FCC Ignores Public, Relaxes Media Ownership
anthrax writes "Ignoring Congressional and public comments, the FCC voted to relax ownership rules that have prevented broadcasters from owning newspapers in the nation's 20 largest media markets. After holding several public hearings that overwhelmingly opposed the relaxation of the rules, and Congressional hearing where Democrats and Republicans (even Ted 'Tubes' Stevens) voiced opposition to the move, the FCC voted 3 to 2 to relax ownership. On the same day the FCC voted 3 to 2 (by a different split) to cap the size of any cable company at 30% of the nationwide market, a limit Comcast is up against."
The brazen disregard show by those 3 commissioners is absolutely shameful. How dare they defy the will of Comcast?
As an Englishman, the one flaw in my inborn sense of cultural superiority has been the lack of Rupert Murdoch owned tabloids in America. Thank you, FCC.
If you haven't made a developer cry, you've wasted a day.
The law covers acquisitions, which is about the only way cable companies grow anyway. The cable market is pretty much saturated -- in fact, it's probably shrinking slightly due to Dish/DirectTV. Laws are not computer code, and Comcast is not going to throw an assertion failure the moment some guy switches to Comcast.