Communications-Related Headlines for September 9, 2003

MEDIA OWNERSHIP
FCC to Approve Univision's Acquisition of HBC
FCC Chief Warns of Future Shock

E-GOVERNMENT
Energy Dept's Karen Evans Named New US E-Government Czar

INTERNET
Judge Rules in Favor of Pop-Up Ads

PHILANTHROPY
Commentary: Philanthropy Where It Counts

DIGITAL DIVIDE
National Digital Technology Plan Takes Shape in Cambodia

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MEDIA OWNERSHIP

FCC TO APPROVE UNIVISION'S ACQUISITION OF HBC
In a vote split along party lines, the FCC approved Univision
Communications, the nation's largest Spanish-language media conglomerate, to
expand its reach by purchasing Hispanic Broadcasting Corp. for $3.5 billion.
Univision would acquire HBC's 63 radio stations and would be required to
sell two radio stations as a condition of FCC approval. With the merger,
Univision would have the top Spanish-language broadcast TV network, cable
channel, record label, Internet site and radio network, as well as the
largest group of television and radio stations. Rival networks have
complained that the merger would cause too much concentration in Hispanic
media and limit the choices for Spanish-speaking Americans. Univision
responds that there is not a separate market for Spanish-language media and
that local radio stations would retain control over their programming.
SOURCE: The New York Times; AUTHOR: AP
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Hispanic-Media.html

FCC CHIEF WARNS OF FUTURE SHOCK
"I think free, over-the-air TV is dying," says FCC Chairman Michael Powell.
"I don't care how much money they made this year, they're dying." Part of
the reason, he says, is that cable networks have both subscriber and
advertising revenue, unlike network television. Powell also cites cable's
freedom from the federal indecency rules that broadcast stations must
follow. "In 10 years, free TV is going to be gone -- absent any policy
decisions trying to help," he claims. Opponents remain unconvinced. "Here we
have the chairman of the FCC trying to somehow protect four of the six
largest and most profitable media companies that dominate the news,
information and entertainment market in America today," said Gene Kimmelman,
of the Consumers Union. "His entire philosophy reeks of corporate welfare
for the wealthiest, most profitable companies at the expense of
competition." Powell also fears that the nation's public telephone network
will start to fail because rather than building facilities, companies such
as MCI and AT&T are piggybacking on the equipment of regional phone
companies "like sucker fish on whales." However, he was unsuccessful in his
bid to revise FCC policy regarding the telephone industry.
SOURCE: Chicago Tribune; AUTHOR: Frank James
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0309070507sep07,1,721...
.story
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E-GOVERNMENT

ENERGY DEPT'S KAREN EVANS NAMED NEW US E-GOVERNMENT CZAR
US Department of Energy Chief Information Officer Karen Evans has been
tapped to take over the leading US e-government post, reports Government
Computer News. Evans will assume her new role as the Office of Management
and Budget's associate administrator for IT and e-government next month.
Evans replaces Mark Forman, who resigned last month to return to the private
sector. "We need to complete and implement the e-government projects and
realize the benefits of the rigor and discipline we are trying to build into
the [budget and planning] processes," said OMB Deputy director Clay Johnson.
Adds David McClure, Vice President for E-Government at the Council for
Excellence in Government: "She has been in the trenches and knows how to get
it done." Evans also serves as vice-chairwoman of the Federal CIO Council,
the primary forum for federal government CIOs to develop inter-agency IT
policies.
SOURCE: Government Computer News; AUTHORS: Thomas R. Temin and Jason Miller
http://www.gcn.com/vol1_no1/daily-updates/23438-1.html

INTERNET

JUDGE RULES IN FAVOR OF POP-UP ADS
A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit by truck rental company U-Haul
regarding the use of pop-up advertising on the Internet. US District Judge
Gerald Bruce Lee dismissed U-Haul's suit against Internet advertising
company WhenU, whose software pops up advertisements of U-Haul's competitors
when Internet users visit the U-Haul website. Judge Lee's decision said that
WhenU's software did not violate U-Haul's copyrights or trademarks, nor did
it force unsuspecting users to see the ads, since WhenU's users must
voluntarily download the software to see the pop-ups. "While at first blush
this detour in the user's Web search seems like a siphon-off of a business
opportunity, the fact is that the computer user consented to this detour
when the user downloaded WhenU's computer software from the Internet," Lee
wrote. Lee added that pop-ups are admittedly an online nuisance, but do not
rise to the occasion of violating laws cited in the U-Haul complaint. "Alas,
we computer users must endure pop-up advertising along with her ugly
brother, unsolicited bulk e-mail, 'spam,' as a burden of using the
Internet," he wrote.
SOURCE: Wired News; AUTHOR: Reuters
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,60347,00.html

PHILANTHROPY

PHILANTHROPY WHERE IT COUNTS
[Commentary] David Stern, president of the Stern Family Fund, argues the
case that foundations should "put their money where it was intended: into
worthwhile causes, not foundation expenses." At issue is the current debate
over the Charitable Giving Act of 2003, which would reduce foundation taxes
from two percent to one percent, while at the same time require that
foundations not count administrative and operating costs when calculating
the federally required five percent annual payout rate. The biggest
foundations are lobbying hard against this latter provision of the bill.
This is not surprising, says Stern, as the top one percent of foundations
have overhead that equals half the aggregate overhead reported by the
nation's 58,000 foundations, including $45 million paid to wealthy board
members and trustees of the top 238 foundations in 1998 alone. Stern is
concerned that some foundations are more concerned with their well-being
than with addressing the problems for which they were created. He believes
the bill would give foundations new incentives to keep administrative costs
down. No longer would the Dallas-based foundation with $50 million in assets
be able to pay out just $1.1 million in grants in 2000, while spending $2.6
million on its salaries and expenses, he writes.
SOURCE: The Washington Post; AUTHOR: David Stern
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A39809-2003Sep7.html

DIGITAL DIVIDE

NATIONAL DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY PLAN TAKES SHAPE IN CAMBODIA
The Cambodian government, with support of the UNDP and its Asia Pacific
Development Information Programme, is developing its first national
technology plan. Cambodia's IT development has progressed since the end of
its long-running civil war in the early 1990s, with the deployment of
Internet access, satellite TV and mobile telephony. But most information and
communications technologies (ICTs) are still unknown to rural Cambodians,
who remain largely disconnected. Cambodian President Hun Sen says the new
technology plan will address rural connectivity issues, as well as promote
the development of Khmer-language computer fonts. "The formulation and
implementation of ICT policies and strategies is crucial to keeping Cambodia
firmly on the development track," the president said. The government expects
the first draft of the plan to be ready before the end of the year.
SOURCE: United Nations Development Programme
http://www.undp.org/dpa/frontpagearchive/2003/september/8sep03/index.html

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