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Where were the
visionary heroes of the current administration when the horse-drawn
transportation industry required protection from the newly created
internal combustion engine? With proper government application of
regulations and taxes and fees, the mechanical abnormalities could
have been suppressed out of existence and today we would not be
breathing polluted air or paying for expensive gasoline. (There'd be
oats and horseshit, but never mind...)
How Not To Save News
By JEFF JARVIS
Last Updated: 5:06 AM, June 3, 2010
The Federal Trade Commission says it wants to save journalism. I'm
not sure who asked it to.
In a just-released "staff discussion draft" of "potential policy
recommendations to support the reinvention of journalism," the
agency only circles its wagons around old newspapers and their
fading business models.
If the FTC wants to reinvent journalism, perhaps it should align
with news' disruptors. But there's none of that in this report. The
word blog is used but once in 35 pages of text--and then only in a
parenthetical mention of soccer blogs. Discussion of investing in
technology comes on the last page in a suggestion about tools for
"improved electronic note-taking."
I testified before these untechnocrats and told them about my
research at CUNY's Graduate School of Journalism into the emerging
ecosystem of news. We found profitable hyperlocal bloggers selling
$200,000 in ads per year. And we built new, less expensive business
models for news (at newsinnovation.com). But that's not mentioned,
either.
Instead, the FTC staff declares defeat in the search for business
models so it may explore many government interventions, including:
* Expanding copyright law and restricting the doctrine of fair
comment to benefit legacy publishers.
* Granting antitrust exemptions to allow publishers to collude on
pricing to consumers and to business partners.
* Giving news organizations tax exemptions.
* Subsidizing news organizations by increasing government funding to
public broadcasting; establishing an AmeriCorps to pay reporters;
giving news companies tax credits for employing journalists;
creating a national fund for local news, and giving the press an
increased postal subsidy.
To its credit, the FTC does ask how to pay for all this. So the
staffers speculated about what I'll dub the iPad tax -- a 5 percent
surcharge on consumer electronics to raise $4 billion for news. They
also consider a tax on broadcast spectrum and even on advertising.
Most dangerous of all, the FTC considers a doctrine of "proprietary
facts," as if anyone should gain the right to restrict the flow of
information just as the information is opening it up. Copyright law
protects the presentation of news but no one owns facts -- and if
anyone did, you could be forbidden from sharing them. How does that
serve free speech?
The FTC's one suggestion I can salute is more government
transparency -- making agencies release information in standard
formats, enabling us all to become watchdogs. But that's about
responsible government, not saving journalism.
The good news in all this is that the FTC's bureaucrats try hard to
recommend little. They just discuss. And much of what the agency
staff ponders are political impossibilities. If there was grumbling
about bailing out General Motors, imagine the hailstorm about
raising taxes to save newspapers.
The report quotes my testimony to the FTC, where I said I'm
"optimistic to a fault about the future of news and journalism."
That's because the barrier to entry into the media business has
never been lower -- and that means news can grow.
The government should favor neither incumbents nor newcomers, but
rather create a level playing field by helping every American get
open, high-speed access to the Internet. That is the gateway to the
real future of news and media.
I believe that future is entrepreneurial, not institutional. The
industry's institutions have had 15 years since the start of the
commercial Web and we've seen how far they can come. What we need
now are innovators -- like my entrepreneurial journalism students --
to invent new forms, structures, efficiencies and business models
for news.
But those entrepreneurs don't need government help. They need to be
left alone with the assurance they won't be interfered with by the
FTC -- or the FCC, which has its own hearings and reports on the
future of journalism.
"Get off our lawn," I testified to both agencies in Washington. That
didn't make it into the report.
Jeff Jarvis, author of "What Would Google Do?", teaches at the
CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.
Oh yeah, - one of the other points in the position
paper was against online "news aggregators" such as the wildly
successful "Drudge Report",
which tends to lean conservative.

Matt Drudge
Freedom of The
Press - it's in the Constitution. You can look it up.
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