• Please read the Announcement concerning missing posts from 10/8/25-10/15/25.
  • This is a political forum that is non-biased/non-partisan and treats every person's position on topics equally. This debate forum is not aligned to any political party. In today's politics, many ideas are split between and even within all the political parties. Often we find ourselves agreeing on one platform but some topics break our mold. We are here to discuss them in a civil political debate. If this is your first visit to our political forums, be sure to check out the RULES. Registering for debate politics is necessary before posting. Register today to participate - it's free!

Gov't Monitors in Newsrooms? FCC to Look Into Media Decision-Making

The RW ranters used to go on and on about the "fairness doctrine" and how the Obama Administration was threatening to shut then down using it. I haven't heard that particular one in a while though.

I wonder if the "government monitors in the newsroom" story is just another incarnation of that particular fantasy?



Do you think it might have to go back to 2013.....when the DOJ was outted for wiretapping the APS Phones and their phone in Congress?



Associated Press says U.S. government seized journalists' phone records.....

r



The Associated Press on Monday said the U.S. government secretly seized telephone records of AP offices and reporters for a two-month period in 2012, describing the acts as a "massive and unprecedented intrusion" into news-gathering operations.

AP Chief Executive Gary Pruitt, in a letter posted on the agency's website, said the AP was informed last Friday that the Justice Department gathered records for more than 20 phone lines assigned to the agency and its reporters.

"There can be no possible justification for such an overbroad collection of the telephone communications of The Associated Press and its reporters," Pruitt said in the letter, which was addressed to Attorney General Eric Holder.

An AP story on the records seizure said the government would not say why it sought the records.

The seized phone records were for April and May of 2012 and AP bureaus in New York, Hartford and Washington were among those affected, as well as an AP phone at the U.S. House of Representatives press gallery, the AP said.

The records seized included general AP switchboard numbers and an office shared fax line, according to the AP story on the probe.....snip~

Associated Press says U.S. government seized journalists' phone records | Reuters
 
Do you think it might have to go back to 2013.....when the DOJ was outted for wiretapping the APS Phones and their phone in Congress?



Associated Press says U.S. government seized journalists' phone records.....

r



The Associated Press on Monday said the U.S. government secretly seized telephone records of AP offices and reporters for a two-month period in 2012, describing the acts as a "massive and unprecedented intrusion" into news-gathering operations.

AP Chief Executive Gary Pruitt, in a letter posted on the agency's website, said the AP was informed last Friday that the Justice Department gathered records for more than 20 phone lines assigned to the agency and its reporters.

"There can be no possible justification for such an overbroad collection of the telephone communications of The Associated Press and its reporters," Pruitt said in the letter, which was addressed to Attorney General Eric Holder.

An AP story on the records seizure said the government would not say why it sought the records.

The seized phone records were for April and May of 2012 and AP bureaus in New York, Hartford and Washington were among those affected, as well as an AP phone at the U.S. House of Representatives press gallery, the AP said.

The records seized included general AP switchboard numbers and an office shared fax line, according to the AP story on the probe.....snip~

Associated Press says U.S. government seized journalists' phone records | Reuters

Wow. Could be!
 
Wow. Could be!

Yeah they even subpenoaed records too. Washington Post carried it too. ;)


Under sweeping subpoenas, Justice Department obtained AP phone records in leak investigation.....

In a sweeping and unusual move, the Justice Department secretly obtained two months’ worth of telephone records of journalists working for the Associated Press as part of a year-long investigation into the disclosure of classified information about a failed al-Qaeda plot last year.

The AP’s president said Monday that federal authorities obtained cellular, office and home telephone records of individual reporters and an editor; AP general office numbers in Washington, New York and Hartford, Conn.; and the main number for AP reporters covering Congress. He called the Justice Department’s actions a “massive and unprecedented intrusion” into newsgathering activities.....snip~

Under sweeping subpoenas, Justice Department obtained AP phone records in leak investigation - The Washington Post


Then lets not forget what Bob Woodward has come out and said about this Administration and Obama's Team members. Which was last year too. Then the liberal media blasted Woodward.
 
It is for a study, there is no intention to control content at this stage. It would only survey broadcast channels. The FCC has no purview over non-broadcast channels. Until the Reagan era, broadcasters were required to serve the public interest with unbiased informational content and required to provide time to parties with views contradicting views presented on the channel. My guess is that the FCC is doing this study to prepare for consideration of a restoration of some of the original requirements for broadcasters. In particular, I expect that they will be looking into advertising and station owner influence on news shows.
 
...you can find any news source with any point of view (sometimes to much).

Only if you know alternatives exist, want to look for for them and succeed in finding them. Few people do that.
 
I need to sit and think about it. I dont understand how the FCC would be involved in/concern itself with news story selection. I suppose they could think a segment of society is being underserved.

I don't see this as a partisan situation. Your posted link suggests the reports are factual. The only reason for such research is marketing. With analysis of stories, they can better tailor all announcements for appeal to certain readers; the best presentation to achieve greater or lesser exposure. It's marketing and psychology; the same type of specific research used by ad men and company product marketing development that determines when, where, who, what, how, and why of selling.

Should this come to fruition, one's personal politics will matter little. WE are ALL in trouble.. We have a difficult time and it takes great effort to discern fact from fiction these days. This is not a positive event for any of us.

I'm unsure about the oversight of FCC.

On a lighter note, maybe Diana could write a political thriller concerning these events ... I have two different titles in mind.

Thom Paine
 
With this administration this does not surprise me in the least. Getting control of the media is paramount when you are out to "change" a country.

And when it turns out that this bull**** article is grossly misrepresenting the situation, you wont use it as evidence that your preconceptions are faulty.
 
And when it turns out that this bull**** article is grossly misrepresenting the situation, you wont use it as evidence that your preconceptions are faulty.

The article was written by one of the 5 commissioners on the FCC. What makes you think he is "grossly misrepresenting the situation?"
 
I cannot find anything about it on hte FCC site and the thousands of hits I get on google are RW noise sites quoting Fox news.

"This does not bode well" -----Thom Paine

Here's more: From a Commissioner of the FCC Ajit Pai: The FCC Wades Into the Newsroom - WSJ.com

By
Ajit Pai
Feb. 10, 2014 7:26 p.m. ET

News organizations often disagree about what Americans need to know. MSNBC, for example, apparently believes that traffic in Fort Lee, N.J., is the crisis of our time. Fox News, on the other hand, chooses to cover the September 2012 attacks on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi more heavily than other networks. The American people, for their part, disagree about what they want to watch.

But everyone should agree on this: The government has no place pressuring media organizations into covering certain stories.

Unfortunately, the Federal Communications Commission, where I am a commissioner, does not agree. Last May the FCC proposed an initiative to thrust the federal government into newsrooms across the country. With its "Multi-Market Study of Critical Information Needs," or CIN, the agency plans to send researchers to grill reporters, editors and station owners about how they decide which stories to run. A field test in Columbia, S.C., is scheduled to begin this spring.

The purpose of the CIN, according to the FCC, is to ferret out information from television and radio broadcasters about "the process by which stories are selected" and how often stations cover "critical information needs," along with "perceived station bias" and "perceived responsiveness to underserved populations."

How does the FCC plan to dig up all that information? First, the agency selected eight categories of "critical information" such as the "environment" and "economic opportunities," that it believes local newscasters should cover. It plans to ask station managers, news directors, journalists, television anchors and on-air reporters to tell the government about their "news philosophy" and how the station ensures that the community gets critical information.

The FCC also wants to wade into office politics. One question for reporters is: "Have you ever suggested coverage of what you consider a story with critical information for your customers that was rejected by management?" Follow-up questions ask for specifics about how editorial discretion is exercised, as well as the reasoning behind the decisions.

Participation in the Critical Information Needs study is voluntary—in theory. Unlike the opinion surveys that Americans see on a daily basis and either answer or not, as they wish, the FCC's queries may be hard for the broadcasters to ignore. They would be out of business without an FCC license, which must be renewed every eight years.

This is not the first time the agency has meddled in news coverage. Before Critical Information Needs, there was the FCC's now-defunct Fairness Doctrine, which began in 1949 and required equal time for contrasting viewpoints on controversial issues. Though the Fairness Doctrine ostensibly aimed to increase the diversity of thought on the airwaves, many stations simply chose to ignore controversial topics altogether, rather than air unwanted content that might cause listeners to change the channel.

The Fairness Doctrine was controversial and led to lawsuits throughout the 1960s and '70s that argued it infringed upon the freedom of the press. The FCC finally stopped enforcing the policy in 1987, acknowledging that it did not serve the public interest. In 2011 the agency officially took it off the books. But the demise of the Fairness Doctrine has not deterred proponents of newsroom policing, and the CIN study is a first step down the same dangerous path.

The FCC says the study is merely an objective fact-finding mission. The results will inform a report that the FCC must submit to Congress every three years on eliminating barriers to entry for entrepreneurs and small businesses in the communications industry.

This claim is peculiar. How can the news judgments made by editors and station managers impede small businesses from entering the broadcast industry? And why does the CIN study include newspapers when the FCC has no authority to regulate print media?

Should all stations follow MSNBC's example and cut away from a discussion with a former congresswoman about the National Security Agency's collection of phone records to offer live coverage of Justin Bieber's bond hearing? As a consumer of news, I have an opinion. But my opinion shouldn't matter more than anyone else's merely because I happen to work at the FCC.

Mr. Pai is a commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission.

OOPS! maybe it was already posted.. sorry ----Paine
 
Anyone who's a government patsy tool will love this --- everyone else (and that should be 98% of the rest of us) should hate it and should be writing our congressmen and women telling them to get the FCC out of the 1st and 4th amendment. Does the FCC realize there's still a constitution or do they just ignore it? And if its the latter, I wonder where they got that idea...
 
Anyone who's a government patsy tool will love this --- everyone else (and that should be 98% of the rest of us) should hate it and should be writing our congressmen and women telling them to get the FCC out of the 1st and 4th amendment. Does the FCC realize there's still a constitution or do they just ignore it? And if its the latter, I wonder where they got that idea...

Who knows... perhaps from the Patriot Act, or maybe asset forfeiture, maybe from having given the president the power of indefinite detention without trial, or the "reach out and kill someone" power that the government has now.

It's time to pick the Constitution up, dust the foot prints off of it, and replace it as the supreme law of the land.
 
The article was written by one of the 5 commissioners on the FCC. What makes you think he is "grossly misrepresenting the situation?"

Different article.
 
If the Government were just interested in the data,
perhaps a double blind study, not conducted by the agency
who holds power over news outlets, would be a better approach.
But then maybe they are not just interested in the data!
 
From what I read, they would be observing why a particular news story is selected. Not sure if that is the only reason and any observing just bugs me. Let the listeners and readers decide. We are well equipped with media in various forms and means to offer feedback. If we aren't interested, a selected story will soon die down.
 
It also might be due to the research out there about disseminating whether the News is truthful and or factual. Been major talk in all forms of Media as to people not knowing whats the truth anymore.

The one I heard that was leading the way with this was Twitter.....as to help media sources. Which they partnered with CNN over this Not that I was happy over that bit of info. But.....they do need to start getting a handle out there. As to What editors and Producers are putting out and as to what stories make the call, and as to why?

Here is a bit of info on it.


Twitter wants to help media partners find the news faster — and also help itself in the process.....

Summary:
A Twitter analytics company called Dataminr is building a custom version of its search tools for news companies like CNN, something that will help media outlets use Twitter better — but will also help reinforce Twitter’s brand as a breaking-news source.


dataminer1.png


Twitter’s chief operating officer, Ali Rowghani, helped announce an interesting new product partnership today at an event in New York — a partnership between CNN and a company called Dataminr. The latter, which pays for access to the Twitter “firehose” of 500 million tweets a day, sells a tool that helps financial companies mine that information for useful signals. CNN now has access to a breaking-news version of that same tool, a kind of souped-up version of Tweetdeck, and soon other companies will as well, for a fee.

And why would such a deal, in which Twitter is just a third-party supplier, justify the presence of an executive like Rowghani? Because the company wants to promote its brand with media entities and encourage further such partnerships, which presumably would increase demand for the firehose — and also cement its burgeoning reputation as a breaking-news service akin to Reuters or Bloomberg.

Both Twitter and CNN made much of the fact that the news outlet was able to beat its competitors to the story about a recent shooting at a Maryland mall because Dataminr’s tool flagged a tweet from an emergency-response worker at the scene. That kind of testimonial could help counter criticisms that the news on Twitter about events like the Boston bombings is unreliable.

Twitter owns the channel through which that news gets reported, and every time a media outlet cites the company, it reinforces that ownership.

He who owns the distribution channel owns the news, to some extent, and Twitter is one of the biggest pure-news distribution channels around.....snip~

Twitter wants to help media partners find the news faster — and also help itself in the process — Tech News and Analysis
 
The bureaucracy is so bloated and bored that it needs new things to spark an interest. Better that we reduce the size of the FCC and make it busier.
 
If done right, this study could be useful. One possible result is a requirement that broadcasters disclose when a 'news' story they include is sponsored. For example, when video news releases are used.
 
If done right, this study could be useful. One possible result is a requirement that broadcasters disclose when a 'news' story they include is sponsored. For example, when video news releases are used.
It would be a good idea to know just who is sponsoring a particular "news" story.
It would also be a good idea to know just who is sponsoring our representatives as well.

I can see a compromise here!
 
It would be a good idea to know just who is sponsoring a particular "news" story.
It would also be a good idea to know just who is sponsoring our representatives as well.

I can see a compromise here!

I love the idea that some comedian proposed for requiring that elected officials wear the logos of their major contributors on their clothes like NASCAR drivers.

Logos_Politicians.jpg


The Political Junkie: September 2009
 
I love the idea that some comedian proposed for requiring that elected officials wear the logos of their major contributors on their clothes like NASCAR drivers.

Logos_Politicians.jpg


The Political Junkie: September 2009

It's a great idea. The media has to tell us when a story is sponsored by some special interest, and politicians have to dress like Nascar drivers. We'll all be better informed.
 
.
I would point out that the FCC is required to study and report to Congress every three years, per 47 U.S.C. §257. Imo, the study you quoted went too far, and the FCC has agreed to revise the study. For those keeping track, §257 was added by the 104th Congress, a Republican Congress, in the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
.
47 U.S.C. §257
"...(b) National policy
In carrying out subsection (a) of this section, the Commission shall seek to promote the policies and purposes of this chapter favoring diversity of media voices, vigorous economic competition, technological advancement, and promotion of the public interest, convenience, and necessity.
.
(c) Periodic review
Every 3 years following the completion of the proceeding required by subsection (a) of this section, the Commission shall review and report to Congress on...
.
U.S.C. Title 47 - TELEGRAPHS, TELEPHONES, AND RADIOTELEGRAPHS
.
FCC to revise study, February 21, 2014.
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2014/db0221/DOC-325722A1.pdf
 
Back
Top Bottom