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Digital Television and Public Service Requirements Digital
TV Main Page There are some blemishes on this rosy picture, however. For one, most people are unable to perceive any improvement in picture quality with HDTV programs unless they have a set measuring at least 40 inches. Moreover, it has became obvious that few, if any, broadcasters are really interested in providing any significant amount of HDTV programming. Instead, broadcasters have asked for "spectrum flexibility," the permission to use this HDTV channel for everything but HDTV programming -- to split it into a mixed bag of several regular-definition pictures, pay-per-view, paging services, data delivery, and other non-program services. When commercial broadcasters first sought this so-called "spectrum flexibility" in 1994, MAP was the only non-industry organization that raised the issue of what broadcasters should give the public in return for the spectrum. MAP argued that broadcasters must pay for the extra spectrum with new public service obligations, including free time for political candidates, increased, quantifiable children's educational programming, and public access. In April, 1997, when it awarded the extra spectrum to TV broadcasters, the FCC promised to conduct a separate proceeding to address appropriate public interest obligations. The FCC's decisionmaking will be aided by a special Presidential advisory committee on new public interest obligations for digital TV, which is to issue a report by October, 1998. MAP's Executive Director has been selected as a member of the Advisory Committee. More resources on Digital TV: MAP, et al.'s Petition for Reconsideration and Clarification of the Fifth Report and Order. (a summary of the petition is also available) FCC's Fifth Report and Order on Digital TV licensing, and the accompanying press release. Comments of the public interest group coalition on the public trustee standards and licensing issues for Digital TV. Reply Comments of the public interest coalition. Filed in response to first round of comments. Testimony of Gigi Sohn, MAP Executive Director, at FCC Public Hearing on Digital TV. A full transcript of this hearing has been posted by the FCC. FCC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Digital TV licensing issues. (also in WordPerfect format) Pretty Pictures or Pretty Profits. An introduction to the Digital TV debate, written by MAP in October, 1995. |
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