The lead story on several radio sites today spotlights a new paper by attorney Edwin Krasnow, who says the concept of public ownership of the airwaves is outdated. Here's a quote from Radio Ink:
"The concept that the public owns the airwaves, particularly as it concerns the authority and mission of the FCC is a mischievous notion that has been misused as a rationalization for government regulation." Krasnow says the public-ownership notion is the main reason for broadcasting's second-class status under the First Amendment. It's time for the FCC to renounce this discredited concept."
Here's more from BroadcastingCable:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/467631-Former_NAB_GC_Says_Public_Ownership_Of_Airwaves_Is_Fallacy.php?rssid=20068
The fact is that the FCC has not applied the public ownership standard to the rest of the spectrum, as evidenced by its policy of auctioning spectrum to cell phone companies. Imagine if it did the same with the broadcast spectrum.
"The concept that the public owns the airwaves, particularly as it concerns the authority and mission of the FCC is a mischievous notion that has been misused as a rationalization for government regulation." Krasnow says the public-ownership notion is the main reason for broadcasting's second-class status under the First Amendment. It's time for the FCC to renounce this discredited concept."
Here's more from BroadcastingCable:
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/467631-Former_NAB_GC_Says_Public_Ownership_Of_Airwaves_Is_Fallacy.php?rssid=20068
The fact is that the FCC has not applied the public ownership standard to the rest of the spectrum, as evidenced by its policy of auctioning spectrum to cell phone companies. Imagine if it did the same with the broadcast spectrum.