Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 3:23am
FALTERING TELECOM BILL MAY SPUR FCC ACTION ON VIDEO SERVICES
[SOURCE: Technology Daily, AUTHOR: Drew Clark]
The prospect that Congress may not pass telecommunications legislation this session could spur the FCC to help the Bell telephone companies more rapidly enter the video market. The FCC is considering two potential vehicles for obtaining regulatory relief, although action is not imminent. One item concerns municipalities' review of cable franchises, and the other addresses the definition of Internet-enabled services, including video programming. The proposals could put the FCC at the core of faltering telecom legislation by undercutting municipal review of the Bells' video services. The House-passed bill, H.R. 5252, which would pre-empt municipal cable franchises with a national one, is stuck in the Senate over whether some telecom firms could be empowered to have tighter control over network providers' content.
http://www.njtelecomupdate.com/lenya/telco/live/tb-DQVV1154635568093.html
Related
- Elections, Net Neutrality May Disconnect Telecom Bill
- Stevens Still Pushing On Franchise Reform
- McCain: Telecom Bill Not Dead Yet
- Alaska's Stevens Left Out In The Cold
- Today's Quote 11.14.06
- Upcoming Telecom Policy Events
- Upcoming Media Policy Events
- Senate Communications Act of 2006 Bill Report
- Congress Unlikely to Tackle Net Neutrality
- Congress ends with a Flurry of Legislation
- House Democrats and the Internet, Telecom Agenda
- Poll: Americans Favor Video Choice Over Net Neutrality
- "Internet Watch List" Identifies Dangerous Legislation
- Verizon may Lobby states on TV service Rules
- Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

