Wednesday, March 24, 2010
CoOlDiGgY news
A federal court has lifted a key set of government rules aimed at curbing media consolidation in the United States. On Tuesday, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit struck down the Federal Communications Commission’s ban on companies from owning both a newspaper and a television or radio station in the same market.
The media reform group Free Press urged the FCC to respond to the ruling, saying, “Evidence suggests that merging newspaper and broadcast newsrooms hurts jobs and journalism. We hope the FCC will take decisive action to protect media diversity and to encourage competition in local news.”
Read more...
*Journalist Allan Nairn Facing Possible Arrest in Indonesia for Exposing US-Backed Forces Assassinated Civilians
*US new home sales hit record low as cold weather bites
*Senator Graham Proposes Indefinite Detention Legislation To White House
*Baby Slings to Be Pulled From Market
*7 New Tax Credits Now Available Through the Recovery Act
*LAPD shooting of autistic man demands policy review, ACLU says
*Euro plunges on doubts over Greece aid
*Court Rules That Mississippi School Violated First Amendment Rights Of Lesbian Student
*The Story of Bottled Water
Labels:
Allan Nairn,
Censorship,
Euro,
Greece,
Indonesia,
LAPD,
media ownership,
real estate,
recall
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