Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk,alt.censorship From: kadie@herodotus.cs.uiuc.edu (Carl M. Kadie) Subject: Censorship in exchange for monopoly (book review) Message-ID: <1992Feb26.215332.18232@m.cs.uiuc.edu> Date: Wed, 26 Feb 1992 21:53:32 GMT I've almost finished reading the book _Freedom, Technology, and the First Amendment_ by Jonathan W. Emord (1991). I recommend the book to anyone interested in freedom and technology issues. The premise of the book is that with *every* mass medium the authorities and the media owners are tempted to strike a devil's bargain: In exchange for content control (censorship) by the medium owners the government imposes market controls (monopoly). The government gets a quiet medium; the media owners get high profits because potential competitors are frozen out of the market. The book starts with the first mass medium, the newspaper. It details how in England, 500 years ago, newspapers were brought to heal with royal contracts. In the United States, in reaction against English laws, newspapers are free (both of content control and market control) but other media are not. The next mass medium discussed is radio. In the early days of radio, anyone could get a license. Interference problems were handled via negotiations and in, at least once case, the courts. (The court recognized that a station with a history of broadcasting on a frequency had common law property rights to that frequency.) Contrary to the official line, the problem for broadcasters was competition, not interference. Using interference as a pretext, the big broadcasters got Congress create the laws that lead to the FCC. With the FCC and its predecessor, the number of broadcasters has been severally restricted. In exchange, Congress passed regulations that guaranteed easy access to the airwaves by incumbents. (These regulations include the equal time rules, the so-called fairness doctrine, the personal attack rule, and rules saying that political advertising must be charged the lowest rate.) (Some of these regulations were removed by Reagan; some remain.) The book ends with a discussion of cable TV. Again we see government (now local government) offering monopolies in exchange for incumbent access and content controls. What is the alternative to, for example, FCC regulation? The author supports property rights. (Why should real estate be "ownable" while parts of the airwaves are not?) For cable, he says that just as it is unconstitutional for a local government to give one newspaper a monopoly on sidewalk newspaper stands, it should be unconstitutional for the government to give one cable company a monopoly on offering cable service. The only argument in the book of which I'm still not certain is one of the author's last. He said that the government will often claim that it needs to regulate the media in order to ensure diversity. In doing this, the government says that it is supporting the principle of the First Amendment. Examples, include laws which restrict the number of media outlets someone may own and requirements that cable systems provide community access channels. He says that the First Amendment does not say that the government should require diversity, rather the First Amendment says that the government can not interfere. Random Closing thoughts: This is a great book. It has probably a thousand references. I am now on the look out for these devil's bargains. The bargains can be fought two ways: 1) fight against *government-sanctioned* media monopolies 2) fight against *government-suggested/imposed* content restrictions. - Carl -- Carl Kadie -- kadie@cs.uiuc.edu -- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign