Export Compliance Daily is a Warren News publication.

An FCC proposal seeking comment on eliminating the...

An FCC proposal seeking comment on eliminating the sports blackout rules “raises thorny questions,” said a Fletcher Heald CommLaw blog post Monday (http://bit.ly/1dRLEqo). If sports blackout rules are eliminated, copyright licenses might allow multichannel video programming distributors to retransmit distant…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.

games even when the local broadcast of those games is blacked out, the blog said. “Avoiding that result could force renegotiation of a wide range of agreements involving TV networks, their affiliates, the sports leagues and MVPDs,” the blog said. Dropping the blackout rule could also cause sports leagues to leave broadcast networks for direct carriage on multichannel video program distributors, the blog said. Since compulsory copyright licenses don’t apply to MVPDs, “leagues interested in exercising maximum control of their game content might, absent governmentally-imposed blackout rules, be inclined to abandon [over the air] broadcast distribution in favor of other methods,” the blog said. These could take the form of dedicated sports networks distributed on MVPD channels or over the Internet, the blog said. That result could mean higher costs for fans, since games wouldn’t be on free broadcast networks. However, that’s more likely a long term issue, the blog said. “The NFL has recently re-upped its deals with CBS, NBC and Fox through the 2022 season, so we're all presumably safe for the time being,” said the CommLaw blog.