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Message-ID: <97d11bd0-c896-4cd5-b0ce-6243cf505f78@googlegroups.com>
Date: 2 May 2019 13:03:02 -0700
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: Waiting game: Will blocking of conservative ad content
cease?
On Thursday, May 2, 2019 at 2:13:57 PM UTC-4, Bill Horne wrote:
> A conservative activist is taking the head of AT&T at his word when he
> says his employees need to stop blocking conservatives from
> advertising platforms.
This is a tricky issue. First off, news organizations have always
had rules for ads they would not accept, some based on good taste,
some based on extreme political stances of either side. Mainstream
newspapers tended not to accept ads from extremists groups.
Publications with a point of view (such as the publication cited
in this thread) might not be so open minded.
Also, while generally news media are pretty flexible about
printing ads with questionable honesty--it's not for them
to judge ad claims--in extreme cases of blatant fraud or
propaganda they won't run an ad.
Needless to say, a private news organization should have the
freedom to decide for itself what ads to run and not to run.
In my own opinion, I don't think communications carriers should
be venturing in certain lines of businesses where they could be
excused of conflicts of interest. IMHO, AT&T should not have
purchased AppNexus in the first place. But those days are gone.
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Message-ID: <9dfc7564-31d5-4bab-b236-b7968be2e8c6@googlegroups.com>
Date: 2 May 2019 13:14:38 -0700
From: HAncock4 <withheld@invalid.telecom-digest.org>
Subject: Re: Guest column: Why we oppose the Incline Village cell
tower (opinion)
On Thursday, May 2, 2019 at 2:13:57 PM UTC-4, Bill Horne wrote:
> Moderator Note: Not-in-my-oh-so-perfect-Stepford-clockwork-department ...
>
> Incline Village residents are protesting the proposed cell tower on
> Village Boulevard.
>
> Although we're not against enhanced cell coverage, we are against the
> eyesore of a 117-foot monopole in the middle of Incline towering 30 or
> more feet above surrounding trees and buildings, sitting within a few
> hundred feet of high-density residences (including six homeowner
> associations), on an 1,800-square-foot cement pad with four large
> equipment boxes, a huge propane gas container, and a noisy emergency
> generator behind a 6-foot fence, all less than 50 feet from the Tahoe
> Regional Planning Agency Class 1 biking/walking path on Village
> Boulevard, which is one of Incline's most highly trafficked streets.
>
> For these reasons - and others having to do with the faulty
> application of Incline Partners - we're appealing the April 4 Board of
> Adjustment approval of the tower (a 2 to 1 decision), which the Board
> of Commissioners will hear in May.
>
https://www.tahoedailytribune.com/news/opinion/guest-column-why-we-oppose-the-incline-village-cell-tower-opinion/
Many towns and cities have zoning ordinances that prohibit high towers
in certain sections. When a communication carrier seeks to build a
radio tower, they often claim they are federally regulated and as such
they can override local rules. That often works (along with a high
powered legal team that outguns a small town.)
Personally, it irked me that communications sought to have it both
ways. When it favored them, they were a regulated company with powers
granted by being regulated. But when it favored them, they were
suddenly in a free market and old regulations didn't apply to them.
> ***** Moderator's Other Note *****
>
> No, it doesn't matter if it's in this or that state or even this or
> that country. If someone chooses to live in a manufactured version of
> the "perfect" little town, then they have to take what comes with it.
>
> I suppose this is the same thing as the well-tended four-square-feet
> patches of grass that adorn city sidewalks, or the pretend fireplaces
> some computer users have as screensavers - but it's dangerous. The
> "benefits" of one-microscopic-size-fits-all insular developments come
> with physical /and/ psychological costs, and we ignore them at our
> peril.
I respectfully have to disagree with this. If a town chooses to have
restrictive zoning to maintain an attractive character, that is its
choice. Generally, that yields nice well maintained buildings, good
property values, and a nice community. If someone doesn't like that
style, there are plenty of unregulated communities.
I've seen cell phone towers shoved into highly inappropriate places
and they look like hell. The support equipment, like generators and
service trucks are noisy and a nuisance to nearby residences. In one
location, the service trucks illegally park on nearby properties; the
carriers don't give a damn and in practice there's little that can be
done even if on paper it is illegal.
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Message-ID: <20190502130723.GA500@telecom.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2019 13:07:23 +0000
From: Bill Horne <bill@horneQRM.net>
Subject: FCC Commissioner Demands Answers from AT&T, T-Mobile,
Sprint, Verizon on Phone Location Data
The demands are the latest move to pressure telecom companies, who
said they would stop the sale of location data to third parties after
Motherboard's coverage.
On Wednesday, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner
Jessica Rosenworcel demanded answers from AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, and
Verizon on their sale of customers' phone location information to data
aggregators. As Motherboard has shown in multiple investigations, this
data, which sometimes included highly precise assisted-GPS data, ended
up in the hands of bounty hunters, bail bondsmen, or private
investigators.
The demands are the latest move to pressure telcom companies, who said
they would stop the sale of location data to third parties after
Motherboard's coverage. AT&T and T-Mobile previously told Motherboard
that sale has ended, and Sprint said it would stop at the end of May.
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/j5wmzg/fcc-commissioner-demands-answers-from-atandt-t-mobile-sprint-verizon-on-phone-location-data
--
Bill Horne
(Remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
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End of telecom Digest Sat, 04 May 2019