Communications-related Headlines for 2/26/99
INTERNET/INFOTECH
FCC Rules Dialing Web Is Long Distance (WSJ)
Gateway Plans to Offer Free Net Service (NYT)
Caveat Emptor on the Web: Ad and Editorial Lines Blur (NYT)
Read All About IT -- by the Roadside (WP)
Ruling Blocks Abortion Foes On Web Site (WP)
Reader's Digest To Boost Internet, Health Roles (WSJ)
Job Kiosk a High-Tech Search Tool (ChiTrib)
ENCRYPTION
Lawmakers Renew Encryption Battle (CyberTimes)
MERGERS
SBC Says ICC Staff Report is Distorted (ChiTrib)
Eye-Popping, Half-Cocked Idea Makes Point (ChiTrib)
TELEPHONE REGULATION
FCC Releases Audit Reports on RBOCs' Property Records (FCC)
U.S. House Passes Cellphone Privacy Act (SJ Merc)
Cuba Fails To Halt Phone Service from US as Firms Reroute Calls (WSJ)
Deutsche Telekom, Phone Home (NYT)
SATELLITE
Judge Rules Against DirecTV (WP)
CAMPAIGN FINANCE
Slight Shift on Campaign Finance Reform (WP)
ANTITRUST
FTC Chairman Urges Caution on Tech Breakups (WP)
INTERNET
FCC RULES DIALING WEB IS LONG DISTANCE
Issue: Internet
The Federal Communications Commission ruled yesterday that connecting to the
Internet is a long-distance call, not a local one. FCC Chairman Bill Kennard
said this is not an attempt to regulate the Internet. The FCC's Larry
Strickling said, "This won't change how consumers access the
Internet or what they pay." What it will change is the relationship between
Baby Bells and independent phone companies. Many Internet service providers
contract with independent phone companies. The Baby Bells must then pay the
independents for routing calls onto the Internet. By defining an Internet
dial-up as a long distance call, the FCC is saying the independent phone
companies no longer have jurisdiction and therefore don't get paid. However,
existing agreements with local independents will be enforced, said John
Windhausen Jr., president of the Association for Local Telecommunications
Services. FCC Commissioner Harold Furchtgott-Roth abstained from the vote,
arguing that labeling an Internet call long-distance means it should be charged
to the customer as such. Some consumer groups are worried that price hikes may
result from the ruling. Scott Cleland, managing director of Legg Mason
Precursor Group says the opposite is true: "by opening the door to
negotiations, the FCC is trying to force Baby Bells and independents to reduce
rates for Internet and voice calls."
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal (B3), AUTHOR: Kathy Chen]
http://wsj.com/
See also:
FCC RULES INTERNET DIAL-UP CALLS ARE INTERSTATE CALLS
[SOURCE: New York Times (C3), AUTHOR: ASSOCIATED PRESS ]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/02/biztech/articles/26access.html
FCC ADOPTS ORDER ADDRESSING DIAL-UP INTERNET TRAFFIC [SOURCE: News Release &
Statements ]
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/1999/nrcc9014.html
FCC EFFECTIVELY OVERTURNS STATE DECISIONS; OPENS DOOR FOR
INTERNET ACCESS CHARGES; FURCHTGOTT-ROTH DENIED COMMISSIONER RIGHTS
[SOURCE: Separate Press Release from the Office of Commissioner
Haroldfurchtgott-Roth]
http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Furchtgott_Roth/Statements/sthfr908.html
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
[Source: Chicago Tribune Author: Associated Press]
http://chicagotribune.com/textversion/article/0,1492,SAV-9902260307,00.html
GATEWAY PLANS TO OFFER FREE NET SERVICE
Issue: Computers/Access
Gateway, the second largest direct seller of PCs, has plans to offer
customers one free year of Internet service. In explaining the motivation
for this move, Gateway's chief executive, Theodore W. Waitt, said "We talk
with more than 50,000 people every day and understand that most of them want
a computer so they can get on the Web." The deal will give consumers free
access the Internet for 150 hours each month. Additional time will be
charged at $1.50 per hour.
[SOURCE: New York Times (Online), AUTHOR: Bloomberg News]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/02/biztech/articles/26gate.html
CAVEAT EMPTOR ON THE WEB: AD AND EDITORIAL LINES BLUR
Issue: Advertising
On the Internet, lines between advertising and content are not drawn as
clearly as they are in traditional media outlets. Advertisements are "woven
into the very fabric of the World Wide Web," observe Hansell and Harmon. The
site for Fox's series "Dawson's Creek", for example, has ads for Dep hair
products on the same page as a story about its characters getting their
hair done at Dep Dapeside Salon. While some Internet executives claim that
people don't care about, or even expect, editorial independence on the web,
other say that this attitude may hurt the industry in the long run. "People
still do not trust the Internet, and they are not ever going to if they feel
that the sites they go to are not being straight with them," says Richard
Gingras, the editor in chief of At Home Network.
[SOURCE: New York Times (A1), AUTHOR: Saul Hansell and Amy Harmon]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/biztech/articles/26web.html
READ ALL ABOUT IT -- BY THE ROADSIDE
Issue: Advertising
While driving through the middle of California, the Post's Mark Leibovich
discovered high tech companies have discovered a low tech method of self
promotion and advertising: billboards. As Leibovich notes, "You don't need
to know the way to San Jose anymore. Just follow the really nerdy
billboards." An Avanti representative, whose company promotes itself on
billboards as "the very deep submicron leader," could not attribute any
sales to the billboards but said "they are a vital source of general
awareness for the company in this community." In case you are wondering,
here are how a few companies are promoting themselves: Acropolis -- Mission
Critical Computing Solutions, Frog -- Integration of Strategic Building,
Digital Media and Product Development, Apple -- Think Different, Lycos --
The Fastest Retriever in Cyberspace, Excite -- The Best Portal on the Web,
Novell -- The Quiet Revolution. [83 billboards in 65 miles? Mark, take a
week off. You've been working too hard. Go for a drive, no, better stay home.]
[SOURCE: Washington Post (E1), AUTHOR: Mark Leibovich]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/feed/biztop920030136893.htm
RULING BLOCKS ABORTION FOES ON WEB SITE
Issue: First Amendment
U.S. District Court Judge Robert E. Jones ruled Thursday that a website
called "The Nuremberg Files" will be banned from publishing "wanted" posters
and personal information on physicians who perform abortions. A federal jury
had agreed earlier this month to award $107 million to a group of doctors
who contended the purpose of the information was to create a "hit list" that
incited violence. The case has been view as an important test of speech
rights. In his decision yesterday Jones said the website is "a blatant and
illegal communication of true threats to kill." Attorneys for the 14
defendants in the case plan to appeal both the judge's and jury's rulings.
[SOURCE: Washington Post (A17), AUTHOR: Rene Sanchez]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-02/26/159l-022699-idx.html
READER'S DIGEST TO BOOST INTERNET, HEALTH ROLES
Issue: E-Commerce
Reader's Digest announced plans to invest $100 million into Internet sales and
services over the next two years. With its magazine database of 140 million
names of people over 50, the company will focus on marketing to this age group.
Products will be targeted toward five areas: "home, health, family, finance,
and faith," Reader's Digest chief executive, Thomas Ryder said. They are
seeking partnerships with financial institutions to offer a Reader's Digest
mutual fund and credit card. Ryder says they are already in discussions with
partners to start a direct-mail pharmaceutical and vitamin business. The
company is counting on faithful readers of Reader's Digest magazine, who are
fifty and older, to trust the name, Bounds reports.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal (B8), AUTHOR: Wendy Bounds]
http://wsj.com/
JOB KIOSK A HIGH-TECH SEARCH TOOL
Issue: Jobs/InfoTech
"We run the classified ads and phones just aren't ringing off the hook
anymore," said Linda Tucker, national Job Shop manager for Adecco, a
California employment agency. The solution -- an "ATM for jobs." Adecco
unveiled its Job Shop kiosk at a Chicago college campus yesterday. "Job
Shop will put ourselves out where the community is. We're taking our
recruiting net and throwing it out farther than anybody else. We're all
fishing in the same pond," said Ms. Tucker.
[SOURCE: Chicago Tribune (Sec 3, p.1), AUTHOR: Michael Ko]
http://chicagotribune.com/textversion/article/0,1492,SAV-9902260357,00.html
ENCRYPTION
LAWMAKERS RENEW ENCRYPTION BATTLE
Issue: Encryption
Representatives Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) http://www.house.gov/goodlatte and
Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) http://www.house.gov/lofgren -- along with 205 other
sponsors -- have introduced the Security and Freedom through Encryption Act
(SAFE), a bill that would lift the Clinton Administration's export controls
on the data scrambling technology. "All the stars are aligned. We are going
to move this very quickly out of the House," said one of the bill's
supporters, Rep Thomas A. Davis III (R-VA) http://www.house.gov/tomdavis.
"This legislation I think now is about ready where we can move it forward,"
House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) http://www.house.gov/armey said.
"This has been I think a difficult juxtaposition, the interest of the
Internet against national security. We will resolve that." "While we always
welcome additions to the public discussions about encryption, the SAFE bill,
as we understand it, continues to have the same problems it had last year,"
said William A. Reinsch, undersecretary of commerce, who as head of the
Bureau of Export Administration http://www.bxa.doc.gov carries out the
Administration's encryption policies. "Instead of the balanced approach
between commerce, privacy, law enforcement and national security the
President is seeking, this bill seeks to tilt the balance in favor of
commerce and privacy. In doing so, we believe it would harm our national
security and our ability to protect our citizens from drug dealers,
terrorist and other criminals." [Find more info on SAFE by searching on
H.R.850 at Thomas]
[SOURCE: CyberTimes, AUTHOR: Jeri Clausing jeri( at )nytimes.com]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/02/cyber/articles/26encrypt.html
MERGERS
SBC SAYS ICC STAFF REPORT ID DISTORTED
Issue: Mergers
Executives at SBC accused regulators at the Illinois Commerce Commission of
misrepresenting the views of James Kahan, SBC senior vice president of
corporate development. ICC staff quoted My. Kahan's testimony that suggested
that SBC's primary concern is high-margin business customers rather than
low-margin residential customers. "Kahan clearly drew the distinction
between an incumbent's obligation to serve any and all customers -- an
obligation that Ameritech has today and will retain after the merger --
versus a competitive local exchange carrier's freedom to compete for any
customer, which SBC will have in markets outside of the SBC/Ameritech
region," said a SBC statement. The ICC's hearing officer has received
hundreds of pages of testimony is support of and in opposition to the
proposed merger. A recommendation to ICC Commissioners will be made this
Spring -- the Commission must vote on the matter before July.
[SOURCE: Chicago Tribune (Sec 3, p.1), AUTHOR: Jon Van]
http://chicagotribune.com/textversion/article/0,1492,SAV-9902260354,00.html
EYE-POPPING, HALF-COCKED IDEA MAKES A POINT
Issue: Mergers, Really Big Ones
CBS-NBC-CNBC-MSNBC-CNN? Vanna, may I buy a vowel? Top CBS executive Mel
Karmazin told advertising executives that he'd like to buy NBC, if
government rules did not prevent it. Here's all he'd have to do: 1) convince
the FCC to change its rules about controlling more than 35% of the broadcast
audience; 2) raise $20 billion to buy the competing network; and then 3)
convince everyone why he wants a network with no football and "a now
tarnished Olympics franchise." Mr. Karmazin's point is that there's all this
consolidation going on, but he doesn't get to play [maybe Mr. Greising
didn't do his homework on how Mr. Karmazin became head of CBS...] "But just
because Karmazin should be allowed to create [a combined] network does not
make it a good idea," Greising writes. This is the guy, by the way, who
brought Howard Stern to television.
[SOURCE: Chicago Tribune (Sec 3, p.1), AUTHOR: David Greising
dgreising( at )tribune.com]
http://chicagotribune.com/textversion/article/0,1492,SAV-9902260136,00.html
TELEPHONE REGULATION
FCC RELEASES AUDIT REPORTS ON RBOCs' PROPERTY RECORDS
Issue: Telephone Regulation
February 24, 1999, the Commission adopted orders to release certain
staff-level Audit Reports concerning property records of the Regional Bell
Operating Companies (RBOCs). Continuing Property Records (CPRs) are a
component of the telephone company's accounting records that provide
descriptive inventories and cost documentation of the company's plant,
property, and equipment used for providing regulated telecommunications
services. Approximately one-half of a telephone company's costs are
associated with the capital investment that is recorded in its CPRs....The
audits examined the hard-wired central office equipment of the companies.
"Hard-wired" equipment in central offices represents the items generally
fixed in place (frames, switches, batteries), as opposed to "plug- ins,"
which are relatively portable (line cards). The hard-wired investment in
central offices represents approximately one-fourth of the total capital
investment for a telephone company. For example, for the RBOCs, the total
investment in network plant is about $200 billion; of this, hard-wired
central office equipment represents approximately $47 billion. The audit
reports found that the RBOCs' book costs may be overstated by approximately
$5 billion. The RBOCs disagree with these audit reports and have filed their
responses with the Division.
[SOURCE: FCC]
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common_Carrier/News_Releases/1999/nrcc9015.html
U.S. HOUSE PASSES CELLPHONE PRIVACY ACT
Issue: Telephony
Overwhelmingly the House passed a bill Thursday that would make it illegal
to intentionally intercept, or disclose, any cellular telephone conversation
or other wireless communication. It also bans modifications of scanners to
pick up some calls from cellular phones and bans new scanners that can
intercept digital signals. The bill also orders the Federal Communications
Commission to consider placing a warning label on scanners about
intercepting wireless communications. After the 403-3 vote, the bill now
moves to the Senate.
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR: Reuters]
http://www.mercurycenter.com/svtech/news/breaking/merc/docs/081985.htm
CUBA FAILS TO HALT PHONE SERVICE FROM US AS FIRMS REROUTE CALLS
Issue: International
By cutting off funds owed to the Cuban phone company, Etecsa, US district-court
Judge James King of Miami hoped to get the Cuban government to pay $187.6
million in compensation to the families of four anti-Castro, Cuban-American
activists who were killed by the Cuban air force in 1997. Instead, the Cuban
government shut down phone lines between the US and Cuba Wednesday in protest
of the $19 million that US phone companies are withholding. An AT&T spokeswoman
said that calls are getting through by re-routing through third countries. Last
month, US lawyers argued against withholding the Etecsa's funds, saying that
the phone company is independent from the government and shouldn't be held
liable for the deaths. The phone service shut down comes in the wake of a new
Cuban law that calls for severe punishments for Cuban citizens caught
collaborating with the 37-year-old US trade embargo with Cuba or communicating
with US media. This Cuban action puts tension on the latest Washington policy
of easing regulations on the trade embargo, which the Castro government has
condemned.
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal (A13), AUTHOR: Jose de Cordoba]
http://wsj.com/
DEUTSCHE TELEKOM, PHONE HOME
Issue: International/Telephony
As the European Union member countries move towards opening their telephone
markets, some former monopolies are encountering the harsh shock of
competition, while for others its still business as usual. Nowhere have
the winds of competition been felt as in Germany, where the national carrier,
Deutsche Telekom, has lost already 30% of its long distance market since the
door to competition was blown open just one year ago. [You go, metaphor-girl]
A young cellular company called Mobilcom has managed to become Telekom's
biggest rival by
simply reselling services over lines leased form the former monopoly
carrier. "You can build your own infrastructure, but the start-up losses are
very high," said Gerhard Schmid, founder of Mobilcom. Schmid was able to
attract customers by offering rates that were 70% lower than Telekom's
prices. Although slow to respond, Telekom's rates have fallen dramatically
as well. The result is an all out price war -- involving several companies -
with no end in sight.
[SOURCE: New York Times (C1), AUTHOR: Edmund Andrews]
http://www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/news/financial/europe-telecom.html
SATELLITE TV
JUDGE RULES AGAINST DIRECTV
Issue: Satellite
A federal judge in Florida yesterday issued a 10-day restraining order
barring DirectTV from delivering CBS and Fox television network programming
and setting a March 8 hearing on a permanent restraining order. The
direct-broadcast service said it will immediately begin shutting off service
to roughly 300,000 customers. CBS, Fox, NBC and ABC asked the Miami judge to
bar DirectTV from carrying their programming via satellite. A permanent
restraining order could include NBC and ABC programming. The legal wrangling
is the latest result of a dispute over interpretation of federal law which
allows satellite systems to provide network programming to viewers who
cannot receive the local affiliate of a network using a television antenna.
In Congress Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-LA) introduced legislation yesterday that
would grant a 90-day moratorium for customers facing the loss of the network
signals, while requiring the Federal Communications Commission to develop a
more reliable method of determining who qualifies to receive network signals
via satellite.
[SOURCE: Washington Post (E1), AUTHOR: Mike Mills]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/daily/feb99/directv26.htm
CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
SLIGHT SHIFT ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM
Issue: Campaign Finance
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY), a leader against congressional efforts to change
campaign fundraising rules, seemed to soften yesterday. He said he is now
willing to explore a compromise on the previously intractable issue and will
work with Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, (D-CT) the new ranking Democrat on the
Senate Rules Committee, on the issue. While not talking about specifics,
Sen. McConnell suggested it might include raising the cap on the amount of
"hard money" that individuals can contribute to candidates in exchange for
curbs on unregulated, unlimited "soft money" donations to political parties
by corporations, unions and wealthy individuals. Sen. McConnell's initiative
came as a bipartisan group of lawmakers who steered a campaign finance bill
through the House last year mounted a new effort for a House vote this
spring to pressure the Senate to act before next year's elections.
[SOURCE: Washington Post (A15), AUTHOR: Helen Dewar]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/campfin/stories/finan
ce022699.htm
ANTITRUST
FTC CHAIRMAN URGES CAUTION ON TECH BREAKUPS
Issue: Antitrust
Speaking to antitrust lawyers at an American Bar Association workshop,
Federal Trade Commission Chairman Robert Pitofsky said antitrust regulators
should "proceed cautiously" in considering the forcible breakup of high-tech
firms. He said, "It is essential to acknowledge that high-tech industries
are different and enforcement must take those differences into account." He
did not make specific references, but both Microsoft Corp. and Intel Corp.
are presently involved in prominent antitrust cases. In staking out a middle
ground, Chairman Pitofsky suggested "antitrust enforcers should proceed
cautiously in breaking up or mandating access to an existing network, even
when that network is dominant." The FTC noted that Chairman Pitofsky's
remarks do not necessarily reflect the views of the commission or any other
commissioner.
[SOURCE: Washington Post (E1), AUTHOR: Tim Smart]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/daily/feb99/antitrust26.htm
For your daily fix on the Microsoft trial, see also:
MICROSOFT TRIAL FOCUSES ON GATEWAY DOCUMENT
[SOURCE: Washington Post (E1), AUTHOR: Rajiv Chandrasekaran]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/longterm/microsoft/micro.htm
MICROSOFT'S BEST HOPE IS TO CONTAIN DAMAGE
[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR: Dan Gillmor]
http://www.mercurycenter.com/svtech/columns/gillmor/docs/dg022699.htm
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...and we are outta here. Happy Friday -- have a great weekend.