FCC intervenes in cable TV market

Published: Nov. 10, 2007 at 12:48 PM

WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (UPI) -- The U.S. Federal Communications Commission intends to enact new regulations opening the cable television market to smaller rival services to deter monopolies.

The regulations empower the FCC to prohibit major cable television providers from gaining too much control over the sector and allow more diverse programming, The New York Times reported Saturday.

"It is important that we continue to do all we can to make sure that consumers have more opportunities in terms of their programming and that people who have access to the platform assure there are diverse voices," FCC Chairman Kevin J. Martin said Friday.

The move utilizes the so-called 70/70 rule of the Cable Communications Act of 1985 that allows FCC intervention to diversify the market if services are available to 70 percent of Americans and 70 percent of those are subscribers.

Andrew Jay Schwartzman of the advocacy group Media Access Project hailed the FCC's decision. "The 70/70 finding is enormous," Schwartzman said in the Times. "It gives the commission a blank check to regulate an industry that Congress had largely deregulated."

But Kyle McSlarrow, chief executive officer of the National Cable and Telecommunications Association, called it an "intrusion into a marketplace where competition is thriving."

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
Google in pursuit of Yelp (4 min)
Beached whales killed by ingesting plastic (11 min)
Canadian wholesale edges up in October
Deutsche Bank staff to share tax pain
Martin leads at South African Open
Crude oil prices rebound
House to investigate Citigroup tax deal
fark
Once again for the slow people who haven't quite grasped it: If you're distributing a magazine for...
Man waiting for teller in a bank decides to text his girlfriend that there's a man with a gun inside....
Qantas 747 flight cut short after pilots discover the hidden afterburner setting on the control...
Neighboring bingo halls battle for customers. "It gives people something to do that's not the bar...
As more and more people are using technology for their everyday social needs, the demand for professional...
You know how it goes, you go to a party, go home drunk, have a smoke in your back yard and then...