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ComcastACM Testimony at Congressional HearingPosted on January 30, 2008 - 7:48am.
from: Alliance for Community Media FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 29, 2008 The Alliance was represented today by Ms. Annie Folger, Executive Director of the Midpeninsula Media Center. Ms. Folger’s remarks addressed the difficulties faced byPublic, Educational and Government Access (PEG) communities across the country. Many communities are seeing threats to their PEG facilities posed by video providersunwilling to meet the public interest needs required of them in exchange for use of the public rights of ways. Millions of dollars have been spent by telephone and cable companies in the past two years on ad campaigns and lobbying to influence state cable franchise laws in 17+ states. The FCC has over-ruled Congress, assigning itself powers that Congress conferred on local communities. According to Ms. Folger, “This chaos is being used to dismantle PEG support and to damage channel quality and accessibility. We welcome competition. But it cannot be used to gut PEG Access provisions that have provided direct service to the local community.” Ms. Folger’s testimony made special example of AT&T’s blockage of closed-captioning for PEG channels on its U-Verse system— a function which is found on all of its commercial channels. At DeAnza Community College in Ms. Folger’s home town, this policy results in the inability of hearing impaired students to view classes which they need to improve their lives. According to Alliance Executive Director, Anthony Riddle, “AT&T’s practice is not the only bad act Another issue raised was the “channel-slamming” engaged in by Comcast. Channel slamming is the practice of relocating PEG channels from desirable locations to inaccessible or unfamiliar “wilderness” locations on short notice and without consulting the communities involved. Additional purchases or steps may be required of viewers to continue viewing PEG channels. This practice isolates the PEG channels and tends to decrease viewership. Many PEG centers have moved into digital technology for production and transmission. PEG centers are fully engaged in migration to an integrated digital environment when allowed. The primary challenge for PEG access is not digital technology, but how cable providers— whether traditional cable operator or telephone company— provide PEG signal quality, functionality, channel placement and funding support. For more detail, please refer to the attached testimonies and summaries. ACM: Annie Folger Summary: summary-testimony.doc MI: Public access TV channel may vanish without fundingPosted on January 29, 2008 - 9:41pm.
from: MLive Public access TV channel may vanish without funding HOLLAND -- Viewers of the public-access channel MacTV outside the Holland city limits could lose coverage later this year unless their local governments step in to assist with funding. MI: Comcast apologizes for local access changesPosted on January 29, 2008 - 8:19pm.
from: MLive Comcast apologizes for local access changes WASHINGTON -- Comcast Corp. apologized today for the way it handled a proposed shift of community access programming in Michigan that would force customers to get converter boxes or new TVs to continue to watch local government meetings and high school football games. P2P users blast Comcast in FCC proceedingPosted on January 29, 2008 - 12:39pm.
from: Ars Technica P2P users blast Comcast in FCC proceeding By Matthew Lasar | Published: January 29, 2008 - 08:14AM CT Two weeks into a Federal Communications Commission public comment period on whether Comcast deliberately degrades P2P broadband traffic, there's no shortage of angry users who feel cheated and want the tampering to stop. Evidence is also mounting that Comcast is blocking more than just P2P traffic. ( categories: Comcast | Net Neutrality )
Cable TV: King of misleading come-onsPosted on January 29, 2008 - 12:36pm.
from: MSNBC Cable TV: King of misleading come-ons By Bob Sullivan Television, from the start, has always been addictive. And there’s nothing easier than stealing from an addict. Why the Congressional Hearing on PEG MattersPosted on January 29, 2008 - 10:14am.
Today's Commerce Telecommunications Subcommittee Hearing, "Public, Educational, and Governmental (PEG) services in the Digital TV Age", was called by Rep. John Dingell (MI) in response to Comcast's actions in Michigan. Comcast had unilaterally announced that PEG channels in many municipalities would be bumped from analog cable carriage to obscure digital channels in the 900 range. The move would mean that 'basic' cable subscribers would no longer have access to the local PEG channels, in fact they would need to subscribe to more a expensive digital cable service tier and pay for an additional charge for a digital cable set-top box. Searching for Basic Cable RatesPosted on January 29, 2008 - 9:55am.
Channel slamming the PEG channels to digital not only moves them, but also makes them more expensive to get. A search on Comcast's site for rates in Dearborn MI and came up with these basic packages: Digital Starter - $24.99 What's missing here is "basic cable". Apparently nowhere to be found on the web site and there's no way to add the service to the online "shopping cart". For Dearborn MI, Comcast shows in the channel guide a service called "Limited Basic", which includes PEG and local broadcast. Of course, pricing, or other information for this is no where to be found anywhere. ( categories: Comcast )
MI: Comcast's Cohen To Issue PEG Apology To CongressPosted on January 29, 2008 - 8:49am.
from: MultiChannel News Comcast's Cohen To Issue PEG Apology To Congress WASHINGTON – In a contrite statement, Comcast Corp. executive vice president David Cohen is planning to apologize to a House subcommittee Tuesday afternoon for fumbling a plan that required thousands of Michigan subscribers to obtain at least one digital set-top box to view local public, educational, and government (PEG) channels. MI: Cable Competition, Prices, and Service Rated 'Very Poor'Posted on January 29, 2008 - 8:23am.
from: The Street Insider Cable Competition, Prices, and Service Rated 'Very Poor' January 29, 2008 8:10 AM EST BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich., Jan. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, the law firm of Howard & Howard Attorneys, P.C. issued its inaugural "Cable Competition Index" for the State of Michigan. Howard & Howard's Cable Competition Index considers the status of wireline video competition in the state, the level of customer service provided by cable operators, and the relative pace of cable price increases. House Schedules Hearing 'Pegged' to Comcast MovePosted on January 25, 2008 - 5:26pm.
from: Broadcasting and Cable House Schedules Hearing 'Pegged' to Comcast Move The House Energy & Commerce Committee's Telecommunications & Internet Subcommittee set the witness list for a Jan. 29 hearing on on “Public, Educational, and Governmental (PEG) Services in the Digital TV Age.” |
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