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The New Media Monopoly

By Timothy Karr, AlterNet. Posted March 9, 2006.


AT&T's $67 billion merger with BellSouth could enable those who control the information pipes to also control the information.
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The race is on to control the future of American media. Unfortunately, those vying for the prize are a limited cadre of corporations hostile to the public interest.

On one hand, there are the remnants of the 1984 breakup of Ma Bell -- four formerly Baby Bells that now dominate the multibillion-dollar marketplace for telecommunications. Over the past 10 years, these have rapidly morphed into massive corporations by swallowing up smaller competitors and positioning themselves atop the heap.

AT&T's announcement earlier this week that it plans to acquire BellSouth is a stunning development in the unrelenting shift toward fewer choices and bigger companies -- essentially stitching back together the monopoly that ruled telecommunications three decades ago.

The aim of AT&T's $67 billion merger is to assemble a new behemoth to dominate the "triple play" of modern communications: voice, video and data. In the near future, all new media -- telephone calls, radio, television or the web -- will travel via a broadband connection to your home. The corporations that control this network are racing to gobble up as many competitors as possible before consumers complete the new media shift.

Left behind, of course, is the American public. As large telecom companies merge and jockey for position with the cable industry over the most lucrative broadband markets, the communities at the edges have been left on the wrong side of the digital divide.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, nearly 60 percent of households with incomes over $150,000 annually have broadband access, compared to just 10 percent of households with incomes below $25,000.

These corporations have done a lousy job rolling out their services to rural areas and low-income urban communities they've deemed unprofitable. As a result, America has fallen from third to 16th place in penetration of high-speed internet services per capita.

But even those who can afford to pay for connectivity are increasingly subject to limited choices at higher prices. According to a Free Press report late last year, the number of Americans who have only one or no choice of broadband provider is near 50 percent.

Meanwhile, the cost of broadband in other countries has dropped dramatically as speeds have increased. On a per megabit basis, U.S. consumers pay five to 25 times more than broadband users in France and Japan. Nations such as South Korea, Finland, and even Canada have much faster internet connections at a lower cost than what is available here.

Not only are Americans being offered limited choices at higher costs than other countries, the cable and telecom companies that control access to the "pipes" now want to control the content and services that are delivered to customers.

Consumer advocates and internet rights groups are especially concerned about AT&T chief executive Edward Whitacre's outspoken resistance to the principle of "network neutrality," a standard that ensures all users can access the content or run the applications and devices of their choice without discrimination from internet service providers.

"I think the content providers should be paying for the use of the network," Whitacre told the Financial Times earlier this year. "Now they might pass it on to their customers who are looking at a movie, for example. But that ought to be a cost of doing business for them. They shouldn't get on [the network] and expect a free ride."

In December, BellSouth's William Smith told reporters that he would like to turn the internet into a "pay-for-performance marketplace," where his company could charge for the "right" to have certain services load faster than others.

What this would mean for you is higher costs, fewer choices and less control.

AT&T, Verizon, Comcast and others could block you from viewing a favorite podcast or blog, cut off internet phones unless we use their service, or force you to download MP3s from their company store by slowing access to outside music sites. The profit motive of a few corporations would supplant the freedoms of all users, determining which features end up shaping our digital future.

These types of corporate schemes discriminate against those of us who rely on the internet as an accessible tool to spread new ideas, spark innovation and encourage dissent.

Now AT&T executives are asking regulators at the Justice Department and Federal Communications Commission to rubber stamp their merger. They argue, incredulously, that bigger is better for consumers.

At a moment marked by America's precipitous decline in the global ranks of communications leaders, the Justice Department and FCC should correct our problems -- not exacerbate them. This merger must be stopped.

Add your voice against the AT&T merger by sending letters to federal regulators and your representatives here.

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Timothy Karr is the campaign director of Free Press, the national media reform organization.

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This is the end of the blogosphere and internet political organizing.
Posted by: wli on Mar 9, 2006 2:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real content to this is political before it's economic. The entrenched elites are terrified of the capacity of the internet to serve as a medium for grassroots political organization.

This is an integral part of the Pentagon's plan to "fight the internet" by shutting down the blogosphere and grassroots political organization over the internet. It literally does not matter if this bandwidth discrimination scheme is profitable in itself or not or whether it damages the economy. It is an instrument of repression, not profit.

What the immediate casualties of this will be are obvious: Air America's webcasting, moveon.org's website, and independent sources of information such as indymedia.org and thirdworldtraveler.com, not to mention all other individually owned/run websites. Notably, this strikes down the Left in a discriminatory fashion, as expected.

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monopolies
Posted by: rsaxto on Mar 9, 2006 4:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to kill media monopolies and their excess profits by creating a nationwide system of wi-fi broadband accessable to every American (sliding scale $0 - $40/month). Any other system is price-gouging anti-democratic brainwashing.

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It is a lose, lose situation for everyone but AT&T
Posted by: reason on Mar 9, 2006 6:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The search engines are important too. If you can't find a website, then that website doesn't do you a bit of good. That may be why Google and Yahoo are expensive stocks. Search can control a lot of what we view.

I lost my favorites list when I had to recover my computer. I had a hard time finding sites I knew were there using search.

I have noticed that since Google didn't go along with Bush wanting access to our searches that the Google stocks have fallen 20 to 25%.

Also it seems to me that it is getting harder to find what I am searching for on all the engines. A lot of crappy choices come up.

Remember how they derided Al Gore for saying he invented the internet? What he meant was he made it possible for everyone to have access to the net by charging a surcharge on our phone bills. Since then all we have to do is have an ISP (internet service provider) and not pay any other charge. I am not sure which charge it is on the bill that covers our internet connectivity. It may be the Communications charge, but I don't know. Anyway, we pay for access and no one is getting a free ride. That telephone surcharge may have paid for all the lines added for internet connections since then, but I don't know.

Before Gore did that, it was 10 cents a minute if you didn't have a local internet company, if it was long distance to your ISP. $6 an hour just to surf the net. They probably want to charge that again, plus control our politics.

Most small towns don't have a local internet company. It would limit the school's internet access or cost the schools a lot of money (paid for by us, the taxpayer)

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I'd sure hate to see more PERSECUTION against P2P
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 9, 2006 6:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as this merger seems to be heading that route. Because we don't want to pay RIPOFF prices to the music and entertainment industries, p2p gets persecuted even when it was p2p that actually helped get people to buy it in the first place.

About the price hell, oh yeah ! Price gouging is as easy for telecom and cable as is turning a door knob. To make matters worse, they'll temporarily hire a few poor slobs to pose for them on TV about phony "extra" and "free" deals that you'll get with these amazingly high prices.

It's bad enough when dialup companies like Netzero are allowed to mislead viewers and customers that they're providing "high speed" internet when NOTHING has changed since 56k as far as telco lines are concerned. I could kind of see this ugly behavior from telco and cable coming especially when they could easily do RIPOFF deals in rural America where they're the only guys in town and then make it look like they're somehow being persecuted whenever people catch them price gouging red-handed.

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The future is now. Wireless will make these "Oh no, the big bad cable company" worries obsolete.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Mar 9, 2006 10:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wireless data transmission will make the consolidation worries obsolete. Plentiful energy resources (anything that makes electricity), the falling price of electronics, and the opening up of the broadcast spectrum in the next two years will mean that digital transmissions will be able to be broadcast across cities by private citizens. Repeaters can facilitate this transmission across regions. Anyone with a view of the Southern horizon on their property can tap into satellite and--if Dishnetwork, etc.--are shown to be administering their systems in a way that enough people don't like, market forces dictate that an upstart will make a bundle.

I'm not convinced that the merger will be terrible, or even bad for consumers. It may very well be; if so, advise prudent folks willing to accept a calculated risk to consider investing in the next wave of digital content providers as WiMax rolls out, as satellite internet become more affordable, etc. TV over IP is already here (in a very limited fashion); a decent graphics card in the computer will allow you to go right from the internet to your television. Again, costs are still somewhat high ($150 for a decent card with VIVO), but falling.

In short, the more that people get P.O.'d at MaBellNetTellCoTV, the more opportunity for adventurous folks to start up new businesses and new business models. Know what? I used to pay $72.00 a month for unlimited local + long distance with MCI (The Neighborhood, 2003-4). I switched to cable internet (not television) and now I pay $68.00 ($45 for Earthlink, $23 for Packet8) a month for Earthlink high speed internet AND I get unlimited local and long distance calling with Packet8 over the internet. As a consumer, I feel that I won one: a great deal more service for slightly less cost.

Final point? Don't confuse consumer complacency with "oppression by the evil corporate empire". Buyer beware, always look for a better deal, and don't be afraid of trying new technology.

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Wow!
Posted by: J- on Mar 9, 2006 2:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's so much wrong with this article I don't know where to begin.

First of all, these guys aren't merging for the consumer market, they're merging to leverage the B2B market. Verizon (a wireless and a baby bell) merged with MCI (a long haul data/voice carrier) to get Verizon Business, not Verizon poor people telecom. AT&T (a long distance data/voice carrier) is merging with SBC ( a wireless and a baby bell) to go after....wait for it....the business market. Home and consumer services are much smaller parts of their revenue than business is.

And really, people and companies already pay more for faster access. You may not have realized this, but a DS3 ( a DS3 is 24 T1's) costs a lot more than a 56k phone line. Most large ISPs or hosting companies have at least one, sometimes multiple DS3's or higher. I'm not sure in what context that Whitacre is referencing.

I seriously doubt there is a pentagon conspiracy or that this is a way for big nasty corporations to control access to alternative web sites. Carriers charge for carrying data based on a given port speed.

Finally, I don't think it would take a NASA scientists or an investment banker to figure out that is everything is going the digital route, then merged networks are a good idea. If your long distance call can be trunked over any number of diversely routed fiber optic trunks at the speed of light from cell phone, mobile phone or PC, how could that be a bad thing? Enterprise networks have been consolidating voice video and data for years now, it's probably time the carriers did the same.

If Mr. Karr wants to get broadband to poor sections of town, he's welcome to pull a T1, buy a wireless router/firewall and start selling access. I know people who do this for beer money in their neighborhoods.

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Don't Panic
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Mar 9, 2006 5:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the stone age, during the Vietnam anti-war protest, we got information out on hand cranked printers. We got whole underground newspapers out the same way. Screw ATandT. This doesn't stop information exchange, it encourages it.

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» RE: Don't Panic Posted by: AlienSlave
The New AT & T is the Old One Minus The Jobs
Posted by: NoPCZone on Mar 9, 2006 7:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the day, the US had a legal monopoly TelCo called AT&T that was the largest private employer in the United States. In addition to the tens of thousands of workers at the regional phone operating companies (later Baby Bells), tens of thousands more were employed by Western Electric making the world's best and highest quality telecom equipment right here in the U.S.A.

These employees were organized by the CWA and others and made good wages while rendering superior quality and service. Employment at AT&T was a great opportunity for people to do good work, make a true middle-class wage, and climb the ladder through a huge company with numerous opportunities.

Bell Labs, the R&D arm of AT&T was the jewel of the high tech world, inventing everything from the UNIX computer operating system, to the transistor, the laser, and cell phone technology among a very long list. Many of the foundational technologies that have made our high tech lives possible were either discovered or developed at Bell Labs.

The US Government decided that this was a bad thing and sued to break up AT & T in the name of competition and consumerism. After years and tens of millions in legal fees, AT&T was broken up.

With the breakup of the old 'Ma Bell', the local telcos were spun off and began shedding workers by the thousands and buying cheaper (quality and price) equipment from overseas makers. As AT&T could not compete on price with CWA wages, the Western Electric jobs went away from communities all over our country. Bell Labs R&D was cut back and focused more directly on telecom, especially after it was spun off as Lucent Technologies.

Meanwhile, the newly independent Southwestern Bell promptly went out and bought some of the very companies the anti-trust lawsuit sought to separate in the name of competition. Southwestern Bell (SBC) bought PacTel (west coast) and AmeriTech (midwest). Later, they merged their wireless with another Baby Bell, Bell South to form Cingular. Cingular promptly went out and bought AT&T wireless.

In the last year, SBC has now bought the last remains of AT&T (long distance & network) and changed it's name to AT&T. Now SBC/AT&T wants to buy Bell South- essentially recreating all of the old Bell System except what is now Verizon and Quest.

The only thing missing are the jobs. Good paying jobs with good benefits. By the tens of thousands with more layoffs to come. Can anyone tell me how this whole 30 year government train wreck has made things better?

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