[Politech] Cato Institute on FCC's broadcast flag regulations

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Wed Nov 12 2003 - 21:35:42 PST

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    To: declan@private
    Subject: Cato TechKnowledge: Broadcast Flag Decision
    From: "Adam Thierer" <athierer@private>
    Message-Id: <20031112220511.C111C34A9B@private>
    Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2003 14:05:11 -0800 (PST)
    
    
    The Broadcast Flag Decision: The FCC Bends Over Backward to Protect 
    Over-the-Air Television and the HDTV Transition
    
    Issue #64
    November 12, 2003
    
    by Adam D. Thierer
    
    Just how far will policymakers go to protect "free, over-the-air" 
    television and our ongoing industrial policy experiment with 
    high-definition television (HDTV)? To answer that question, one need look 
    no further than last week's decision by the Federal Communications 
    Commission mandating that by July 1, 2005, every consumer electronic device 
    in America capable of receiving digital TV signals must be able to 
    recognize a "broadcast flag"-or string of digital code-that will be 
    embedded in digital broadcast programming in the future. In theory, this 
    little bit (excuse the pun) of regulatory engineering will encourage 
    content creators and broadcasters to air more digital programming "in the 
    clear" (i.e., through the broadcast television spectrum), knowing that the 
    broadcast flag will allow them to prohibit mass redistribution through 
    peer-to-peer (P2P) networks. In other words, the broadcast flag mandate 
    will prevent the "Napster-ization" of video programming.
    
    That's the theory, and to some extent it just might work. But is adding 
    another layer of regulation to the existing mountain of HDTV mandates 
    really a good idea? In one sense, it's tempting to say, why not? The 
    history of broadcast television in general, and the HDTV transition in 
    particular, is just an endless string of mini-industrial policies. Each 
    industrial policy decision begets another and another. The theory has 
    always been that broadcasting is a complicated and important business and, 
    therefore, policymakers need to take special steps to guarantee its 
    success. Somebody needs to figure out, for example, the transmission 
    standards for broadcast television. Are 480 lines of resolution enough, or 
    should we bump it to 1,080? Is interlaced video acceptable, or would 
    progressively scanned video be better? Is a 4x3 TV set aspect (square) 
    ratio good enough, or should all pictures be shown in 16x9 (letterbox) 
    aspect? Should we phase out the old analog broadcast transmission on a 
    specific timetable? Should each new television set include a digital tuner?
    
    Hey, somebody has to make these decisions, right? Sure they do, but it 
    remains unclear why that someone should be the FCC. Nonetheless, in each of 
    the examples just listed, the FCC has already adopted mandatory standards 
    for companies and consumers to follow. We have aspect ratio standards and 
    rules governing what counts as a "high-def" signal; rules governing by what 
    date stations are supposed to make the digital transition in their 
    communities; mandates requiring set manufacturers to install 
    government-approved digital tuners in every set they sell; and now a 
    broadcast flag edict mandating that every program and electronic device 
    include or read government-approved digital code to guard against content 
    redistribution. We are told to believe that the HDTV transition will not 
    happen in this country without such mandates and micromanagement from above.
    
    One cannot help but snicker at such an assertion since the HDTV 
    "transition" has already been going on for almost 20 years and yet only a 
    very small percentage of consumers receive HD signals today. Moreover, the 
    FCC does not impose grand industrial policy experiments on most other 
    high-tech industries, but they seem to make complex transitions all the 
    time. The computer sector is equally, if not more complicated than 
    broadcasting, and there exists a variety of knotty computing issues for 
    which the FCC could potentially establish complex regulatory solutions. But 
    they don't. Somehow the computer sector just keeps chugging along without 
    such meticulous micromanagement from Washington.
    
    But what's done is done, and we long ago reached the point of no return on 
    the road to a HDTV industrial policy. What should we make of the latest 
    mini-industrial policy, the broadcast flag? Doesn't the content community 
    have valid reasons to be concerned about widespread redistribution of their 
    digital programming? Some broadcasters have even said they'd consider 
    pulling their existing digital programming off the air if they couldn't 
    ensure adequate protections existing against Net redistribution.
    
    As someone who's obsessed with HDTV and currently owns three HD sets, I 
    certainly appreciate the value of high-definition television programming 
    and want to make sure it doesn't disappear. But while the broadcast and 
    content industry are correct in asserting that the widespread 
    redistribution of high-definition broadcast content over the Internet might 
    represent a serious problem, it's hard to believe anyone in America today 
    has enough bandwidth or processing power to be downloading and 
    redistributing massive digital television files via the Net. In the future, 
    however, when broadband speeds (hopefully) multiply, content providers 
    might have more reason to be concerned about the financial viability of 
    certain programs if those shows could be redistributed to the world at the 
    click of a button. In such a world, it might make sense for them to embed 
    digital broadcast flags in their programming, or even encrypt their 
    programming at the source and require consumers to purchase new equipment 
    to decrypt that programming before it can be viewed. But it is an entirely 
    different matter to have the FCC set up a mandatory regulatory regime that 
    forces such solutions on the entire nation.
    
    Technology mandates are misguided because, well, they are mandatory! 
    Policymakers should not lock industry or consumers into any static 
    technological standard, even when it's done in the name of protecting 
    intellectual property. IP rights can still be enforced in other ways. For 
    example, programmers could sue individual users who redistribute content on 
    a widespread basis without permission or compensation for the creators. 
    Instead of taking this more targeted approach to prosecuting the handful of 
    users that cause the most serious problems, the broadcast flag proposal 
    opens the door for the FCC to create an intrusive new regulatory apparatus 
    for the Internet and computers in the future. The FCC would be hard-pressed 
    to point to any language in the Communications Act of 1934 or the 
    Telecommunications Act of 1996 that gives them the authority to regulate 
    IP, the Internet, or computers in this manner, but statutory law long ago 
    ceased to be much of constraint on this agency's actions.
    
    Finally, there are some troubling enforcement issues here worth 
    considering. In the wake of the broadcast flag plan as well as the digital 
    tuner mandate, the phrase "compliant devices" will become more common in 
    this arena. If I build a personal computer that powers my home theater 
    setup and it includes a noncompliant digital tuner or video card, have I 
    broken the law? What if I sold a few of those devices on eBay? If the 
    broadcast flag makes my current DVD players obsolete, can I tinker with 
    them to make sure they're still usable after July 1, 2005? What about the 
    so-called "analog hole" problem of consumers simply using analog outputs to 
    transfer files to computers, ignoring the broadcast flag altogether? And 
    what happens when the broadcast flag gets hacked a few weeks after it 
    debuts? Will the FCC invoke the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's 
    "anti-circumvention" provisions to go after certain consumers who take 
    advantage of the hack? What's the FCC's enforcement plan if and when each 
    of these scenarios develop?
    
    So many questions. I guess we'll have to wait for the next few FCC 
    industrial policies to be promulgated to get our answers. One wonders if 
    the Soviets ever spent this much time and attention planning a sector of 
    their economy.
    
    Adam Thierer (athierer@private) is the Director of Telecommunications 
    Studies at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. (www.cato.org/tech). To 
    subscribe, or see a list of all previous TechKnowledge articles, visit 
    http://www.cato.org/tech/tk-index.html.
    [][]
    
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