistake

Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) used an FCC reform hearing in the House communications subcommittee to express his strong opposition to the proposed AT&T-T-Mobile merger. "It would be an historic mistake to approve the AT&T-T-Mobile merger," he said flatly.

John Eggerton, Broadcasting & Cable
Why the AT&T-T-Mobile Merger Should Not Come to Pass

Should AT&T be allowed to acquire T-Mobile, wireless carriers will get even further control over the distribution and makeup of the hardware and software that is changing the way we interact with computers, and they'll likely charge us more for the privilege.

Tom Krazit, paidContent
AT&T Works to Gin Up Support for Its T-Mobile Deal

You know that AT&T really wants to buy T-Mobile. And senators pressed hard on AT&T during hearings to prove that the acquisition wouldn't hurt competition in the market and seemed skeptical. Although Congress doesn't have a direct say on the deal, political opposition could influence regulators. And so AT&T is pulling out the stops and seems to be indirectly approaching the press in search of some positive stories to help influence the legislature.

Erik Sherman, BNET
High Fiber

The United States is where the Internet was born. But we're falling behind in the race to the online future. Most of us go online these days using a service that's called broadband -- faster than old-fashioned dial-up, and always on. But broadband service in the U.S. lags behind a dozen or more industrialized countries -- and we're doing worse every year. Why are we being left so far behind?

Betsy Rate and Rick Karr, Need to Know
An Internet Rock Star Tells All

Jonathan Coulton's songs almost never get played on the radio. He doesn't have a contract with a music label. Yet he's a one man counterargument to the idea that musicians can't make money making music. So how did Jonathan Coulton take his songs and -- without the aid of a record label, or any outside support really -- turn them into half a million in annual revenue? The Internet, of course.

Alex Blumberg, Planet Money
Turks Protest Internet Censorship

Thousands of Turks gathered in some 40 cities and towns around the country, to join marches organized on Facebook against state Internet censorship.

Ayla Albayrak, Wall Street Journal
Moffett: AT&T Caps Herald 'Next Generation of Communications'

Supporters of low broadband caps and high overage charges can't admit that the shift toward these pricing models is about turf protection and offers no benefit to consumers. That's why investors and the broadband industry will often try to insist that these new flat rate plus caps and overage pricing models are about altruism or a love of "next generation communications." This tends to add insult to injury to a public that's generally smarter than the industry gives them credit for.

Karl Bode, Broadband Reports
NCTA Says RUS Should Stop Broadband Loans Until Rules Are Fixed

Cable operators have advised the Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service that it needs to fix its rules for handing out broadband development loans under the Broadband Loan Program, and it should stop handing out the money until that happens.

John Eggerton, Multichannel News
Same Old Song: Another Radio Merger

It's the same old song -- both on the radio, and in politics. Another mega media merger is looming. Radio giant Cumulus is attempting to acquire radio giant Citadel, giving Cumulus massive control over the airwaves, and leaving the public with even less choices in programming and music on the radio.

Megan Tady, SavetheNews.org
MPBN to Argue Case for Funding

The Maine Public Broadcasting Network is expected to make the case for why it shouldn't have all of its state funding cut. Last week, Gov. Paul LePage proposed to help fill a hole in the budget by eliminating $2 million a year for the next two years that was slated to go to public broadcasting.

Kennebec Journal
Radio Summer Spreads Word on Community Radio

As reported back in December, Congress has passed the Local Community Radio Act. The act's passage is a major victory for community radio, permitting hundreds or thousands of groups to launch low-power FM radio stations that will aid their own specific community needs. Of course, most of us are still a little hazy on how, exactly, we can launch our own local radio stations. So the nonprofit radio activist organization Prometheus Radio Project has launched Radio Summer.

Tom Breihan, Pitchfork
act now

FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker is leaving the FCC to become a lobbyist for Comcast – just four months after she voted to approve the Comcast-NBC merger. It's no wonder the American people are disgusted by Washington. Help us close the revolving door. Demand that Congress investigate Baker's conflict of interest.
In Other News...
If Cable Firms Act As Monopolies, Cities Should Be Able to Regulate

For many Bostonians, cable service, while not strictly essential, has become an important way to get entertainment and monitor public affairs. And if the FCC finds that Comcast enjoys a de facto monopoly, the city should be given the power to regulate it.

Boston Globe
The New Tech Bubble

Some time after the dotcom boom turned into a spectacular bust in 2000, bumper stickers began appearing in Silicon Valley imploring: "Please God, just one more bubble." That wish has now been granted. Compared with the rest of America, Silicon Valley feels like a boomtown. Yes, irrational exuberance has returned to the Internet world. Investors should beware.

The Economist
Social Media's Sticky Role in Anti-Israel Uprisings

After a page calling for a mass march by Palestinians on the borders of Israel on May 15 was taken offline by Facebook, mirror sites with more than 3.5 million followers sprung up. Now Egyptians are preparing to march on Gaza and the Israeli military is threatening to crush protests. Will the so-called "Facebook Intifada" tip the Middle East into further turmoil?

Fast Company
Social Networking Sites Face New Privacy Battle

California could force Facebook and other social networking sites to change their privacy protection policies under a first-of-its-kind proposal at the state Capitol that is opposed by much of the Internet industry.

San Francisco Chronicle
Most Top Apps Lack Privacy Policies

Nearly three-quarters of the most popular mobile apps lack even a basic privacy policy, according to a new survey.

MediaPost
Five Reasons Why Skype Will Be an Office Hit

What Microsoft's acquisition of Skype represents is the potential for greater adoption by business people. Of course that will depend on how Microsoft treats Skype. It will be integrated into the Microsoft suite for use as a sanctioned communications tool. But the signs are there that Microsoft will respect the service as a stand-alone product for the millions of people who love it for what it is. Considering these two factors, we see five reasons for why Skype will be a hit in the business world.

ReadWriteWeb
Luck of the Irish for British Newspapers

Ireland may be small, but its purchasing power is mighty. In the face of newspaper industry doom and gloom, the Irish are showing that maybe there is some bit of luck to keeping the newspaper business afloat. U.K. papers are largely the beneficiaries of an enthusiastic readership on the Emerald Isle.

AdWeek
Sony Hits Restart on Games Network

Sony has restored access to its video game networks for many users. Now the company needs to fix its reputation.

Wall Street Journal
Ban Mobile Phones and Wireless Networks in Schools, Say European Leaders

Mobile phones and computers with wireless Internet connections pose a risk to human health and should be banned from schools, a powerful European body has ruled.

Daily Telegraph
College Students Use Social Media to Cheat

Social media and content sharing websites account for one-third of plagiarism among college students, and paper mills are far less popular than once thought, according to a report detailing the most common cheating methods in higher education.

eCampus News
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Saturday, 14 May 2011

{Political_Views} Comcast Buys FCC




Free Press Action Fund: Action Alert
Stop the Revolving Door!

Outrageous!

FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker is leaving the FCC to become a lobbyist for Comcast – just four months after she voted to approve the Comcast-NBC merger.1

This is just the latest – but perhaps most blatant — example of so-called "public servants" cashing in on companies they are supposed to be regulating. But Baker's jump to Comcast is particularly egregious. As recently as March, the commissioner was giving speeches complaining that the Comcast-NBC deal "took too long." 

And you wonder why the American people are disgusted with Washington. 

Stop the Revolving Door: Demand Congress Investigate Baker's Conflict of Interest

Congress is already concerned about how the FCC conducts itself. Rep. Darrell Issa, chair of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, has been making a lot of noise recently about alleged ethical violations at the agency. By signing this letter to Congressman Issa, you're urging him to launch an investigation of Commissioner Baker's seemingly blatant conflict of interest.

Outside of Washington, people of every political stripe have expressed near unanimous contempt for a system of government that favors powerful corporations at the expense of the many. Sadly, the complete capture of government by industry barely raises an eyebrow inside the Beltway anymore. That's why Congress needs to hear from you. 

Urge Congress to Investigate this Conflict of Interest at the FCC

The revolving door at the FCC erodes any prospect for common-sense public policy -- such as strong Net Neutrality rules or a rigorous review of mega-deals like AT&T's proposed takeover of T-Mobile. 

Unless we speak out now and demand an investigation, business as usual in Washington will undermine our media system and endanger our democracy.

Thank you for taking action,

Craig Aaron
President and CEO
Free Press Action Fund
www.freepress.net

1. 'Regulator to Join Comcast After OK of NBC Deal,' Associated Presshttp://act2.freepress.net/go/3982?akid=2506.9616907.PhUcdn&t=5

Free Press Action Fund is a national, nonpartisan organization working to reform the media. Learn more at www.freepress.net


{Political_Views} Our best chance


A special election in a conservative New York Congressional district has become a referendum on Republican plans to end Medicare—and the Democrat is neck-and-neck! A win here will send shock waves through washington. Please support the efforts of our local allies at the Working Families Party. 

Help save Medicare
Dear Friend,

A special congressional election in upstate New York has suddenly become the most important battleground in the fight against Republican plans to abolish Medicare.

This is a solidly Republican district, but the Republican candidate is in free-fall ever since she said she would vote to abolish Medicare.1 Now The New York Times is calling this "the first electoral test of the Republican agenda."2 And recent polls show Kathy Hochul, the Democratic candidate, neck-and-neck! 

A win here will send shock waves through the Washington establishment. It'll put Republicans on the defensive and slow their attacks on the middle class. And it'll embolden Democrats to stand up and fight. Winning here may be the best way to save Medicare.

Our allies at the Working Families Party are running a massive on-the-ground campaign that could swing the election. But after Karl Rove's corporate front group dumped $650,000 into the race this week,3 grassroots efforts are even more important—and they need help from progressives nationwide. This is a huge and urgent opportunity. PLEASE HELP!
 
 
The Working Families Party is New York's independent, progressive "third party" that has helped Democrats win time and time again. They have the best field operation in the state—maybe the country.

Their energy at the doors is the difference that matters in a close election, especially with outside groups like Karl Rove's trying to buy the election. They have delivered the margin of victory in dozens of races, including for two congressional races just last year. Now they aim to do it again in New York's 26th congressional district, helping Democrat Kathy Hochul beat Republican Jane Corwin.

If we win this race, it'll be a huge setback for John Boehner, Paul Ryan, and Karl Rove in their efforts to kill Medicare.

 
Thank you.
 
—Adam R., Steven, Laura, Tate, and the rest of the team
 
Sources:
1. "Poll: Hochul Leads 26th Race; Davis Taking GOP Votes," WBEN, accessed May 12, 2011 

2. "G.O.P. Medicare Plan Shakes Up Race for House Seat," The New York Times, May 5, 2011

3. "Crossroads enters NY-26," Politico, May 10, 2011

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{Political_Views} FOX FAILS TO DISCOLSE INDUSTRY TIES


Media Matters for America

Here are today's news items from Media Matters for America, click on the title or 'read more' to read the entirety of each story.

Fox Business Fails To Disclose Industry Ties Of Drilling Proponent
On Fox Business' Follow the Money, Penny Lee claimed that the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) is a "frozen wasteland" and that "we should be drilling there." But neither Lee nor host Eric Bolling disclosed the fact that one of Lee's lobbying clients is a corporation that holds millions of acres of potential oil lands in Alaska including land located near ANWR. Read More

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