October 2005

FCC Eyeing Local Franchises?

[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: Ted Hearn]

Lawmakers urge US to Keep Control of Internet

[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Andy Sullivan]

Fed-Up Cities Seek to Provide Net Access

[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: Michael Hiltzik]

Big Brother Lurking in WiFi, Mobile Services

[SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR:Mike Langberg mike@langberg.com]

A Web on the Grid

[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Editorial Staff]

Senators: Bloggers may not be true journalists

[SOURCE: C-Net|News.com, AUTHOR: Anne Broache]

Westin: ABC Affected By DOJ Climate

[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]

Sinclair Sues Former D.C. Bureau Chief

[SOURCE: The Daily Record (MD), AUTHOR: Caryn Tamber]

Phone Users May Get None of Merger Savings

[SOURCE: Los Angeles Times, AUTHOR: James S. Granelli]

Media Companies Go Too Far in Curbing Consumers' Activities

[Commentary] In some quarters of the Internet, the three most hated letters of the alphabet are DRM. They stand for Digital Rights Management, a set of technologies for limiting how people can use the music and video files they've purchased from legal downloading services. DRM is even being used to limit what you can do with the music you buy on physical CDs, or the TV shows you record with a TiVo or other digital video recorder. Once mainly known inside the media industries and among activists who follow copyright issues, DRM is gradually becoming familiar to average consumers, who are increasingly bumping up against its limitations. For some activists, the very idea of Digital Rights Management is anathema. They believe that once a consumer legally buys a song or a video clip, the companies that sold them have no right to limit how the consumer uses them, any more than a car company should be able to limit what you can do with a car you've bought. But DRM is seen as a lifesaver by the music, television and movie industries. The companies believe they need DRM technology to block the possibility that a song or video can be copied in large quantities and distributed over the Internet, thus robbing them of legitimate sales. I believe Congress should rewrite the copyright laws to carve out a broad exemption for personal, noncommercial use by consumers, including sharing small numbers of copies among families. Until then, I suggest that consumers avoid stealing music and videos, but also boycott products like copy-protected CDs that overly limit usage and treat everyone like a criminal. That would send the industry a message to use DRM more judiciously.