From children's television to political advertising rules, television broadcasters free use of the "public airwaves" included "public interest obligations." As broadcast spectrum and the viewing public migrate increasingly to mobile broadband, is there still a place for the public interest? Can concepts such as public file disclosure or anti-payolla rules have meaning in...
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From children's television to political advertising rules, television broadcasters free use of the "public airwaves" included "public interest obligations." As broadcast spectrum and the viewing public migrate increasingly to mobile broadband, is there still a place for the public interest? Can concepts such as public file disclosure or anti-payolla rules have meaning in Cyberspace? What does "local news" or service to a "local community" mean for a global, mobile medium?
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Organized by: Rutgers School of Law | Camden: Institute for Information Policy & Law