Fla. Official Calls On FCC To Stop Use Of National WEA

The chief financial officer of the state of Florida wants the FCC to “immediately halt any further utilization” of Wireless Emergency Alerts on a national level. Jimmy Patronis, who also serves as the state’s fire marshal, addressed his letter to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. He took issue with use of the WEA platform to send the nationwide emergency text message to cellphones and wireless devices in early October:

City Summons Reporter To Court After He Asked Too Many Questions

A reporter for The Daily Southtown received three citations from the government of Calumet City, Ill., for continuing to contact “city departments and city employees via phone and email.”

Michelle Shanahan Joins APTS As General Counsel

America’s Public Television Stations (APTS) has hired Michelle Shanahan as general counsel, effective today. She will oversee the legal affairs of APTS, including leading the governance, regulatory, contracting, corporate compliance […]

BRAND CONNECTIONS

Ex-Meta Executive Gives Senate Critics A New Hammer To Pound Big Tech

Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Marsha Blackburn cite a story on an Instagram whistleblower to push protective legislation.

Amazon Flooded Search Results With Irrelevant Sponsored Ads, FTC Alleges

Amazon founder-owner Jeff Bezos instructed executives to flood the giant ecommerce company’s search results with irrelevant ads to pump up its profits, The Federal Trade Commission charges in newly unredacted documents from its antitrust lawsuit against Amazon. During a key meeting, Bezos directed executives to “accept ‘more defects’ as a way to increase the total number of advertisements shown and drive up Amazon’s advertising profits,” the FTC document charges.

Local Journalists Arrested In Small Alabama Town For Grand Jury Story

Press-freedom advocates are raising the alarm that the arrests of the Atmore News’s publisher and reporter are unconstitutional.

COMMENTARY

Why We’re Optimistic About Cameras In The Trump D.C. Trial

In early October, RTDNA and 18 other press freedom groups and national news organizations filed two key documents seeking live audiovisual coverage of the trial in United States v. Trump, the D.C. election interference criminal case currently docketed to begin in March.

European Regulators Clamp Down On Meta Over Ad Targeting

APTS President Patrick Butler To Retire in 2024

The leader of America’s Public Television Stations will stay on through the selection of his successor but no later than the end of next year.

Fox Calls Dominion Documents Irrelevant To License-Renewal Challenge

Fox is telling the FCC that documents its critics want the regulator to compel it to produce aren’t relevant to a challenge to the company’s license for WTXF Philadelphia — a challenge Fox says the commission should reject.

FCC Announces Second EEO Audit Of 2023

The FCC this week released its second EEO audit notice for 2023. The FCC’s Public Notice, audit letter, and the list of stations selected for audit is available here. Those stations, and the station employment units (commonly owned or controlled stations serving the same area sharing at least one employee) with which they are associated, must provide to the FCC (by uploading the information to their online public inspection file) their last two years of EEO Annual Public File reports, as well as backing data to show that the station in fact did everything that was required under the FCC rules. The response to this audit is due to be uploaded to the public file of affected stations by Dec. 14.

A D.C. Experiment Seeks To Save Local News With City Council Coupons

A bill proposes giving registered voters government-funded vouchers to pay for community news subscriptions.

Cavell, Mertz & Associates Merges With Capitol Airspace Group

Broadcast and communications consultant Cavell, Mertz & Associates has merged with Capitol Airspace Group. For more than 20 years, Capitol Airspace Group has provided analytical, strategic and advocacy services to […]

With Executive Order, White House Tries To Balance AI’s Potential And Peril

On Monday, the White House announced its own attempt to govern the fast-moving world of A.I. with a sweeping executive order that imposes new rules on companies and directs a host of federal agencies to begin putting guardrails around the technology.

Supreme Court To Wade Into Social Media Free Speech Firestorm

The Supreme Court will hear an array of legal arguments involving social media’s free speech wars this term with a series of dicey cases that could reshape how public officials and U.S. government agencies operate online. On Tuesday, the court will hear oral arguments in the first two of those cases, which both ask whether public officials can constitutionally block their constituents on social media  — one of those cases at its core centers on a lakeside city manager in Michigan who decided he would block someone posting what he called “creepy” smiley emoji’s on his Facebook page amid criticism of the manager’s COVID-19 response.

Morgan Murphy Media General Counsel Richard Burns To Retire

Longtime media attorney Jonathan Allen will succeed him at the end of the year.

Televise Trump’s Federal Trials? Judicial Panel Says Its Hands Are Tied

A courts committee says it lacks authority to modify a broadcasting ban in time for the historic criminal cases against the former president.

3 Democratic Philadelphia City Councilmembers Support Renewal Of Fox’s WTXF O&O There

Three Democratic Philadelphia City Councilmembers have weighed in at the FCC in support of the license renewal application for Fox Corp.’s WTXF Philadelphia. The comments are in response to a […]

Apple Fights Subpoena In NFL Sunday Ticket Lawsuit

Apple has asked a U.S. judge to reject a subpoena that could require the company to reveal corporate secrets tied to its failed effort to carry the National Football League’s “Sunday Ticket” programming, now on Google’s YouTube TV. In a filing in California federal court, Apple’s attorneys on Monday opposed a subpoena from residential and commercial Sunday Ticket subscribers who accused the NFL and its teams in a multibillion-dollar lawsuit of violating U.S. antitrust law in the distribution of Sunday Ticket.

Meta Accused By States Of Using Features To Lure Children To Instagram And Facebook

Meta was sued by more than three dozen states on Tuesday for knowingly using features on Instagram and Facebook to hook children to its platforms, even as the company said its social media sites were safe for young people. Colorado and Tennessee led a joint lawsuit filed by 33 states in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District Court of California.

RAISING THE BARR | UPDATED AT 3:42 PM ET

Lawmakers Need To Act To Halt The Erosion Of Access To Local TV News

Emily Barr: Access to local media on streaming platforms is getting more difficult and localism is getting squeezed out of media’s new world order. The FCC and Congress need to act before the damage becomes irreversible.

Republicans: Big Tech Should Preserve Videos Of Hamas Attacks

MAD About Murdochs And Fox

Former Republican FCC Chairman Al Sikes and other representatives of the group demanding that the FCC revoke the license of Fox-owned WTXF Philadelphia visited FCC officials in Washington yesterday to press their case. The Media and Democracy Project (MAD) argues that the Murdoch family that controls the station and Fox News is unfit to hold broadcast licenses because of the news network’s role in promoting Trump’s false claim that he lost the presidency in 2020 because of a rigged election. The contingent (l-r): David Goodfriend, adviser to MAD; Bill Kristol, former editor of conservative, Murdoch-owned The Weekly Standard; Art Belendiuk; counsel to MAD; Milo Vassallo, executive director, MAD; Preston Padden, former Fox executive and Murdoch lobbyist; Bill Reyner, former counsel to Murdoch/Fox; and Sikes.

Dish Sues Eight Companies Over Streaming Tech Patents

Eight separate companies have been on the receiving end of patent lawsuits filed in federal court by pay TV provider Dish. The lawsuits were all filed within the past two months and share a common allegation: Dish believes the services are violating its patents that are connected to adaptive bitrate technology, which improves or decreases the video quality of an online stream based on a user’s connection speed and other factors.

FCC Reasserts Authority Over Internet Access

The FCC has voted 3-2 to begin the process of giving utility-style authority to regulate broadband access by reclassifying broadband as a Title II telecommunications service subject to some common-carrier regulations and then restoring bright-line rules against blocking, throttling and paid prioritization. Broadband access is currently classified as a Title I information service under the Communications Act of 1934, and thus not subject to mandatory access or other common-carrier regulations.

FCC Revives ‘Net Neutrality,’ Proposes New Regulations For Internet Service

Comcast, Charter, AT&T and other telecom giants are expected to wage a legal fight with the Democratic-controlled agency over this regulatory push.

Senators Urge FCC To Refresh The Record In vMVPD Proceeding

In the letter, 20 senators express concern regarding their constituents’ continued ability to access programming from local broadcast television stations on digital streaming platforms. The senators urge the Commission to reexamine its proceeding, first opened in 2014, that solicited comments about whether federal regulations governing pay TV providers such as cable and satellite providers should extend to streaming platforms that offer linear programming.

Appeals Court Weighs Meta’s Liability For Scam Ads

NBCU Seeks Video Coverage Of Donald Trump’s Election Conspiracy Case

NBCUniversal filed its own request to televise Donald Trump’s election conspiracy trial, citing the extraordinary circumstances of a former president facing criminal charges. In an application filed today in U.S. District Court in Washington, NBCU’s legal team, led by Theodore Boutrous Jr., wrote that “Civil and criminal proceedings have been televised routinely for decades pursuant to rules in many state courts, with no prejudice to any party or to the administration of justice. If ever a trial were to be televised, this one should be, for the benefit of American democracy,” they wrote.

Christina Pascucci, TV Anchor, Is Running For Senate In California