Free Press

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NONPROFIT TAKES ON BIG MEDIA
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Amy Schatz Amy.Schatz@wsj.com]
Mr Silver, we're ready for your close-up. Kevin Martin, the Republican chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, wants to loosen existing ownership limits on newspapers and broadcasters to allow them to own both in most markets. But his efforts have stalled, the result of a surprisingly energetic grass-roots opposition campaign guided by , a nonprofit with offices in Washington and Northampton, Mass. For a relatively low-profile organization, is on a roll. Four years ago, it used old-fashioned grassroots organizing, along with basic Internet tools, to help derail the FCC's years-long effort to relax media ownership rules. Last year, the group thwarted a multi-million dollar lobbying effort by the Baby Bells to rewrite the nation's telecom laws over "net neutrality," the idea that Internet providers can't discriminate against any Internet traffic. Progressive, left-leaning grass-roots activists have gotten more attention for their opposition against the Iraq war, but their bigger impact may have been on national media regulations and telecom policies. By mobilizing the progressive left to focus on media and telecom issues, has effectively blocked some of the most-wanted issues on corporate wish-lists. (Nice hair, Josh.)
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