nab – Techdirt (original) (raw)

The FCC Ponders A Hugely Problematic Tax On WiFi

from the this-won't-end-well dept

For years, we’ve noted how telecom and media giants have been trying to force “big tech” to give them huge sums of money for no reason. The shaky logic usually involves claiming that “big tech” gets a “free ride” on telecom networks, something that’s never actually been true. This narrative has been bouncing around telecom policy circles for years, and recently bubbled up once again thanks to FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr.

Carr’s push basically involves parroting AT&T’s claim that big tech should be funding AT&T network upgrades. You’re to ignore the fact that giants like AT&T routinely take billions in tax breaks and subsidies for network upgrades that never arrive. This quest to punish “big tech” with unnecessary new surcharges is something that’s also supported by the National Association of Broadcasters, who have long hated companies like Microsoft’s efforts to use unlicensed spectrum from unused television channels (aka “white spaces”) to deliver new broadband options.

The FCC does desperately need to find more funding revenue to shore up programs like the Universal Service Fund (USF) and E-Rate, which help provide broadband access to schools and low income Americans. So it recently announced it would be considering a new tax on unlicensed spectrum. Pressured by NAB, the Biden FCC’s plan would assess regulatory fees on ?unlicensed spectrum users,? which would include users of Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and other consumer wireless devices. It’s a tax on tech, proposed by telecom and media companies that want to punish their ad and data collection competitors in tech.

Harold Feld, who probably knows more about wireless spectrum policy than anybody, has penned a helpful piece over at Forbes explaining why this is a terrible idea. He outlines that NAB’s real goal is to punish companies like Microsoft for daring to use spectrum the broadcast industry falsely believes belongs to them:

“The NAB has made it abundantly clear this is payback against tech companies ? particularly Microsoft. Broadcasters don?t just claim to own their individual channels. They claim to collectively own all ?broadcast spectrum.? About 10 years ago, the FCC authorized unlicensed access to unused television channels, aka ?TV white spaces.? Broadcasters vowed to strangle the new technology in its cradle rather than share ?their? spectrum and, unfortunately, were largely successful. But in recent years, Microsoft has tried to resurrect the TV white spaces as a way of bringing broadband to rural America.”

The FCC’s proposal may go nowhere. Interim (and soon permanent) FCC boss Jessica Rosenworcel may just be doing her due diligence, and opening the door to a conversation about various options to shore up dwindling FCC broadband program funding. But Harold makes it very clear the proposal, if adopted, would be hugely problematic and defeat the benefit of unlicensed spectrum:

“The idea that a tax on unlicensed spectrum would only hurt Microsoft or ?big tech? is absurd. The whole point of unlicensed spectrum is that it?s open for everyone to use. The effort by broadcasters to impose a Wi-Fi tax should be as laughably ridiculous as modem taxes and email taxes. But rather than simply deny the proposal, the FCC has put it out for public comment.”

While Harold’s correct that this particular push belongs to NAB, the broader push to hit “big tech” with various new FCC regulatory fees is something also being supported by telecom giants, and the regulators who love them. Both broadcasters and telecoms realize the FCC is desperate for new funding for low-income programs, and want to exploit that with efforts that predominately benefit themselves. For NAB, it’s punishing big tech for daring to innovate using spectrum it falsely thinks it owns. For AT&T, it’s forcing “big tech” to pay for network upgrades it routinely fails to finish despite billions in tax breaks, regulatory favors, and subsidies.

Filed Under: bluetooth, broadcasters, e-rate, fcc, radio, tax, usf, wifi
Companies: nab

Microsoft Unveils Plan To Deliver Broadband To 2 Million, NAB Immediately Craps All Over The Announcement

from the I-just-hate-innovation-and-disruption dept

Wed, Jul 12th 2017 06:24am - Karl Bode

Since 2004 we’ve talked about the effort to take unlicensed spectrum, previously used by TV stations, and make a new wireless broadband delivery alternative. Dubbed “white spaces” (or occasionally and misleadingly “super WiFi”) the technology has the potential to provide less expensive, niche connectivity in areas incumbent broadband providers are unwilling to upgrade. Even then, incumbent ISPs have consistently tried to kill the technology, as has the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), whose members aren’t keen on an entirely new broadband and TV delivery mechanism they won’t have control over.

This week, Microsoft punctuated years of global trials of this technology with the announcement that it would be deploying white space broadband to around two million Americans in 12 states (New York, Texas, Washington, Virginia, Michigan, Maine, Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin) over the next five years. According to Microsoft, the project should cost somewhere around $10 billion, and provide another layer of competition in some of the areas that need it most:

“The time is right for the nation to set a clear and ambitious but achievable goal ? to eliminate the rural broadband gap within the next five years by July 4, 2022. We believe the nation can bring broadband coverage to rural America in this timeframe, based on a new strategic approach that combines private sector capital investments focused on expanding broadband coverage through new technologies, coupled with targeted and affordable public-sector support.”

Of course the push to connect 2 million rural consumers to broadband in a nation where 34 million Americans still can’t access broadband is a small drop in the dysfunction bucket. And Microsoft’s obviously not operating out of blind altruism here, since like Facebook their focus on broadband is primarily driven by cornering the hardware used to receive these signals, and therefore the ad load. Still, it’s at least an effort to do something to shore up connectivity in a nation that has let companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast dictate federal policy for decades — to what should be obvious results.

White Space broadband has had a long, difficult road to arrival thanks in part to intense lobbying against the technology by incumbent broadband providers, companies like Cisco, and NAB. NAB’s legal and PR assault on the technology has often been particularly comedic. At one point they employed Dolly Parton to rail against the technology, claiming it would cause interference armageddon. At several points NAB launched incredibly alarmist campaigns featuring grandmothers being left unable to watch their TV programs if white space broadband was allowed to materialize.

And while studies showed that a ham-fisted, idiotic approach to the technology might cause problems, those same studies indicated there were numerous ways to mitigate any potential issues. So plenty of very smart engineers spent the better part of a decade testing the technology, and developing an elaborate system of databases that can be used to track and prevent any potential interference in target markets. Microsoft meanwhile has been conducting trials to show the tech works as promised, and pushing the FCC to set aside unlicensed spectrum for broader adoption of the technology.

But, right on cue, NAB today issued a short and pithy statement crapping all over Microsoft’s announcement, insisting the entire technology was little more than an “unmitigated failure”:

“It’s the height of arrogance for Microsoft — a $540 billion company — to demand free, unlicensed spectrum after refusing to bid on broadcast TV airwaves in the recent FCC incentive auction,” whined NAB. “Microsoft’s white space device development has been a well-documented, unmitigated failure. Policymakers should not be misled by slick Microsoft promises that threaten millions of viewers with loss of lifeline broadcast TV programming.”

Again, while there are potential interference concerns, NAB likes to play those up for dramatic effect. Why? Because the organization’s deeper-pocketed member companies (like, oh, Comcast NBC Universal) don’t much like the idea of an entirely new technology disrupting the existing telecom and television ecosystems. After all, somebody might, oh, offer cable TV for less than the cost of a new Tesla, or deliver broadband that doesn’t require a second mortgage. Hardware companies like Cisco similarly oppose the tech because they missed the boat on early hardware development (telecom sector lawyer Harold Feld explains this in great detail here).

All of that said, it’s still not entirely clear if white space broadband will be anything more than a niche broadband solution. But it’s at least another tool in the tool chest as we attempt to bring something vaguely resembling competition to bear on a captive market. And it should go without saying that there’s oodles of legacy companies that like the current culture of dysfunction — just the way it is.

Filed Under: broadband, competition, spectrum, white space
Companies: microsoft, nab

The Broadband Industry Is Now Officially Blaming Google (Alphabet) For…Everything

from the glass-houses dept

Mon, Apr 18th 2016 06:33am - Karl Bode

From net neutrality to municipal broadband, to new broadband privacy rules and a quest to open up the cable set top box to competition, we’ve noted repeatedly that the FCC under Tom Wheeler isn’t the same FCC we’ve learned to grumble about over the years. For a twenty-year stretch, regardless of party control, the agency was utterly, dismally apathetic to the lack of competition in the broadband space. But under Wheeler, the FCC has not only made broadband competition a priority, but has engaged in other bizarre, uncharacteristic behaviors — like using actual real-world data to influence policy decisions.

Obviously, this doesn’t please incumbent telecom operators like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast, who grew pretty comfortable with an FCC that asked “how high” when commanded to jump. The reality is that this is just what it looks like when a regulator does its job and tries to fix a very broken market. But incapable of admitting the broadband market’s horribly broken, the telecom industry instead seems intent on pointing fingers elsewhere. In a strange story over at Politico, broadband providers blame Google for absolutely everything the FCC has been up to.

The quest to open the set top box, the quest for more unlicensed spectrum, and the quest for better consumer privacy controls? All the fault of Alphabet and Google:

The cable industry-led Future of TV Coalition earlier this year suggested Google had “a sneak preview” of the FCC?s February plan to open up the set-top box market to new competitors. The move would require pay-TV companies to make their content streams available to third parties that want to build and sell their own boxes ? a move that cable firms say is designed to benefit Google, which has already demonstrated a prototype cable box to regulators.

AT&T, meanwhile, has charged that the agency is placing its “thumb on the scale” in favor of Google via Wheeler’s March proposal to impose strict privacy rules on broadband companies. The plan, according to AT&T and others, would put telecom firms at a disadvantage compared with Internet companies like Google, which wouldn’t fall under the FCC rules. Internet firms’ privacy practices are policed by the Federal Trade Commission, which is seen as less prescriptive.

On another front, the National Association of Broadcasters argued that Google led a behind-the-scenes push at the FCC to set aside more unlicensed airwaves ? something that could boost Wi-Fi networks that support the company’s products and services. NAB says this FCC set-aside allows Google to avoid having to pay for spectrum during the FCC’s current incentive auction.

The telecom industry taking pot shots at Google is certainly nothing new; in fact the net neutrality debate basically began in 2005 when then AT&T CEO Ed Whitacre proudly proclaimed that Google wouldn’t be able to “ride his pipes for free.” Traditionally though, the telecom industry has used third-party consultants, think tanks, and other policy tendrils to hurl strange attacks at Google. These new, more direct attacks are a sign of increased desperation.

This desperation originates with two things, one of them being Google Fiber. Though admittedly still limited in reach, Google Fiber has managed to light a fire under the apathetic posteriors of telecom giants that previously had little to no impetus to upgrade networks. It has managed to generate a national conversation about the sorry state of broadband competition, and even managed to illuminate the telecom sector’s love of state protectionist laws that prevent community broadband and even public/private partnerships. In short, the broadband industry’s mostly just pissed that they’re now facing some competition (which is why they’ve resorted to lawsuits to slow Google Fiber’s expansion).

The other thing on telecom executives’ minds is the fact that with the broadband market saturated, they’re turning to advertising and content to try and attain quarterly growth. That’s why Verizon’s been gobbling up companies like AOL and blowing kisses at Millennials in a quest to magically become the new Facebook or Google. But these ISPs face new neutrality and privacy regulations that Google doesn’t have to worry about, solely because there’s no competition in the broadband space (read: you have a choice in search engines, but often not in ISPs). This lack of competition isn’t Google’s fault. It’s the fault of the carriers themselves and generations of lobbying.

The telecom industry has invited the wrath of regulators for years with a laundry list of bad behavior. The FCC’s privacy rules weren’t driven by Google, they were driven by Verizon’s decision to use stealth cookies users couldn’t opt out of to covertly track customers around the Internet. Net neutrality wasn’t created by Google, it was created thanks to AT&T threatening to charge Google a “just because we can” toll. And while Google has lobbied to open up the cable set top box to competition, this idea is actually more than a decade old, driven primarily by the fact that the industry enjoys $20 billion in captive revenue thanks to absolutely no serious cable set top hardware competition whatsoever.

Yes, Google and Alphabet have become lobbying behemoths since Google first started ramping up its lobbying apparatus around 2007. And yes, like any large company, Google spends a good amount of its time lobbying to saddle the other guy with additional regulations — something that will only increase as the company inevitably shifts from innovation to turf protection. And we’ve already started to witness this turn; most notably in the way Google turned its back on net neutrality in the States and abroad the last few years.

A saint Google isn’t, but to suggest that the FCC is suddenly doing its job entirely because of Google lobbying borders on the comical, especially coming from an industry that has had its lobbying talons deep in the federal government for more than a generation. It’s much the same way that ISPs and their loyal politicians have taken to attacking Netflix for daring to criticize usage caps and standing up for net neutrality. It’s snide hubris from a sector that can’t come to terms with the fact that a generation of telecom regulatory capture is finally starting to crumble. Instead of adapting to shifting markets, the telecom sector would rather blame “big tech” for a firestorm of regulatory activity it brought down upon itself.

Filed Under: blame, broadband, fcc, net neutrality, open internet, set top boxes, spectrum
Companies: alphabet, at&t, google, nab, verizon

from the incredible-sense-of-entitlement dept

Having followed the copyright industry for so long, I’m often shocked at the incredible sense of entitlement of those who argue strictly for greater and greater copyright powers. One thing we’ve discussed in the past is that the gatekeepers (and it always is the gatekeepers) have an issue of constantly overvaluing the content and undervaluing the service. That is, any time they see a new service come along that the public really likes, they insist that all or nearly all of the value must be attributable to the content and not the service. Thus, they will always argue that “the service” is somehow ripping them off. We’ve seen it over and over again, from ringtone royalties to Guitar Hero to Pandora and others. Every time the story is the same: these other companies are making some money (even if they already pay us) and therefore we’re getting screwed. If anyone else is making any money, then the copyright holders start screaming about how it’s completely and totally unfair.

In their minds, the value of the service is meaningless. The fact that they were unable to provide such services directly themselves gets totally ignored. They just insist that 100% of the value is the content, and thus they need to get more money. Nevermind the fact that companies like Pandora already pay nearly all of their revenue to the copyright holders. There’s always more blood to be squeezed from that stone, even if it means killing the golden goose (to mix a few parables).

Two recent stories illustrate this extreme entitlement, and total dismissal of the value of anyone else, perfectly. Let’s start with the Aereo case, which was heard today at the Supreme Court. It will be some time before the court rules, but check out this quote from Gordon Smith, the president of the National Association of Broadcasters on why he believes Aereo is breaking the law:

“Quite simply, Aereo takes copyrighted material, profits from it and does so without compensating copyright holders,” said Gordon Smith, the president of the National Association of Broadcasters.

Of course, that’s misleading in the extreme for a variety of reasons. First of all, there are lots of areas where it’s perfectly legal to profit from copyrighted materials without compensating copyright holders. Used book stores and used record stores (back when such things existed) are a perfect example. Fair use is another. The point is: just because someone is making a profit does not mean that the copyright holders have to get paid. That’s never been the case. In fact, it’s the same fallacy described above. People are flocking to Aereo because it provides a better service than the cable companies. But the broadcasters ignore all of that and insist all of the value must come from the content itself.

That brings us to the second story highlighting this, which involves comments over in the EU concerning the legality of reselling digital media. Not surprisingly, the record labels, represented by the IFPI and BPI, are 100% against this sort of thing for no logical reason, other than that consumers might actually prefer such a system. They specifically highlight that the quality and convenience of digital resales are too good, and that might upset the business model the record labels have chosen. The argument echoes the labels’ argument against ReDigi in the US, a service that allows people to resell digital content that has been shut down in the US.

Again, the focus here has nothing to do with what’s right or what’s best for the public. In fact, the entire argument appears to be “fuck the public, we need more money.” It completely ignores multiple studies that have shown that a thriving used goods market increases the value of the original market. It ignores the idea that making things easier and better for consumers is a good thing. Instead, it’s all about overvaluing the content and undervaluing everything else.

This all goes back to a point we made years ago: industries that have embraced copyright for the entirety of their business model have set copyright up as a crutch on which they lean. Rather than exercising the rest of their body, finding all sorts of other good business models that allow them to improve the experience for customers, they just keep leaning on that crutch and insist it’s entirely necessary for them to live. And thus, those other muscles atrophy and wither away. So now that the world is changing and innovating, and others are demonstrating lots of great ways to better serve the public, the copyright maximalists are insisting it’s all impossible. They need that damn crutch, and anything else is “piracy.” They only have themselves to blame, of course. For decades, people have been explaining to them and showing them how to build better services, how to offer better experiences for everyone, while still making money. And, all they do is lean more on that old crutch and insist it’s the only possible way to walk.

It’s a massive sense of entitlement, in which they appear to have no self-awareness that they’re actively advocating for a world in which the public is worse off.

Filed Under: business models, content, copyright, crutch, entitlement, value
Companies: aereo, nab, pandora, redigi

Will The NAB Agree To A Performance Rights Tax In Exchange For Having RIAA Support Mandatory FM Radio In Mobile Phones?

from the rearranging-deck-chairs dept

We’ve discussed, for quite some time now, the ridiculousness of a performance rights tax on radio. This is the attempt, by the record labels, to get radio stations to pay performers for advertising and promoting their music. This is clearly not needed, because in the real world, without this, record labels already know that radio play is valuable: it’s why they keep running payola scams. For them to try to then legally mandate that money should flow in the opposite direction is downright ridiculous. In what world does the government make someone pay to promote someone else?

After years and years fighting this, we should have known that the NAB would come up with some ridiculous idea in the end. The NAB, which represents broadcasters, is almost always on the wrong side of policy debates (that’s what happens when your job is to protect a dying industry), but on this one issue we agreed… until now. Rumors are circulating that the NAB is willing to cave on performance rights, if the RIAA, in exchange, supports a totally wasteful plan to require FM radio receivers be placed in mobile phones, MP3 players and other digital devices. Now, everyone involved says no deal is done yet, but there are multiple indications that this is exactly where the conversation is heading.

The NAB tries to defend this by comparing FM radio — a dying technology — to federal mandates on digital television tuners. That, of course, was entirely different in so many ways. It involved attempts to move the country forward to a new technology, not mandating an obsolete one. It also was done for a very specific reason: to try to recapture tons of valuable spectrum that could be put to much more valuable and practical use. Mandating FM tuners is just a waste of time and money in a quixotic attempt by broadcasters to prop up FM radio. My mobile phone has an FM receiver today, and I’ve never even looked at it. Some manufacturers have chosen to put this technology into devices today — and that’s fine, if they choose to do so. But, mandating it as part of a backroom political deal? No thanks.

Filed Under: deals, fm radio, performance rights, performance tax, radio
Companies: nab, riaa

NAB Cries To The Court About White Spaces Spectrum Plans

from the same-old-story dept

One of the better decisions to come out of the FCC during Kevin Martin’s reign was the decision to free up the “white spaces” spectrum that lies in between TV broadcasts for other uses. The white spaces are unused spectrum that sit in between TV broadcasters’ signals. They were important in analog broadcasts to keep stations’ signals from interfering with each other, but they are less crucial in digital broadcasts (like the ones the US will eventually switch to). White spaces proponents say that they can effectively be reused by unlicensed devices that can seek out empty spectrum and use it to communicate, without interfering with licensed broadcasts, and the FCC concurred — and, of course, made that a key part of its approval of the technologies. But as ever, the National Association of Broadcasters disagrees, and has sued to block usage of the white spaces, arguing it will interfere with their members’ broadcasts.

We might be more sympathetic to the NAB’s claim if it didn’t have such a long and glorious history of trying to stifle anything that competes with incumbent broadcasters, and have such an annoying way of doing it. The FCC has put significant stipulations in place to ensure that white space devices don’t cause interference, and despite the NAB’s contention, the prototypes that failed in the testing process didn’t do so. The FCC got it right by approving use of the white spaces with the restrictions and rules it put in place to tame interference; the NAB has once again got it wrong by trying to stifle innovation, and perhaps competition.

Filed Under: interference, lawsuits, spectrum, white space
Companies: fcc, nab

Recording Industry Lobbying Group Pushes Congress To Tax Radio Stations More

from the and-even-screws-that-up dept

MusicFIRST, a recording industry lobbying group that already has some controversy surrounding it due to contributions from groups not allowed to be involved in lobbying, is continuing to push forward with its campaign to claim that radio is a kind of piracy and demanding legislation that forces radio stations to pay extra to play music. For most of the history of radio, radio stations have paid songwriters and publishers royalties for playing music on the radio, but they didn’t pay the musicians (really: the record labels). In fact, the money often (illegally) went in the other direction, with the labels paying the radio stations to play certain artists to help promote them.

However, these days, with the recording industry unable to adapt to the changing marketplace, they’ve taken to demanding that others (individuals, ISPs, video games, Apple, webcasters, etc…) simply give them money instead. Their latest target, of course, is radio stations. It started with that silly claim that radio is a form of piracy — then advanced to a bill, being introduced by a Congressional Rep, John Conyers (whose last campaign was heavily funded by those connected to the labels and this lobbying group), to force radio stations to pay the record labels as well.

MusicFIRST’s latest effort was to drag its dog and pony show to Congress, where it paraded a bunch of musicians in front of Congresscritters to whine about how unfair it was that radio stations helped promote their music without paying them. Of course, it looks like MusicFIRST should have talked to the musicians a bit more carefully first. One of the musicians they trotted out, Matt Maher, less than 24 hours before going before Congress, noted on his Twitter account how such royalties could hurt radio stations and worried that it would cause some stations to shut down. Apparently, someone went a bit off the reservation and made exactly the opposite point that MusicFIRST wanted him to make….

Filed Under: fees, matt maher, publicity, radio, recording industry, royalties, taxes
Companies: musicfirst, nab, riaa

Traditional Radio Stations Agree To Webcasting Rates; Internet Only Webcasters… Not So Much

from the battle-still-brewing dept

While the big radio stations, represented by the NAB seem to have worked out a deadline deal on webcasting rates, it appears that internet-only webcasters have had their talks break down. This is bad news, of course. The whole situation is something of a farce. Rather than letting the market work the issue out directly, the Copyright Royalty Board (basically some internet-illiterate judges) basically gave the recording industry everything it wanted when it declared what the rates should be — and made them quite high. Many online radio stations noted that the rates were so high that they would shut down. And, of course, the whole process would make RIAA-spinoff SoundExchange tons of money in administrative fees while separately benefiting the major labels that make up the RIAA by driving the smaller indie webcasters (who play less RIAA music) out of business. A win-win! And, of course, protesting by playing non-RIAA music wouldn’t help. SoundExchange gets to collect for that music as well.

About the only reasonable thing was (despite the CRB’s refusal to stay the ruling) that SoundExchange agreed to hold off new royalties while the parties negotiated. Time to work out a deal was supposed to end last fall, and despite SoundExchange and many webcasters asking for more time, the NAB lobbied hard to deny that extra time. Luckily they got it anyway, but even the extended period of time has ended. NAB and its big radio stations are fine with their deal, but internet-only webcasters still don’t see anything reasonable. On top of that, SoundExchange made a separate offer to “small” webcasters, but most have found that to be way too onerous as well — especially the part where if they ever get acquired by a larger player, they’ll have to go back later and pay the higher rates even for the time when they were small and independent.

And, no one has yet explained why webcasters should need to pay so much money for helping to promote new acts in the first place. Radio, streaming online or over the air, is a great way for people to learn about new acts, giving them reasons to go out and buy products and merchandise or see those acts live. By forcing the very people who want to promote the music to pay ridiculous fees, all the industry is doing is shooting itself in the foot. Again.

Filed Under: copyright royalty board, radio, royalties, webcasting
Companies: nab, soundexchange

Congressman Buys Recording Industry Argument That Radio Is Piracy

from the and-here-we-go-again dept

For pretty much the entire history of radio, everyone has known that getting your songs played on the radio was promotional. It helps sell albums. It helps sell concert tickets. There is no better way to prove this than to just look at the history of “payola” whereby record labels would pay radio stations to get their music heard. Obviously, the recording industry put tremendous value into being on the radio and was willing to pay for the privilege (even if it was illegal). In the US, radio stations have to pay royalties to composers and publishers — but not performance rights to the musicians. That’s because Congress also recognized that radio was a benefit to those artists.

Yet, in the last few years, with the recording industry execs desperate for more cash and unwilling to embrace business models that actually take some work, they’ve been running to Congress demanding that radio stations now pay performance rights to the labels. They even came up with a silly study that attempted to prove that radio play decreases sales. Late last year, it got so silly that one of the recording industry’s many lobbying groups, called musicFIRST, claimed that radio is a “form of piracy.” musicFIRST has been hiring big name lobbyists, like former House Majority Leader Dick Armey to push this view, and (of course) some politicians have obliged.

Rep. John Conyers has once again introduced a performance rights bill which is mistakenly described as creating “parity.” It’s only “parity” if you think that doubling the tax on playing music on the radio is “parity.”

This is, once again, nothing more than the recording industry trying to get the government to force others to hand over money, because the labels are too lazy (or clueless) to learn how to embrace some of the new business models that are earning musicians plenty of money. And Congress has no problem helping to prop them up.

It’s worth noting, of course, that among the top contributors to Rep. Conyers recent re-election was the American Intellectual Property Law Association as well as DLA Piper, the big law firm that (oh look!) Dick Armey has been working for… It’s also worth pointing out that Conyers, as head of the House Judiciary Committee, just so happened to have recently abolished the subcommittee on intellectual property — which (hmm…) would have almost certainly been chaired by Rep. Rick Boucher, one of the few folks in Congress who actually has been known to fight for the rights of consumers, and against the RIAA, when it comes to copyright. This gave Conyers, rather than Boucher, control over new IP related legislation.

Filed Under: john conyers, payola, radio, recording industry, royalties
Companies: musicfirst, nab, riaa

Radio Companies Try To Force Satellite Radio Devices To Play HD Radio Too

from the let-us-tag-along! dept

Well, the terrestrial radio companies failed to stop the XM-Sirius merger from a happening with a rather ridiculous campaign against the merger, but that doesn’t mean they can’t continue to try to cause problems. The latest is that they’ve convinced Representative Ed Markey to introduce legislation requiring all satellite radio devices to include the ability to play HD Radio (terrestrial radio’s attempt to provide a better quality product to compete with satellite). The FCC had just begun investigating whether or not such an HD Radio mandate made sense, but apparently Markey can’t wait and is pushing to have the mandate pushed through as law before the FCC can study the issue. Is it worth mentioning that the NAB, the lobbying arm of the terrestrial radio stations (and the group that resorted to all sorts of questionable actions in trying to prevent the Sirius-XM merger), is one of Markey’s biggest campaign contributors? Oh, and that XM CEO Mel Karmazin contributed to Markey’s campaign back in 2001 (when Karmazin worked for Viacom), but apparently hasn’t contributed more recently? Feel free to express your thoughts on the bill with this voting widget (if you’re reading in RSS, click through to see it):

Filed Under: ed markey, hd radio, mandates, mel karmazin, satellite radio
Companies: fcc, nab, sirius, xm