| == Phrack Inc. == |
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| Volume Three, Issue Thirty-five, File 13 of 13 |
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| PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN |
| PWN PWN |
| PWN Phrack World News PWN |
| PWN PWN |
| PWN Issue XXXV / Part Four PWN |
| PWN PWN |
| PWN Compiled by Dispater PWN |
| PWN PWN |
| PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN PWN |
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| The Media Monopoly |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by Dispater |
|
|
| As we all know, more technology means more and more legal questions. It |
| is important not only to understand the economic but social impacts of the |
| recent "Telco-TV" issue. I think technologically the idea of transmitting |
| audio/video signals through phiber optic line is fascinating and a great |
| technological triumph. However, how will society benefit by having an even |
| smaller number of owners controlling the media? There is already a media |
| dynasty due to policies established in Ronald Reagan's presidency. |
|
|
| Today almost all of the media is controlled by 18 global corporations. |
| That is down from 23 in 1990 and down from 50 corporations in 1983. The trend |
| is very scary. In the United States there are around 25,000 different media |
| voices. This includes newspapers, book publishers, television stations, radio |
| stations, movie studios, and magazines. However we should not kid ourselves |
| into thinking that there are 25,000 different owners. Is it fair to that 23 |
| companies have so much power over our lives? It is incredibly dangerous to |
| allow this trend to continue. We must stop this trend and "bust up" the media |
| as it was done in the pre-Reagan era. |
|
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| If you are concerned about this issue I strongly urge you to read "The |
| Media Monopoly" by Ben Bagdickian. It is published by Beacon Press and runs |
| around 300 pages in length. |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
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| Phone Companies Could Transmit TV Under FCC Plan October 25, 1991 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by Edmund L. Andrews (The New York Times) |
|
|
| In a surprising and controversial move to promote cable television |
| competition, the Federal Communications Commission proposed today that local |
| telephone companies be allowed to package and transmit television programming. |
|
|
| The proposed rules, which were unanimously endorsed and are likely to be |
| adopted within a year, would expose cable companies to the most threatening |
| competition yet. But they could benefit cable television consumers, many of |
| whom have seen their bills double and triple in recent years. |
|
|
| The cable industry vowed to fight the proposals and threatened to |
| challenge the rules in court if they are adopted. Telephone companies, eager |
| to enter a lucrative new business, applauded. |
|
|
| "Today's action will create competition and offer consumers more choices," |
| said James R. Young, vice-president of regulatory and industry relations at the |
| Bell Atlantic Corporation. "Let's hope it's a beginning to the end of turf |
| wars." |
|
|
| In essence, the commission recommended that telephone companies be allowed |
| to offer "video dial tone" over telephone lines that would carry programming |
| produced by outside companies. Consumers could view whatever programs they |
| pleased and would be charged accordingly. |
|
|
| Initially, telephone companies would serve primarily as a pipeline, not |
| producing the programs. But the commission said telephone companies should |
| also be allowed to organize and package video services, as long as they make |
| their networks available to all programmers. The commission also opened an |
| inquiry on whether to let telephone companies produce programs. |
|
|
| The idea of allowing so-called video dial tone service has long been a |
| favorite of the FCC's chairman, Alfred C. Sikes. Congress, which is weighing |
| regulatory legislation to rein in cable process has shied away from the issue. |
| Today's action makes it more likely that lawmakers will have to reconsider the |
| role of telephone companies in television. |
|
|
| Before cable companies would feel much impact from today's FCC proposal, |
| however, most telephone companies would have to spend billions of dollars to |
| install new fiber-optic transmission lines and switching equipment that could |
| carry large volumes of television material. Analysts have estimated that the |
| cost of converting every home in the country to a fiber-optic line would be |
| $100 billion to $200 billion and that it would take at least five years. |
|
|
| Most large telephone companies, including all of the regional Bell |
| companies, already plan to replace their copper wires with fiber over the next |
| two decades. The immense business opportunity posed by the $18 billion cable |
| television market is likely to accelerate those plans. |
|
|
| High-capacity communications lines that reach every home in America could |
| radically alter the distribution of entertainment and enable people on home |
| computers to tap distant libraries and obtain information in seconds. |
|
|
| "Both program providers and consumers would have chances they don't have |
| today, without the bottlenecks provided by cable companies and without the |
| bottlenecks of broadcasting," said Richard Firestone, chief of the FCC's common |
| carrier bureau. |
|
|
| The move was immediately attacked by the National Cable Television |
| Association, which threatened to challenge any new rules in court. |
|
|
| "Until and unless the telco's monopoly in voice telephone is ended, no |
| level of Government safeguards against cross-subsidies will be effective," said |
| James P. Mahoney, president of the cable association. |
|
|
| The most controversial issue, which the FCC raised for discussion without |
| recommendation, is whether telephone companies should be allowed to produce |
| programming, a much bigger business than transmission. Many Bush |
| Administration officials favor such a move, but television broadcasters and |
| producers bitterly oppose it. Officials noted that such a shift would require |
| changes in the Cable Television Act of 1984. |
|
|
| "Among the top two or three concerns of ever cable operator has always |
| been head-to-head competition against local telephone companies," said John |
| Mansell, a senior analyst at Paul Kagan Associates, a marketing-research firm |
| that monitors the cable industry. |
|
|
| For telephone companies, the move could be a windfall. Steven R. Sieck, |
| vice president of Link Resources Inc., a market-research firm in New York, |
| said, "It's by far the largest market opportunity among the whole collection of |
| information services" for telephone companies. |
|
|
| It remains unclear, however, whether the new rules will survive in court. |
| The Cable Television Act of 1984 bars a telephone company from owning a cable |
| television franchise in the same market. The FCC ruled today, however, that |
| the law does not prevent a local telephone company from transmitting programs |
| produced by other companies and that it does not bar long-distance carriers in |
| any way. |
|
|
| The Bell companies have lobbied strongly for legislation that would allow |
| them to enter the cable business, and several companies have invested in |
| European cable franchises. In addition, Pacific Telesis Group, which provides |
| local phone service in California, already holds an option to buy a controlling |
| interest in a Chicago cable franchise, which could be [sic] permissible since |
| it is outside the company's telephone area. |
|
|
| The commission also handed down a ruling that could give telephone |
| companies an important price advantage in future competition with cable |
| operators and could prompt protests from local governments, ruling that neither |
| a telephone company nor a video programmer needs to pay franchise fees to local |
| governments. |
|
|
| Under the cable act, by contrast, local governments can charge cable |
| operators a franchise fee as high as five per cent of revenues. |
|
|
| Explaining today's ruling, Mr. Sikes said, "We have segregation laws, and |
| these segregation laws should be ended." He added that some cable companies |
| were already installing optical fibers in their own networks, and that some |
| were exploring the option of using their networks to offer telephone service. |
|
|
| The proposals mark the second major change in longstanding restrictions on |
| the telephone companies' ability to move into new services. Less than three |
| weeks ago, a Federal appeals court cleared the way for the regional Bell |
| companies to begin providing information services, like news, stock and sports |
| tables, immediately. |
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| Phiber Optic or Twisted Pair? |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by John J. Keller (Wall Street Journal) October 28, 1991 |
| |
| Expanding the nation's telephone network into a vast television broadcast |
| system is going to cost tens of billions of dollars and won't be finished |
| before the end of the decade, say executives at some of the largest phone |
| companies. |
|
|
| But the scale of the project isn't stopping the phone giants, such as GTE |
| Corp., Ameritech, Bell Atlantic Corp., and Pacific Telesis Group, from |
| methodically exploring how to implement such a system. |
|
|
| The Baby Bells and GTE have spent several million dollars testing new |
| systems that carry cable TV shows into homes via the phone network. The phone |
| companies will spend many million of dollars more before they are satisfied |
| that they have a service that matches the current voice phone system and tops |
| today's entrenched cable TV monopolies. |
|
|
| Last week the phone companies were buoyed by a Federal Communications |
| Commission plan to support a new technology called video dial tone, that would |
| put the big phone companies into direct competition with local cable-television |
| monopolies. |
|
|
| Phone subscribers could use such a system to dial up and order video |
| programs from an entertainment company through the same wire that connects a |
| typical phone call. More important, allowing the phone companies could |
| generate enough traffic to fund "broadband" upper-capacity information highways |
| that could someday carry TV, medical information, and even FM stereo channels |
| into a home through a single wire, say the executives. |
|
|
| However, big hurdles remain. The FCC hasn't decided whether to let the |
| phone companies participate in the programming end of the cable TV business. |
| The phone companies argue that's a financial necessity, because cable TV |
| companies would be reluctant to share the programs they now support and run |
| them over a rival's network. In addition, the 1984 Cable TV Act, which |
| prohibits phone company participation in the cable business, would have to be |
| rewritten. |
|
|
| "We're encouraged by the FCC action, but it's not as complete a step as |
| there needs to be made," said Larry J. Sparrow, vice president of regulatory |
| and governmental affairs at GTE Telephone Operations, Irvine, Texas. Adds |
| Kathleen Ahren, Nynex Corp.'s director of federal regulatory policy: "For us to |
| build facilities without anyone to use them would be irresponsible... |
| programming is essential." |
|
|
| There are also technical issues such as whether TV service to the home |
| should be provided through a cable-TV-like coaxial cable or advanced fiber- |
| optic line. Either would require pulling out existing "twisted pair" wiring |
| that now binds the phones in homes and most small businesses to the local phone |
| network. Moreover, the phone industry must still hammer out technical |
| standards for melding video transmission, which requires tremendous |
| transmission capacity, with voice traffic, which uses far less. |
|
|
| The system that is finally built will require mountains of capital to |
| transform the existing phone network into a high-capacity phone network of |
| systems that pump signals digitally through fiber-optic transmission lines, |
| which are glass wires. "We've seen figures that it would cost about $250 |
| billion nationwide," says James R. Young, vice president of regulatory and |
| industry relations at Bell Atlantic. Adds Ms. Ahern, "I don't think our plans |
| would have us doing this in less than 20 years and if we do you're talking |
| billions of dollars." |
|
|
| Pacific Bell, which spends about $1 billion a year on new network |
| equipment, would see that annual tab jump by two to three times in the first |
| several years of constructing a broadband network, says Michael Bloom, customer |
| premise, broadband applications at the San Francisco-based unit of Pacific |
| Telesis Group. But he notices that as equipment purchases grow and the |
| technology is perfected the annual cost should drop down to current levels |
| after about four years. |
|
|
| PacBell, like most other phone companies, already has installed fiber- |
| optic "trunking" lines to carry bulk traffic between its switching centers. |
| It has also begun replacing copper facilities in some neighborhoods, running |
| optical fibers to the pedestal at the curb and then connecting to the regular |
| phone home wires. Someday these lines will carry cable TV, but for now |
| regulation restricts the phone company to voice and data transmission, says Mr. |
| Bloom. |
|
|
| Someday this will change, says the FCC, which envisions a service where |
| phone customers would turn on their TVs and find a listing of TV shows, movies, |
| news and other programs, supplied by the phone company and other programmers |
| and accessible via remote control. |
|
|
| Several phone companies are already testing such services. In Cerritos, |
| Calif., GTE has built an elaborate network of fiber-optic and coaxial cables |
| lines and advanced switching systems to deliver TV services to several thousand |
| customers. One service, called "Main Street," allows a customer with a remote |
| control to shop via TV, check a bank account and even seek information on |
| colleges in the US. Another service, dubbed "Center Screen," lets 3,900 |
| residential customers call for a movie or a TV show by dialling a special |
| number. A third service lets some customers talk to one another through a |
| videophone in the house. |
|
|
| "We've found [from the Cerritos tests] that our customers like full-motion |
| video and not still pictures," which is all that's possible over today's |
| regular phone lines, Mr. Sparrow says. |
|
|
| That's because regular conversation travels over phone lines at the rate |
| of 64,000 bits a second. By contract, "reasonable quality" video, such as the |
| kind that appears from a VCR tape, requires transmission capacity of at least |
| 1.3 megabits to 1.5 megabits a second. High quality video will take capacity |
| of 45 megabits to 90 megabits a second, he says. A megabit equals 1 million |
| bits. |
|
|
| To save money and get as much capacity out of the existing copper-based |
| systems, Bell Communications Research, the Baby Bell's research arm, has |
| developed "video compression" technology which uses existing copper wire to |
| deliver TV to the home. With video compression, a microprocessor squashes |
| video signals so they can be sent through a regular phone line at the rate of |
| 1.5 megabits a second. The little chip, which is in an electronic box attached |
| to the phone line, looks at an incoming video signal, and filters out the parts |
| of the moving image that are redundant. The chip codes and sends the parts of |
| the signal that are different through the phone line to a receiving box, which |
| decodes and reconstructs the image before projecting it onto the TV screen. |
|
|
| The cable companies hope to retaliate by providing phone service through |
| their cable networks. They are funding research to develop switching systems |
| that can pass phone calls from one cable subscriber to another and out to |
| customers using the regular phone system. |
|
|
| But the blood between the industries isn't all bad. Ameritech's Indiana |
| Bell subsidiary and Cardinal Communications, an Indiana cable TV operator, are |
| testing a fiber distribution system made by Broadband Technologies Inc, of |
| Raleigh, NC. The system is being used to route video and phone signals over |
| backbone fiber-optic lines and finally through coaxial and twisted pair lines |
| attached to homes in Tipton Lake, a Columbus, Ind. residential development. |
| Bell Atlantic is negotiating with Loudon Cablevision, a cable TV company in |
| Loudon County, Va., to test the transmission of TV signals through phone |
| company lines to 5,000-6,000 homes in The Cascades, a local housing |
| development. |
|
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|
|
| Baby Bells as Big Brother November 2, 1991 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| >From The New York Times |
|
|
| Two official decisions in October, one liberating and the other |
| frightening, may shape telecommunications -- and America -- for decades. The |
| liberating decision, by the Federal Communications Commission, proposes to |
| allow the seven regional telephone companies to transmit TV programs. |
|
|
| If implemented, that proposal for video-by-phone would free families to |
| tell cable operators, if they misbehave, to get lost. |
|
|
| The frightening decision, by a federal appeals court, unblocked the same |
| seven "Baby Bell" companies from owning electronic yellow pages, video shopping |
| and other information services. |
|
|
| Unless Congress intervenes, this decision will allow the Baby Bells to |
| exploit their monopolistic stranglehold over residential phone lines and |
| dictate what information reaches nearly every home. The same principle ought |
| to govern in both situations: democracy needs diversity. |
|
|
| Technological advances have brought the nation to a regulatory crossroad. |
| A single information pipeline -- perhaps fiber-optic cable, perhaps enhanced |
| coaxial or copper wire -- may soon pour an unimaginable array of phone, video |
| and data communications into homes. Whoever controls the pipeline controls |
| access to American minds. |
|
|
| The best protection against Big Brother is to separate control of the |
| pipeline from the information. That could be easily enforced by requiring that |
| pipeline owners, like the Baby Bells, serve only as common carriers and lease |
| pipeline space to information providers on a non-discriminatory basis. |
|
|
| Common carrier status is what the FCC proposal would achieve for video |
| services but what the appeals court decision would foreclose for information |
| services. |
|
|
| Congress seems unwilling to impose common carrier status. But Rep. Jim |
| Cooper, D-Tenn., offers a second-best remedy. As long as the Baby Bells retain |
| monopoly control over local phone service, he would allow each to sell |
| information only outside its own region. His bill also offers stringent |
| safeguards against anti-competitive behavior. |
| |
| Yet the bill's provisions aren't as safe as common carrier status. The |
| Baby Bells have frequently violated regulations; rules alone are unlikely to |
| stop them from subsidizing forays into information services with funds |
| extracted from captive rate-payers. |
|
|
| Contrary to their claims, the Baby Bells have no special abilities to |
| provide electronic services. If they could sell video shopping for a profit, |
| so could hundreds of other companies -- not one of which has the power to |
| intimidate ratepayers because not one has privileged access to their homes. |
|
|
| Nor, as the Baby Bells claim, do they need to produce their own |
| information services in order to fill capacity on fiber-optic cables they might |
| lay. |
|
|
| The strongest argument the Baby Bells offer is technological. Only a |
| single company, they contend, will be able to marry pipeline and information. |
| But there's no proof of this speculation and besides, there are better ways to |
| manage the problem. |
|
|
| The Cooper bill provides plausible protection against monopolistic Baby |
| Bells, giving them ample room to compete but limited room to exploit. |
|
|
| Newspapers, including The New York Times Co., support the bill for |
| competitive commercial reasons. But there is a much more important reason for |
| the public to favor, and Congress to adopt, the Cooper bill: to protect the |
| free, diverse flow of information on which democracy depends. |
|
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|
| Don't Baby the Bells November 10, 1991 |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| >From The New York Times |
|
|
| Although the Bell companies are opposed by numerous groups, including the |
| Consumer Federation of America, the cable television industry and existing |
| providers of electronic information services, it is the newspapers that are its |
| biggest opponents. |
|
|
| The publishers argue that the telephone companies can compete unfairly by |
| subsidizing their services with money from their regulated telephone businesses |
| and by imposing technical obstacles to competing information suppliers. |
|
|
| But one of their biggest fears is simply that the telephone companies |
| could attract a large proportion of the classified advertising, a mainstay for |
| newspapers, by offering cheap and easy-to-use electronic bulletin boards. |
|
|
| The newspapers are pushing Congress to adopt a bill introduced by |
| Representative Jim Cooper, Democrat of Tennessee, which would not allow a Bell |
| company to offer information services unless those services are already |
| available to at least 50 percent of the people in the area over an alternative |
| network. |
|
|
| As a practical matter, the bill would reinstate the information-service |
| ban for all Bell companies for years, because of the difficulty in building an |
| alternative network that reaches most customers. |
|
|
| To defend their position as more than a simple bid to keep out |
| competition, the newspaper association has crafted a blunt advertising campaign |
| around the slogan "Don't Baby the Bells." |
|
|
| In one ad, the association warns that the telephone companies could amass |
| as much private information on customers as the Internal Revenue Service. |
|
|
| But while many members of Congress are worried about giving new powers to |
| the Bell companies, the Cooper bill has thus far attracted only 24 sponsors, |
| and most experts doubt the bill can muster enough support to pass even the |
| House. |
|
|
| Meanwhile, the Bush administration strongly favors lifting the prohibition |
| on information services and would probably move to veto a bill that kept it in |
| place. The upshot is that newspaper publishers are in a difficult position. |
|
|
| A stalemate in Congress amounts to a complete victory for the Bell |
| companies, because court decisions have already given them precisely what they |
| want. |
|
|
| In Congress, however, aides to leading lawmakers say they are waiting in |
| part to see how much popular and political strength each side can muster. "We |
| want them to show us what they can bring," one staff member said about the |
| publishers. |
|
|
| One lobbyist allied with the publishers said opponents of the Bell |
| companies were essentially trying to build up a bargaining position. "You could |
| see this as the beginning of a minuet," he said. "The question is whether they |
| will ever get into the middle of the floor and dance." |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
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