FCC Commissioner: Return of Fairness Doctrine Could Control Web Content

SAWYER

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
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McDowell warns reinstated powers could play in net neutrality debate, lead to government requiring balance on Web sites.

By Jeff Poor
Business & Media Institute
8/12/2008 5:37:12 PM

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There?s a huge concern among conservative talk radio hosts that reinstatement of the Fairness Doctrine would all-but destroy the industry due to equal time constraints. But speech limits might not stop at radio. They could even be extended to include the Internet and ?government dictating content policy.?



FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell raised that as a possibility after talking with bloggers at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. McDowell spoke about a recent FCC vote to bar Comcast from engaging in certain Internet practices ? expanding the federal agency?s oversight of Internet networks.



The commissioner, a 2006 President Bush appointee, told the Business & Media Institute the Fairness Doctrine could be intertwined with the net neutrality battle. The result might end with the government regulating content on the Web, he warned. McDowell, who was against reprimanding Comcast, said the net neutrality effort could win the support of ?a few isolated conservatives? who may not fully realize the long-term effects of government regulation.



?I think the fear is that somehow large corporations will censor their content, their points of view, right,? McDowell said. ?I think the bigger concern for them should be if you have government dictating content policy, which by the way would have a big First Amendment problem.?



?Then, whoever is in charge of government is going to determine what is fair, under a so-called ?Fairness Doctrine,? which won?t be called that ? it?ll be called something else,? McDowell said. ?So, will Web sites, will bloggers have to give equal time or equal space on their Web site to opposing views rather than letting the marketplace of ideas determine that??



McDowell told BMI the Fairness Doctrine isn?t currently on the FCC?s radar. But a new administration and Congress elected in 2008 might renew Fairness Doctrine efforts, but under another name.



?The Fairness Doctrine has not been raised at the FCC, but the importance of this election is in part ? has something to do with that,? McDowell said. ?So you know, this election, if it goes one way, we could see a re-imposition of the Fairness Doctrine. There is a discussion of it in Congress. I think it won?t be called the Fairness Doctrine by folks who are promoting it. I think it will be called something else and I think it?ll be intertwined into the net neutrality debate.?



A recent study by the Media Research Center?s Culture & Media Institute argues that the three main points in support of the Fairness Doctrine ? scarcity of the media, corporate censorship of liberal viewpoints, and public interest ? are myths.
http://www.businessandmedia.or...08/20080812160747.aspx


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Common Courtesy
 

Corn

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 1999
6,389
29
91
Careful what you wish for libtards, internet bandwidth is a scarce resource and it just may be in the public's interest to temper dailykos' liberal bias with some conservative direction.

 

RocksteadyDotNet

Diamond Member
Jul 29, 2008
3,152
1
0
Originally posted by: Corn
Careful what you wish for libtards, internet bandwidth is a scarce resource and it just may be in the public's interest to temper dailykos' liberal bias with some conservative direction.

How is this a pro liberal thing?

Liberals support freedom of speach, right wingers do not.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell raised that as a possibility after talking with bloggers at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. McDowell spoke about a recent FCC vote to bar Comcast from engaging in certain Internet practices ? expanding the federal agency?s oversight of Internet networks.

IIRC, this decision regarding Comcast had to do with their throttling of bandwidth for "heavy users" -- meaning P2P users downloading massive quantities of data. What the hell does that have to do with regulating web content?

In any event, so long as the fairness doctrine only applies to equal air time for political candidates, and nothing else, I don't see the harm in it.
 

RocksteadyDotNet

Diamond Member
Jul 29, 2008
3,152
1
0
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell raised that as a possibility after talking with bloggers at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. McDowell spoke about a recent FCC vote to bar Comcast from engaging in certain Internet practices ? expanding the federal agency?s oversight of Internet networks.

IIRC, this decision regarding Comcast had to do with their throttling of bandwidth for "heavy users" -- meaning P2P users downloading massive quantities of data. What the hell does that have to do with regulating web content?

In any event, so long as the fairness doctrine only applies to equal air time for political candidates, and nothing else, I don't see the harm in it.

Why should the goverment be able to dictate what people do with their own radio station?

If you don't like it change the station!
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
103
106
Originally posted by: RocksteadyDotNet
Originally posted by: Corn
Careful what you wish for libtards, internet bandwidth is a scarce resource and it just may be in the public's interest to temper dailykos' liberal bias with some conservative direction.

How is this a pro liberal thing?

Liberals support freedom of speach, right wingers do not.

If you really believe that, you're smoking crack or you're very naive. Liberals support free speech only so long as it's speech they agree with. Say something they don't like, and you'll get shouted down (happens on campuses all over the place) or otherwise labeled a racist, bigot, homophobe, whatever in order to censor you. Neither the right-wingers nor left-wingers support real free speech, they only support it if you agree with them.
 

frostedflakes

Diamond Member
Mar 1, 2005
7,925
1
81
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell raised that as a possibility after talking with bloggers at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. McDowell spoke about a recent FCC vote to bar Comcast from engaging in certain Internet practices ? expanding the federal agency?s oversight of Internet networks.

IIRC, this decision regarding Comcast had to do with their throttling of bandwidth for "heavy users" -- meaning P2P users downloading massive quantities of data. What the hell does that have to do with regulating web content?

In any event, so long as the fairness doctrine only applies to equal air time for political candidates, and nothing else, I don't see the harm in it.
Nothing IMO, just sounds like right-wing fear-mongering to me. This legislation would essentially kill conservative talk radio, so they're going to fight tooth and nail to prevent it.
 

Corn

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 1999
6,389
29
91
Originally posted by: RocksteadyDotNet
Originally posted by: Corn
Careful what you wish for libtards, internet bandwidth is a scarce resource and it just may be in the public's interest to temper dailykos' liberal bias with some conservative direction.

How is this a pro liberal thing?

Liberals support freedom of speach, right wingers do not.

Then why do I only see liberals calling for a return of the fairness doctrine?
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
103
106
Originally posted by: RocksteadyDotNet

Why should the goverment be able to dictate what people do with their own radio station?

If you don't like it change the station!

Agreed. This whole "fairness doctrine" is a load of crap. People can choose to watch whatever they want and listen to whatever they want, they can always change the station if they don't like what they hear. It's called a free market, and it works.

 

RocksteadyDotNet

Diamond Member
Jul 29, 2008
3,152
1
0
Originally posted by: Double Trouble
Originally posted by: RocksteadyDotNet
Originally posted by: Corn
Careful what you wish for libtards, internet bandwidth is a scarce resource and it just may be in the public's interest to temper dailykos' liberal bias with some conservative direction.

How is this a pro liberal thing?

Liberals support freedom of speach, right wingers do not.

If you really believe that, you're smoking crack or you're very naive. Liberals support free speech only so long as it's speech they agree with. Say something they don't like, and you'll get shouted down (happens on campuses all over the place) or otherwise labeled a racist, bigot, homophobe, whatever in order to censor you. Neither the right-wingers nor left-wingers support real free speech, they only support it if you agree with them.

Sorry, I meant liberal as an idiology.

Dems do NOT uphold left-wing ideas anymore. Just as the GOP is not a conservative party anymore.

A true liberal supports total free speach.
 

SAWYER

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
16,742
42
91
"Neither the right-wingers nor left-wingers support real free speech, they only support it if you agree with them."

This
 

gclg2000

Senior member
Jul 12, 2005
913
0
0
The liberal "fairness doctrine" suggestion in a nutshell...


Stop Rush Limbaugh and his $500 million dollar empire


end of story... like him or not with Oxycontin pills in his "formally nicotine stained fingers" that is what it's all about...