BellSouth told FCC it was opposed to request by Dept. of Justice and FBI for additional security requirements under Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA). DoJ/FBI asked agency in Nov. to require carriers to: (1) Submit name, phone number, e-mail address and other contact information for person designated as point of contact for CALEA issue. (2) Notify FCC in writing or by e-mail of any change in such contact information. BellSouth said requirements were “unnecessary, burdensome and inconsistent with the Commission’s minimal set of guidelines for compliance with CALEA’s systems security and integrity provisions.”
Mont. House State Administration Committee completed hearings Wed. on bill that would require state agencies to retain internal and external e-mail memos and letters as public record, just as they must do now with correspondence on paper. Measure (HB-112) would clarify state open records law to include e-mail among agency records that must be retained and made available to public. Panel has until mid-Feb. to move bill. Measure also would make it crime to harass or threaten anyone via e-mail. Penalties would be same as for telephone harassment. State Rep. John Brueggeman (R- Polson), bill’s sponsor, said e-mail had become common method for conducting official state business, but effectively was exempt under current law from requirements that official correspondence be kept for public inspection. Other supporters cited incident last fall in which environmental group seeking internal memos from state Natural Resources Dept. to bolster case in timberland dispute discovered material had been deleted in routine purge of e-mail files. Supporters also said making e-mail harassment crime would close loophole in current law. No opponents spoke at hearing.
Hearst-Argyle TV will take over management of WMUR-TV (Ch. 9, ABC) Manchester, N.H., under local management agreement, companies said. Deal is effective until Hearst-Argyle completes acquisition of station from Imes Communications.
PASADENA -- CBS TV Pres. Leslie Moonves said network had ordered new Survivor series 3 and 4 -- to follow Survivor 2, which begins its run immediately following Jan. 28 Super Bowl. Third in series will air in fall as hedge against possible strike by writers and actors. “That’s all part of the game plan,” along with extended new or expanded editions of news programming, he said at TV critics session here. Reality shows are “not union dependent,” Moonves said. “We hope the strike can be avoided, but we are ready… Obviously, everybody is going to be doing the same thing” in stockpiling reality programming in case of strike (CD Jan 9 p7). He joked that if Super Bowl were “a blowout, we may eliminate the 4th quarter and go right to Survivor… and hopefully in the near future we'll be announcing Survivor 19 and 20.” He refused to discuss prices being paid by advertisers for Survivor 2, but “obviously it’s a great deal more than they paid” for original series last summer.
U.S. Appeals Court, D.C., ruling Tues. that rejected SBC’s advanced services subsidiary (CD Jan 10 p1) appeared to have raised more questions than it answered. Observers questioned Wed. whether decision might pressure Congress to revise Telecom Act to account for advanced services, how ruling would affect similar arrangement at Verizon and how it might play out under new Republican FCC. Court overturned trade-off FCC made with SBC: FCC allowed SBC to provide advanced services free of interconnection requirements if company formed separate affiliate to provide those services. In response to appeal filed by Assn. of Communications Enterprises (ASCENT), court ruled FCC didn’t have authority to forgo interconnection requirements of Sec. 251(c) just because SBC was providing advanced, rather than basic, services and using separate subsidiary. ASCENT represents competitive carriers, particularly those that resale ILEC service.
RateXchange Corp. and London Satellite Exchange announced first global alliance that gives bandwidth users ability to fulfill satellite and fiber requirements at same time. RateXchange operates trading system for fiber bandwidth and London Satellite Exchange is online exchange for satellite industry.
Helgi Walker, aide to FCC Comr. Furchtgott-Roth, will move to White House as assoc. White House counsel and special asst., his office said. Walker, who specialized in mass media and cable issues, will be replaced by Ben Golant of FCC Cable Bureau.
Moody’s assigned B3 rating to XO Communications’ proposed $450 million convertible subordinated notes to “reflect the relatively early development stage of the company with positive cash flow generation… still likely to be approximately 1 to 2 years away.”
Research firm pulver.com forecast that wireless revenue would top local wireline revenue by 2003, based on recent price reductions by mobile providers. “The wireless industry has erased the twentyfold wireline price advantage that existed in 1984, completely changing the business case for who represents a potential wireless customer,” pulver.com CEO Jeff Pulver said. Report said if 25% of residential wireline customers convert to wireless, industry would gain 26 million subscribers, representing $14 billion potential revenue increase. That would give wireless industry revenue of $91 billion in 2003, compared with $90 million for local wireline industry, pulver.com projected.
Paxson announced series of TV station transactions, including: (1) It agreed to sell KBPX (Ch. 13) Flagstaff and WPXS (Ch. 13) Mt. Vernon, Ill., to Equity Bcstg., terms not disclosed. Stations will remain Pax affiliates. It said sales were move toward complying with FCC ownership cap. Deals mean Paxson stations will reach 33.1% of U.S. households, it said. (2) Pax TV signed joint sales agreements with Scripps-owned NBC stations in Kansas City (KSHB-TV, Ch. 13), Palm Beach (WPTV, Ch. 5), Tulsa (KJRH, Ch. 2). NBC stations will provide sales and marketing infrastructure for Pax stations. (3) Paxson signed joint sales agreement with Dispatch Bcst. station WTHR-TV (Ch. 13) Indianapolis (NBC). WTHR-TV will provide sales and marketing for WIPX-TV (Ch. 63) Bloomington, Ind.