HDTV Almanac - Speed Bump in FilmOn Road to Success

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alfredpoor
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HDTV Almanac - Speed Bump in FilmOn Road to Success

Post by alfredpoor »

What would you say about a company that started streaming television programming over the Internet to subscribers, and chalked up 30 million users in a few weeks? That’s reportedly the score for FilmOn, one of two companies that are streaming locally-broadcast television content over the Internet. Along with iviTV, FilmOn believes that it has the [...]

[url=http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/columns/2010/11/hdtv-almanac-speed-bump-in-filmon-road-to-success.php]Read Column[/url]
jbowen01
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Time for the local affiliates to wake up to the world

Post by jbowen01 »

I don't watch the local affiliates now....they need to adapt to new technology like they did with Directv. I use my Galaxy S Tab on the road....are they going to HUNT ME DOWN NEXT

And where in the Constitution does the FCC get the right to interfere with private business.
alfredpoor
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Government and business

Post by alfredpoor »

You raise an interesting point. I'm not a Constitutional scholar, but here's how I think it works. The Founding Fathers didn't know about radio waves, but they did have a provision that lets the federal government hold assets in trust for the people as a whole. This led to the federal control of interstate commerce, so that businesses could count on some standardization of the rules. And it was decided that the radio spectrum belongs to the citizens, and it is up to the federal government to manage that asset (since it is clearly interstate commerce). The FCC is intended to do what it thinks makes the best use of this asset for the country as a whole. Clearly, there may be cause to disagree with some of their choices over the years, but we do have a wireless communication infrastructure in this country that I believe is second to none, so the federal involvement hasn't been a total barrier to progress.

Alfred
720pete
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Re: Government and business

Post by 720pete »

It would be nice if all the people constantly referring to the Constitution of the United States would actually read it once in a while.

Here's where it says the FCC has the "right to interfere with private business."

Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the United States Constitution, known as the Copyright Clause, the Copyright and Patent Clause (or Patent and Copyright Clause), the Intellectual Property Clause and the Progress Clause, empowers the United States Congress “…To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”

The Federal Communications Act of 1934 created the FCC (successor to the FRC) to regulate the radio spectrum in the public interest. A clear case of interstate commerce, since radio (and TV) waves respect no state lines. And part of their job is to step in when use of those radio waves involves copyright infringements, which FilmOn clearly does.
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