August 2017

We’re Journalists, Mr. Trump, Not the Enemy

[Commentary] President Donald Trump’s caricature of journalists as dishonest is hypocritical, and it insults the courage and professionalism of my colleagues who sometimes risk their lives trying to get a story. I’ve lost reporter and photographer friends in war zones all over the world, and have had other friends kidnapped and tortured. When Trump galvanizes crowds against reporters in the room, I worry that we may lose journalists in the line of duty not only in places like Syria but also right here at home. Trump will get people hurt.

This is an extraordinary moment in our nation’s history, for we are enduring an epic struggle over the principles on which our country was founded. These include the idea that a flawed free press is an essential institutional check on flawed leaders. So may I humbly suggest that when a megalomaniacal leader howls and shrieks at critics, that is when institutional checks on that leader become a bulwark of democracy.

Qunnipiac Poll: President Trump’s war on the media is backfiring

President Donald Trump’s war on the media is succeeding in convincing people that press coverage of the president is unfair, according to a new poll from Quinnipiac University, but the net impact on public perceptions of Trump still seems to be negative. The good news for the White House is that by a 55-40 margin, respondents say they disapprove of the way the media covers the president. Some of that, of course, is probably people who think the media is too soft on Trump. But by and large it seems like Trump is basically convincing people of his core thesis about the media: They should be nicer to him. On the other hand, the very same poll says that by a 62-35 margin, respondents disapprove of how Trump talks about the media. And by a 54-36 margin, people say they trust the media over Trump “to tell you the truth about important issues.” In short, it seems that Trump’s media bashing has been a negative-sum game that’s eroded confidence in the press while also eroding confidence in Trump.

FCC Posts 1.5 Million Net Neutrality Comments Since Extending Deadline

The pace of filings at in the Federal Communications Commission's network neutrality comment docket, dubbed "Restoring Internet Freedom," by FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, is showing no signs of slowing down, with still plenty of people (or bulk e-mail generators, some argue) still weighing in. The FCC extended the comment deadline to Aug. 30 from Aug. 16. Since that Aug. 16 date, 1.5 million additional filings have been logged as of Aug. 24, making the current total 21,850,771, up from the 20,350,000 in the docket as of Aug. 16. The FCC does not keep track of such records, but nobody is disputing that this volume is a record for the number of comments in any FCC docket.

August 24, 2017 (Trump Blames Media at Rally)

BENTON'S COMMUNICATIONS-RELATED HEADLINES for THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 2017

COMMUNICATIONS & DEMOCRACY
   At Rally, President Trump Blames Media for Country's Deepening Divisions
   President Trump blames the media for nearly all of his problems as president - WaPo analysis
   President Trump, Calling Journalists ‘Sick People,’ Puts Media on Edge
   RTDNA Warns Journalists About Trump Vilification
   Trump: Media is trying 'to take away our history and our heritage' [links to Hill, The]
   Trump on removing Confederate statues: 'They’re trying to take away our culture' [links to Hill, The]
   Trump claims news media turned off cameras at rally as live coverage goes uninterrupted [links to Hill, The]
   Media lets loose its fury after Trump attacks [links to Hill, The]
   Wall Street Journal Editor Admonishes Reporters Over Trump Coverage [links to Benton summary]
   Trump’s vicious attack on the media shows one thing clearly: He’s running scared - WaPo [links to Benton summary]
   Op-Ed: Master Trump’s game: Don’t get pissed. Do journalism. [links to Columbia Journalism Review]
   Crowdfunding campaign's goal: Buy Twitter, then ban Trump [links to Benton summary]
   Ex-Russian ambassador slams CNN: Campaign collusion talk is ‘nonsense’ [links to Hill, The]

INTERNET/BROADBAND
   Defending Internet Freedom through Decentralization: Back to the Future? - MIT Media Lab analysis [links to Benton summary]
   AT&T brings 500Mbps home Internet to cities outside its territory [links to Benton summary]

SECURITY/PRIVACY
   Silicon Valley siphons our data like oil. But the deepest drilling has just begun - The Guardian analysis

OWNERSHIP
   Sinclair Fires Back at Deal Critics
   Sinclair-Tribune Critics Pan Broadcaster's Deal Defense
   Newsmax’s Ruddy: Sinclair/Tribune Combo Is Dangerous Proposition [links to Broadcasting&Cable]
   FTC: We won’t stand in the way of pending Amazon-Whole Foods merger [links to Benton summary]

AGENDA
   Announcement of Sept 18 Consumer Advisory Committee Meeeting - public notice [links to Benton summary]

GOVERNMENT & COMMUNICATIONS
   Secret Service agrees to stop erasing White House visitor log data [links to Benton summary]

ELECTIONS & MEDIA
   Complaints Filed Against TV Stations for Public File Violations on Political Issue Ads - Broadcast Law Blog analysis [links to Benton summary]

EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS
   Broadcasters Encounter FCC System Obstacles in Meeting Monday Deadline for EAS Form 1 Filing [links to Benton summary]

ADVERTISING
   Advertisers Say TV Has More Impact Than Other Media [links to Broadcasting&Cable]

CONTENT
   A Hunt for Ways to Combat Online Radicalization - NYT analysis [links to Benton summary]
   Pro-Russian Bots Take Up the Right-Wing Cause After Charlottesville [links to ProPublica]
   YouTube stars sued over lampoon video win case [links to Hill, The]
   The Twitter #hashtag is 10 years old [links to CNN]

WIRELESS/SPECTRUM
   NAB Voices Its Concerns With Microsoft Spectrum Proposal [links to Benton summary]

COMPANY NEWS
   Walmart and Google are plotting to change your shopping habits [links to Washington Post]
   Samsung faces a crucial smartphone launch as its top executive faces a sentencing hearing [links to Washington Post]

POLICYMAKERS
   One-Time Allies Sour on Joining President Trump's Tech Team [links to Benton summary]

DIVERSITY
   Lawyers for fired Google programmer ask other employees to come forward [links to Benton summary]

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COMMUNICATIONS & DEMOCRACY

TRUMP BLAMES MEDIA FOR COUNTRYS DEEPENING DIVISIONS AT RALLY
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Mark Landler, Maggie Haberman]
President Donald Trump, stung by days of criticism that he sowed racial division in the United States after deadly clashes in Charlottesville (VA), accused the news media on Aug 22 of misrepresenting what he insisted was his prompt, unequivocal condemnation of bigotry and hatred. Removing his earlier statements about the Charlottesville violence from his jacket pocket, President Trump glibly ticked off a list of racist groups that he had been urged to explicitly denounce, and ultimately did two days after the clashes. But he said the news media quoted him selectively, accused him of responding too late and ignored his message of unity. “I hit ’em with neo-Nazi. I hit them with everything. I got the white supremacists, the neo-Nazi. I got them all in there. Let’s see. KKK, we have KKK,” President Trump said sardonically of his rebuke to Charlottesville racists, after being faulted for failing to condemn those groups in his initial response on the day of the clashes. In an angry, unbridled and unscripted performance that rivaled the most sulfurous rallies of his presidential campaign, President Trump sought to deflect the anger toward him against the news media, suggesting that they, not he, were responsible for deepening divisions in the country. “It’s time to expose the crooked media deceptions,” President Trump said. He added, “They’re very dishonest people.” “The only people giving a platform to these hate groups is the media itself and the fake news,” he said. President Trump also derided the media for focusing on his tweets, which are his preferred form of communication. Pointing repeatedly to the cameras in the middle of a cavernous convention center, President Trump whipped the crowd into fevered chants of “CNN Sucks.” Members of the audience shouted epithets at reporters, some demanding that the news media stop tormenting the president with questions about his ties to Russia.
benton.org/headlines/rally-president-trump-blames-media-countrys-deepening-divisions | New York Times | Washington Post | The Hill | Broadcasting&Cable | Huffington Post | WaPo Video | WaPo Video
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TRUMP BLAMES MEDIA FOR NEARLY ALL HIS PROBLEMS AS PRESIDENT
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Amber Phillips]
President Donald Trump stepped on stage in Phoenix (AZ) on Aug 22 with something clearly eating at him. Minutes into his style rally, we learned what: It wasn't the white supremacists and the Ku Klux Klan and the neo-Nazis who threw the nation into chaos and allegedly killed a woman in Virginia. Or the intractable 16-year war in Afghanistan that he just announced he's revving up. It's the media. President Trump spent nearly a third — if not more— of his 90-minute rally rehashing his public remarks in the wake of Charlottesville and complaining that he was widely criticized for them. In fact, about the only time he mentioned the racial tensions and violence stirred up last week was in the context of defending himself. The president was so frustrated with media coverage of him that he printed out copies of some of the remarks he gave in the wake of the violence. He read them aloud to the crowd, pausing to express total disbelief that the tone of the coverage wasn't more positive.
benton.org/headlines/president-trump-blames-media-nearly-all-his-problems-president | Washington Post
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TRUMP PUTS MEDIA ON EDGE
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Daniel Victor]
President Donald Trump’s angry condemnation of the news media during a campaign-style rally heightened the fear among journalists that verbal attacks on the profession could lead to physical attacks. While criticizing media coverage has long been a surefire tactic to rile up crowds, the depth of the president’s most recent jabs took even seasoned journalists by surprise. He called journalists “sick people,” accused the news media of “trying to take away our history and our heritage” and questioned their patriotism. “I really think they don’t like our country,” he said. “To see this sort of attack coming yet again from the president is deeply disturbing,” said Courtney C. Radsch, the advocacy director for the Committee to Protect Journalists. “It creates an environment in which attacks on the press, both verbal and potentially physical, could become common.”
benton.org/headlines/president-trump-calling-journalists-sick-people-puts-media-edge | New York Times
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RTDNA WARNS JOURNALISTS ABOUT TRUMP VILIFICATION
[SOURCE: Multichannel News, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
The Radio-Television Digital News Association is warning broadcasters to be careful out there following arguably President Donald Trump’s most extended attack on the news media to date. “Throughout his campaign, and throughout his first seven months in office, the president has consistently tried to make responsible journalists the villains in his effort to fire up his political base. We know that this kind of rhetoric has emboldened some people who don’t like, or don’t understand, the news media to act out against reporters and photojournalists at the national and local levels,” said Dan Shelley, RTDNA incoming executive director. “As long as the person with the most powerful bully pulpit in the world continues to attack verbally the news media, journalists are at risk. We urge reporters and photojournalists to be vigilant, and to take whatever steps they feel necessary to protect their personal safety while fulfilling their Constitutionally-guaranteed duty to seek and report the truth.”
benton.org/headlines/rtdna-warns-journalists-about-trump-vilification | Multichannel News
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SECURITY/PRIVACY

SILICON VALLEY SIPHONS OUR DATA LIKE OIL
[SOURCE: The Guardian, AUTHOR: Ben Tarnoff]
[Commentary] Silicon Valley is an extractive industry. Its resource isn’t oil or copper, but data. Companies harvest this data by observing as much of our online activity as they can. This activity might take the form of a Facebook like, a Google search, or even how long your mouse hovers in a particular part of your screen. Alone, these traces may not be particularly meaningful. By pairing them with those of millions of others, however, companies can discover patterns that help determine what kind of person you are – and what kind of things you might buy. These patterns are highly profitable. Silicon Valley uses them to sell you products or to sell you to advertisers. But feeding the algorithms that produce these patterns requires a steady stream of data. And while that data is certainly abundant, it’s not infinite. To increase profits, Silicon Valley must extract more data. One method is to get people to spend more time online: build new apps, and make them as addictive as possible. Another is to get more people online. This is the motivation for Facebook’s Free Basics program, which provides a limited set of internet services for free in underdeveloped regions across the globe, in the hopes of harvesting data from the world’s poor.
benton.org/headlines/silicon-valley-siphons-our-data-oil-deepest-drilling-has-just-begun | Guardian, The
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OWNERSHIP

SINCLAIR FIRES BACK AT DEAL CRITICS
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
Sinclair is vigorously defending its proposed merger with Tribune to the Federal Communications Commission as both in the interest of the public and of its company, which it says needs to scale up to be better able to compete with a growing number of less-regulated competitors. In fact, it says what deal opponents don't understand is that the deal will help "save" free, over-the-air TV. That came in a filing in opposition to the petitions to deny the deal, which was due by end of day Aug 22. In the comments, Sinclair alternated between providing data to support its assertion the deal is in the public interest, countering some of the criticisms, and dismissing others as not transaction specific, or not relevant to the merger review. “Sinclair firmly believes in the mission of local broadcasting and this filing fully explains the public interest benefits that this transaction will provide as a result of the efficiencies and scale created by the combination of Sinclair and Tribune," said Chris Ripley, president and CEO of Sinclair. "This acquisition will help to ensure the future of the free and local television model for both Tribune and Sinclair’s local communities.” In the comments, Sinclair said, "At bottom, each of the petitioners is either trying to use this proceeding to stifle competition for its own economic interests or is still living in a pre-cable, pre-internet, pre-smartphone world, untethered from the economic realities of the current media market. Sinclair and Tribune ask the Commission to see these transparent and/or naïve attempts for what they are, dismiss or deny the petitions in full, and grant consent to the proposed transaction."
benton.org/headlines/sinclair-fires-back-deal-critics | Broadcasting&Cable | The Hill
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SINCLAIR-TRIBUNE CRITICS PAN BROADCATERS DEAL DEFENSE
[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: John Eggerton]
The Coalition to Save Local Media, comprising companies that want the Federal Communications Commission to block the deal, said Sinclair and Tribune have still failed to justify its approval. That came in response to Sinclair's 47-page, plus exhibits, response to petitions to deny the deal, which Sinclair filed with the FCC Aug 22 in response to those critics. That response basically restated the criticisms they leveled in their petitions to deny and Sinclair addressed in its filing. "Sinclair-Tribune has failed to explain how this multi-billion-dollar merger is in the public interest," the coalition said. "This merger continues to raise substantial legal and policy questions — including compliance with Federal Communications Commission rules — that remain unanswered by Sinclair-Tribune." Coalition members include the American Cable Association, A Wealth of Entertainment channel, Cinemoi, Common Cause, Competitive Carriers Association, the Computer and Communications Industry Association, DISH, ITTA – the Voice of America’s Broadband Providers, Latino Victory Project, NTCA—The Rural Broadband Association, One America News Network, Public Knowledge, RIDE TV, the Sports Fans Coalition and The Blaze. “A combined Sinclair-Tribune would create the single largest operator of local broadcast stations in the country, reaching 72 percent of American households, and lead to higher prices and fewer choices for consumers," the group added. "Additionally, the combined company would effectively control the market for certain broadcast equipment and impede deployment of mobile broadband, limiting competition and choice for the distribution of content and broadband services nationwide."
benton.org/headlines/sinclair-tribune-critics-pan-broadcasters-deal-defense | Broadcasting&Cable
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