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Regulating the Infrastructure in Digital Television within the UK Context. Did the 2003 Communications Act remedy the mistakes of the past? Eliza Varney The University of Hull eliza_pop@yahoo.com ITS Conference, Policy and Regulation for Digital Broadcasting Berlin, 4-7 September 2004.
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Regulating the Infrastructure in Digital Television within the UK Context Did the 2003 Communications Act remedy the mistakes of the past? Eliza Varney The University of Hull eliza_pop@yahoo.com ITS Conference, Policy and Regulation for Digital Broadcasting Berlin, 4-7 September 2004
Introduction • This paper assesses the extent to which the 2003 Communications Act provides an effective response to the regulation of the infrastructure in digital television. • Reference is made to previous flaws associated with the implementation of the 1995 Advanced Television Standards (ATS) Directive. • Particular emphasis is placed on the regulation of bottlenecks. This is approached from a dual perspective: • Economic concerns (technical and competition-related challenges). • Public policy concerns (non-economic interests, such as pluralism and diversity and citizenship-related concerns). • The study demonstrates that, while responding to the technical aspects of bottlenecks regulation, the Act fails to address adequately the public policy implications of the bottlenecks challenge.
Part I: Economic concerns • Need to advance a common framework for regulating bottlenecks. • ATS Directive: Failure to cover interactive services. Need for a “horizontal approach” in regulating electronic communications networks and services; • Oftel: Measures covering “access control services” to avoid tying regulation to a particular technology; • Communications Act: Move towards a horizontal approach. • Over-emphasis with CASs. • ATS Directive: Over-emphasis with CASs, at the expense of APIs and EPGs. • Oftel: Went beyond what was required in the ATS Directive and included EPGs in its interpretation of CASs. • Communications Act: specific reference to the regulation of APIs and EPGs. Extends to receivers the requirement to provide access on a fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory basis. • Failure to define “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory access”. (FRND). • ATS Directive: Did not define FRND. • Same level of ambiguity in the 2002 Directives in the 2003 Communications Act. • Oftel: guidelines on FRND. However, these are not binding. • Standardisation. • Effective access to networks can be guaranteed only by ensuring open standards or interoperability between proprietary technology. • ATS Directive: lack of adequate measures to address these issues. • The 2003 Communications Act “encourages” rather than mandates standardisation.
Part II: Public Policy Concerns • The bottlenecks challenge affects the public not only as consumers but also as citizens. • Public policy dimension: non-economic interests, such as pluralism and diversity and citizenship-related concerns. • Any room left for active regulatory intervention designed to safeguard citizenship interests? • Deregulatory nature of the Act. • The Act does not place sufficient emphasis on the public policy dimension of regulating bottlenecks. • Within the current framework, references to citizenship interests are minimal: • Although the pursuance of citizens’ interests is placed as the primary duty of OFCOM (s. 3(1)(a)(b), Communications Act), references to “citizens” throughout the Act are few. • Rather than protecting the interest of the public, the current framework proves favourable to commercial interests. • Is there any room left for citizenship interests? • The current framework associates citizenship-related concerns with content regulation. • Regulation of the infrastructure in digital television cannot be limited merely to economic issues. • It needs to accommodate citizenship-related concerns such as pluralism and diversity in the communications sector. • Unfortunately, we are witnessing the gradual transformation of the public from active citizens into passive consumers.
Conclusion • The 2003 Communications Act remedied only the technical flaws of the previous system for regulating bottlenecks in digital television. • Still lack of sufficient protection for the “public policy” dimension of the bottlenecks challenge. • In relation to access and interoperability issues, the Act generally refers to the public by using impersonal terms such as “consumers”, “customers” or “end users”. • In this era of rapid technological advances where the regulatory realm became dominated by market-related interests, it is legitimate to question: when did we stop being citizens?