Technology companies such as Apple and Google are in the Newspaper Association of America crosshairs over use of advertising blockers and fair-use copyright issues, NAA CEO David Chavern said at a Media Institute lunch Wednesday. Chavern said NAA is talking to Apple about its use of ad blockers in Apple News, and plans similar conversations with other companies. "You've got to keep letting my guys make money," Chavern said. "That keeps the reporting coming. ... At some point, we've got to get back to talking about fair use for my members." Apple didn't comment. Chavern became CEO in October and said a good portion of his job has been to evangelize about the traditional news business. "Facebook isn't going to interview the quarterback," he said. "Google's not going to interview the mayor. They don't want to." A key reason, Chavern said, is the difficulty in creating a newsroom: "That's going to be really, really expensive. Incumbency has its advantages." Despite woes about the state of the newspaper industry, Chavern said, "It's not the coal industry, it's not travel agents. People want the product." Newspapers, even with declining print circulations, are somewhat the envy of digital businesses, Chavern said, because those print operations still are profit generators -- something digital businesses find elusive. But he said the decades of enjoying 35-plus percent profit margins are gone, and newspaper companies must resign themselves to that. "It may not ever get to that again," he said. "It doesn't have to be that [level]." Given that all of the 2,000 newspapers that make up NAA are "experimenting like crazy" and generally don't compete much among one another, Chavern said, "there's an incredible opportunity for knowledge sharing," with that being one NAA goal. He previously spent nine years as U.S. Chamber of Commerce chief operating officer, and spent part of his talk discussing the ins and outs of lobbying. "This is a tough environment for advocacy," Chavern said, saying much of the job involves laying the groundwork for when legislative action has a better likelihood of passage.
Growing subscriber rolls at some cable TV providers, even as the over-the-top (OTT) market booms, indicate people "really like to watch TV," said Corie Wright, Netflix director-global public policy, Wednesday at Incompas' 2016 Policy Summit. "It's not an either/or proposition -- a price point for something like Netflix or [Amazon] Prime makes it easy to add onto your core package," she said on a panel on the streaming video content marketplace.
Analysts are skeptical of Viacom's plan to rebound from ratings declines at some of its biggest pay-TV networks, given the onslaught of newer media and online competition. Speaking as Viacom announced results Tuesday for FY Q1 that ended Dec. 31 that disappointed some analysts, CEO Philippe Dauman said the company would rebound, but analysts said they're not so sure. Investors, too, were cautious, with Viacom stock closing down 18 percent Tuesday and closing Wednesday down another 4.4 percent to $35.15.
Analysts are skeptical of Viacom's plan to rebound from ratings declines at some of its biggest pay-TV networks, given the onslaught of newer media and online competition. Speaking as Viacom announced results Tuesday for FY Q1 that ended Dec. 31 that disappointed some analysts, CEO Philippe Dauman said the company would rebound, but analysts said they're not so sure. Investors, too, were cautious, with Viacom stock closing down 18 percent Tuesday and closing Wednesday down another 4.4 percent to $35.15.
Landline telcos' largest trade group quit a coalition of telcos, pay-TV providers, consumer groups and others that has been seeking to block Charter Communications' planned buys of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable. Meanwhile, FCC staff asked executives of two major programmers to discuss the pair of deals worth about $90 billion, said filings posted Friday in docket 15-149. The staffers are asking programmers questions about video market competition and past transaction conditions as part of the agency's review of Charter/TWC/BHN.
Landline telcos' largest trade group quit a coalition of telcos, pay-TV providers, consumer groups and others that has been seeking to block Charter Communications' planned buys of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable. Meanwhile, FCC staff asked executives of two major programmers to discuss the pair of deals worth about $90 billion, said filings posted Friday in docket 15-149. The staffers are asking programmers questions about video market competition and past transaction conditions as part of the agency's review of Charter/TWC/BHN.
Charter Communications still hopes to see federal approval of its $89.1 billion takeovers of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable by the end of March, CEO Tom Rutledge said on a conference call Thursday on FY 2015 financial results. "We're reasonably confident the FCC and DOJ [Department of Justice] are on track to stay within the [180-day] shot clock," Rutledge said. As of Thursday, it stood at 131 days.
Charter Communications still hopes to see federal approval of its $89.1 billion takeovers of Bright House Networks and Time Warner Cable by the end of March, CEO Tom Rutledge said on a conference call Thursday on FY 2015 financial results. "We're reasonably confident the FCC and DOJ [Department of Justice] are on track to stay within the [180-day] shot clock," Rutledge said. As of Thursday, it stood at 131 days.
From regulatory reform to incentives to help justify the total cost of ownership of a network, rural broadband advocates came to the launch of the House's bipartisan Rural Broadband Caucus Wednesday with a litany of suggestions. "As much as we want to advance rural broadband, if you don't have a government program [to] support the deployment and maintenance, people aren't going to deploy it," said Sarah Tyree, CoBank vice president-government affairs. The caucus' focus was expected (see 1602020057).
From regulatory reform to incentives to help justify the total cost of ownership of a network, rural broadband advocates came to the launch of the House's bipartisan Rural Broadband Caucus Wednesday with a litany of suggestions. "As much as we want to advance rural broadband, if you don't have a government program [to] support the deployment and maintenance, people aren't going to deploy it," said Sarah Tyree, CoBank vice president-government affairs. The caucus' focus was expected (see 1602020057).