landtuna said:
The All Channels Act (1961) was issued a generation prior to Fox creating the so-called fourth network and there were many UHF stations operating by that time. I don't think these two events had anything to do with each other.
The number of operating UHF stations peaked in 1954 at 122 stations, then dipped as stations found it financially impossible to continue. The 122 figure wasn't reached again until 1965 -- after the All Channel Receiver Act kicked in & got a reasonable number of UHF receivers into viewers' hands.
The 1961
Broadcasting Yearbook lists only eight independent UHF stations. I am nearly
certain two of them are typos. (actually had network affiliations)
Whether any of that has anything to do with Fox - probably not. But I don't think it's unreasonable to believe the All Channel Receiver Act was a necessary prerequisite to the presence of enough independent TV stations to make a fourth network eventually possible.
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Is there really any significant difference between government and a single private provider? Where I live, I have a single choice of broadband providers. (Charter. DSL and uVerse are not available here.) That provider has absolute control over what sites I may access for streaming video, for movie downloads, for online radio. If Charter decides they don't like Fox News, they have the ability to prevent me from watching either on TV or online. I find that difficult to distinguish from government regulation establishing the same prohibitions.
The limiting factor today seems to more related to the cost of providing a competing service (and the profits to be gained) than government regulation.
I think this may be the important statement. Competing systems are generally permissible - the ability of local governments to issue exclusive franchises is essentially gone.
There are several reasons franchises were issued in the first place:
1. To ensure entrants have enough potential customer base to pay for the cost of building and maintaining infrastructure. Charter doesn't seem to be having much trouble making a profit on 100% of the broadband market here. They could probably still make a profit on 50%. I strongly suspect if they had to compete with 10-15 other broadband providers, they'd find it impossible to make any money -- and probably wouldn't bother making the investment.
2. To ensure universal availability of service. If you're building a new telephone service, where are you going to start? Probably, the densely populated rich neighborhoods where everyone can & will subscribe and the construction and maintenance expenses are low. The poor neighborhoods -- and the sparsely populated areas with few subscribers per mile -- will see service last, if at all. The franchising process requires a company to serve high-cost areas if they wish to have access to high-profitability areas.
3. To limit redundant infrastructure to reasonable levels. Ever see a photo of a major city around the turn of the century? HUGE utility poles with dozens of wires. Multiple competitive telephone and electric companies, each running their own wires. For better or worse, most Americans don't want to see that in their cities, or suburbs, today. Yes, you could require the lines be buried (though that's government regulation again) but then you'd be watching various utilities digging up the road/adjacent properties almost continuously.
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I'm really primarily concerned with network neutrality. Much of the benefit of the Internet is in the ability for just about anyone to provide content and make that content available worldwide. I see little difference between the U.S. Government requiring an (expensive) license to broadcast - vs. Charter requiring an (expensive) non-throttling agreement to post a website.
Nobody is proposing to tell ISPs they can't limit usage of their networks to levels the infrastructure can handle. What neutrality proposes is to require such limits be non-discriminatory. There are two reasons for the battle:
1. ISPs that also have a cable TV business want to discourage customers from dropping their TV packages (or switching to a less-expensive tier) and viewing their TV online.
2. More customers are likely to be aware of content-neutral bandwidth limitations - it will be easier for competitors with looser restrictions to compete.