Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to MCN Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

ACA Continues Quest To Keep News Corp. Restraints In Place

Claims News Corp. Has ‘Manipulated’ FCC, ‘Ignored’ Public Interest

By Linda Moss -- Multichannel News, 5/16/2008 3:24:00 PM

Filing additional comments with the Federal Communications Commission Friday, the American Cable Association continued its opposition to News Corp.’s bid to be freed of conditions—related to retransmission consent and regional sports networks—imposed by the regulatory body as part of the media giant’s purchase of DirecTV in 2004.

News Corp., which sold its holdings in DirecTV to Liberty Media in February, has filed a petition of modification with the FCC claiming that the conditions should no longer apply.  The terms of the order setting the conditions aren’t set to expire until 2010.

ACA’s nine-page filing Friday expands on its previous filing calling attention to News Corp.’s. recent claims of “big gains” from its broadcast and cable networks.

“These public statements eliminate any shred of credibility to the petition’s claims that News Corp., and the public interest, would somehow suffer from a ‘competitive disadvantage’ that would befall News Corp. if the conditions were not terminated early,” the ACA said in its most recent filing.

“Throughout this process, News Corp. has manipulated the commission and ignored the public interest,” ACA president Matt Polka charged.

“Petitioning the Commission for relief from conditions it alleges are restrictive—while simultaneously reporting to Wall Street big gains from its television stations and cable networks—defies logic,” he said. “The conditions set in 2004 serve the public good, specifically for those communities served by small and medium-sized cable systems.  Repealing them prematurely would reward News Corp. for its abuse of the process, enabling it to ignore the public good while continuing to collect ’big gains."

If the agreed-upon conditions for News Corp. were lifted, small cable operators and their customers will be forced to pay more money for the same content, because News Corp. will exercise unconstrained market power over smaller distributors, the ACA argued.

 

 

 

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

PRODUCT WIRE




 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links

More Content

  • Voices
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Voices

  • Todd Spangler
    BIT RATE

    July 18, 2008
    Does Anyone Really Want to Watch YouTube on a Big-Screen TV?
    Yes, of course. Not for hours on end. But anecdotal evidence suggests that you or I would...
    More
  • Linda Moss
    Hits And Misses

    July 15, 2008
    The TCA ‘Mad Men’ Set Visit: No, I Didn’t Steal Any Ashtrays
    I’m not sure if Mad Men executive producer Matt Weiner was tongue-in-cheek joking or not when ...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Photos

  • USA Network's Sandy 'Burn Notice'
    USA Network transplanted ‘Burn Notice’s’ Miami beach setting to Times Square for a promotional event in support of the second-season premiere of the original series.
  • Comcast's New Video Wall
    The 83-by-25-foot, 10-million-pixel high-definition video wall located in the lobby of Comcast's new corporate headquarters has become quite a tourist attraction in downtown Philadelphia.
  • National Educational Computing Conference
    Operators, programmers, Cable in the Classroom and CTAM shared their resources with more than 18,000 school leaders, educational technology purchasers and decision-makers this week at the National Educational Computing Conference in San Antonio.

Podcasts

Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS

Click on a title below to learn more.

Multichannel Newswire
MCN HD Update
MCN Telco IP Update
MCN Local Cable Advertising Sales
MCN Hispanic Television Update
MCN HD Programming
Multichannel Multicultural Newsletter
Multichannel Friday First Read
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites