Now Hear This
An open and frank discussion of media and telecommunications issues - from the consumer point of view.
Associated Press Reporter John Dunbar is out with a story about a private meeting with FCC officials that should infuriate anyone who cares about open government.
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Wireless phone users have received an unexpected gift from the U.S. Copyright Office. A new ruling by the Copyright Office allows wireless phone users to break software locks inserted into their handsets by carriers such as Verizon and Cingular.
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For more than a year now, phone giant Verizon has been convincing state and local officials to let it sell cable television services in their communities using the argument that the new competition will improve service and drive down prices. So imagine our surprise when we learned that Verizon is planning to raise the rates on its FiOS television service in all those newly-competitive communities at the beginning of the year.
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In the month leading up to the 2006 mid-term elections, local television news viewers got considerably more information about campaigns from paid political advertisements than from news coverage, a new University of Wisconsin-Madison study shows.
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In a move that is hard to interpret as anything but contempt for the public it is supposed to serve, the FCC chose to unveil the details of a much anticipated set of studies on media ownership late on eve of the Thanksgiving holiday.
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Earlier this week we told you about a federal court case that could rob hundreds of thousands of rural satellite television consumers of their access to the big broadcast networks such as NBC, CBS, ABC and Fox. We've done a bit more digging on this story and have some new details and additional perspective.
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Hundreds of thousands of rural satellite television consumers are about to lose their access to the big broadcast networks such as NBC, CBS, ABC and Fox because of a federal court case.
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A new article in Adweek says this year's mid-term elections rewrote the record book for political advertising, with local broadcasters all across the country scoring huge windfalls.
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The biggest owner of the nation's radio airwaves is going private.
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The Federal Communications Commission has just announced it will hold its second official public hearing on its media ownership rules in Nashville on Monday, December 11.
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Top broadcaster lobbying group tells FCC huge advertising windfalls from political campaigns and Olympics shouldn’t be included when determining the financial health of television stations.
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Late yesterday the FCC removed the proposed AT&T/BellSouth merger from the agenda for today's open meeting.
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Big media companies regularly brush aside charges that media consolidation homogenizes local news and public affairs coverage and shuts out minority voices. But even the slickest media mogul would have a hard time putting a positive spin on a cost-slashing plan recently unveiled by NBC Universal.
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