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saveaccess's blogCT: Video Clips of Connecticut Public Hearing on PEG Access TVPosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:13pm.
from: Community Media Clippings Video Clips of Connecticut Public Hearing on PEG Access TV On March 7 Connecticut's Joint Committee on Energy & Technology held a 4-hour hearing on HB 5814, a bill to amend their recent statewide video franchising law. Connecticut PEG access advocates are asking to have two essential protections added: Verizon to New England: Bye-ByePosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:11pm.
from: Computer World Verizon to New England: Bye-Bye Increase text size Decrease text size Email this page Print this page March 12, 2008 It looks like the Verizon selloff of its Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont landline business to FairPoint Communications is a done deal. All three states have given their approval, with conditions. That deal will have a huge impact on the evolution of high speed broadband in Northern New England. ( categories: Verizon )
FCC Black Tuesday: This place is hell; silent protest plannedPosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:09pm.
from: Ars Technica FCC insider: This place is hell; silent protest planned By Matthew Lasar | Published: March 16, 2008 - 05:19PM CT A Federal Communications Commission employee called me on Friday and said that this Tuesday, the third anniversary of Kevin Martin's tenure as Chair of the FCC, at least some staff will arrive at work dressed in black. A "silent but expressive protest" is what they're calling the move. What for? I asked. "Because this place is hell," came the reply. ( categories: FCC )
CT: U-Verse's Sorry Excuse For Public Access TVPosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:06pm.
from: Broadband Reports U-Verse's Sorry Excuse For Public Access TV As Verizon and AT&T lobbyists worked to eliminate the local video franchise system, consumer advocates pointed out that such moves resulted in the death of public access. AR: Public access TV may be on ropesPosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:03pm.
from: Saline County Voice Public access TV may be on ropes Public access television's future may be threatened. No, not really from an irate alderman upset with programming, although backers of Benton's public access Channel 12 may think so. The greatest threat to Channel 12 and community public access stations across the country is state, rather than local, control of content. ( categories: ARKANSAS | State Franchises )
TN: Commission hears cable competition proposalPosted on March 17, 2008 - 10:02pm.
from: Times Free Press Commission hears cable competition proposal By Holly Cowart Soddy-Daisy commissioners did not vote on a resolution supporting competition in the cable industry at their March 6 meeting, but expect to on March 20. IL: Kankakee County tuning in local TVPosted on March 16, 2008 - 11:18am.
from: The Daily Journal Kankakee County tuning in local TV By John Stewart Anybody can post a video on YouTube.com with a cheap Web cam and an even cheaper microphone. But not everyone gets on television or can make a video that gets on television. That's because television still has a "mystique," according to Steve Bertrand, assistant director of the Kankakee Public Library. Union Made - CWA, Ball State and IndianaPosted on March 15, 2008 - 10:48am.
from: Ridel Communications Thursday, March 13, 2008 There once was a union maid, she never was afraid PEGspace at Drupalcon 2008Posted on March 15, 2008 - 10:47am.
from: Community Media in Transition PEGspace at Drupalcon 2008 PEGspace Drupal Group For those interested in learning more about the intersection of Public Access Television and free and open source software, Jason Daniels (medfield.tv) forwarded along a link to audio & meeting minutes from a gathering of public broadcasting and public access media folks during the recent Drupal conference held in Boston, this year. Here’s a bit from the description: ( categories: )
Were Telcos Justified in Warrantless Wiretaps?Posted on March 15, 2008 - 10:44am.
from: Light Reading Were Telcos Justified in Warrantless Wiretaps? Democrats and Republicans in Congress are divided over a critical telecom issue: wiretapping. Are the U.S.'s largest phone companies liable for assisting the federal government in carrying out warrantless wiretaps? |