CONVERGENCE ELECTRONIC MASS COMMUNICATION POLICY AUSTRALIA

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CONVERGENCE and ELECTRONIC MASS COMMUNICATION POLICY in AUSTRALIA Dissertation by Ian Hayne Submitted as part of the requirements for the award of the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Communication (Honours). University of Canberra October 1993

I D Hayne December 1993 Set in Times New Roman using PageMaker 5.0

Abstract The historical assumptions that underpin broadcasting regulation in Australia have included scarcity of spectrum for broadcasting, concerns about the power of the media to influence, an expectation that a service that uses spectrum belonging to the public should be used for the public good, and a desire on the part of Governments to offer economic protection from competition in return for the provision of public goods by broadcasters. Despite the substantial reforms to broadcasting regulation implemented by the Broadcasting Services Act 1992, the whole broadcasting system that now exists has grown incrementally on the foundations of these unchallenged assumptions. Service innovations made possible by convergence of communications and computing technologies, however, challenge many of these assumptions. Convergence also provides for many forms of physical media that are currently exempt from restrictive regulation, to migrate into the electronic domain, inviting questions about if, and how, they should be covered by the type of regulation currently applied to broadcast media. If they are not to be subject to restrictive regulation, will they be able to be sufficiently differentiated from broadcasting to allow industry specific regulation of broadcasting to be unaffected by their presence? The approach to the study of mass communication policy and law in Australia, until very recently, was steeped in a public trust paradigm. The recent emergence of a market paradigm, coupled with challenges to the assumptions underlying the regulation following from the convergence of services and technology opens new issues to academic inquiry. This dissertation sketches out some of the challenges for broadcasting policy that lie in this new conceptual territory.

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Acknowledgments I would firstly like to record my appreciation for the financial assistance provided during this last year by the Department of Transport and Communications through the staff scholarship scheme. This scheme enabled me to undertake full-time study during 1993 and complete my honours year. In particular, I would like to thank Mr Tony Shaw, First Assistant Secretary of the Broadcasting Policy Division and Mr Chris North, Principal Adviser of the Broadcasting Policy Division, for their personal support of my application. I also want to extend personal thanks to Chris North who graciously gave his time to review this manuscript, offering many helpful suggestions. I am also very grateful to Dr John Penhallurick in the Faculty of Communication at the University of Canberra, who supervised my research during 1993. John was always available to discuss issues and problems, and he provided helpful guidance on both the direction of my research and on possible useful sources. John was a welcome source of encouragement throughout the year, and I am lucky to have worked with someone who knows the territory so well. I am also grateful for the helpful comments and guidance provided along the way by Dr Mark Balnaves and Mr Rob Schaap. Rob supervised my research in an elective unit during my honours year, and the results of that research are presented here as a supporting appendix. As a proponent of an alternative view to the one advanced here, he provided very useful guidance on matters that I should recognise. As unit covenor of the dissertation unit, Mark was exposed to my approach and expectations at a very early stage. He too provided continuous support for the project, for which I am grateful. I also want to thank Mr Phil Callan, who has no connection with communication issues, communication policy or communication theory, but who also graciously gave of his time to cast a critical eye over the draft. That he was able to do so without finding the paper a cure for his chronic insomnia says much for his endurance, and for his value as a friend. Page vii

Finally. I would like to thank my wife, Vicki, who supported my studies over the last few years with patience and understanding. She understood when social engagements had to be curtailed or abandoned. She tolerated a fair chunk of our disposable income being directed to books and materials and a host of other things. She banished me to our study to complete this thesis or that essay, even when there were a thousand other things that we would both rather be doing. She also assisted in proofing this paper. During this last year, we have both been distracted by the imminent arrival of our first child. Even through this, Vicki maintained the pressure on me to keep up the work, and do it to my best. IDH October 1993

for Jordan Hayne

Page x

Commonly Used Abbreviations ABA ABC ABCB ABT ADSL AM ATVI AWA BEN B-ISDN B-MAC BSA BTCE CD Australian Broadcasting Authority - broadcasting industry regulator established by the Broadcasting Services Act 1992. Australian Broadcasting Corporation - publicly funded national broadcaster. Australian Broadcasting Control Board - broadcasting industry regulator from 1949 to 1976. Australian Broadcasting Tribunal - broadcasting industry regulator from 1976 to 1992. asymmetric digital subscriber line - technique for optimising data capacity on twisted-pair copper telephone lines. amplitude modulation - a scheme for coding information on electromagnetic radiation so that the information varies the amplitude of a constant frequency signal. Australian Television International - a satellite delivered service to South-east Asia packaged by the ABC, transmitted over Indonesian Palapa satellites. Amalgamated Wireless Australasia - operator of the sealed set scheme in the early 1920s. Now a major industrial company. Broadcast Engineering News - broadcasting industry trade journal. broadband integrated services digital network - optical fibre cable digital telecommunications system with very high transmission capacity. multiplexed analogue components - type B. A time division multiplex method of transmitting video information. This system used by RCTS broadcasters and the ABC for satellite transmission of television and radio services to remote areas. Broadcasting Services Act 1992 - The principal regulatory instrument of electronic mass communication regulation in Australia. Bureau of Transport and Communications Economics - subprogram within DOTAC. compact disc - optical storage medium for data, or more popularly for digitally recorded music. Page xi

DAB DAT DOTAC IDD ISDN digital audio broadcasting - digital transmission technique for radio services. digital audio tape - digital coding techniques of music on compact cassette tapes. Department of Transport and Communications - Australian Department of state with responsibility for communication issues. international direct dialling - international telephone service. integrated services digital network - digital telecommunication system. LAN local area network - computer networking within a small area, such as a building. FACTS Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations - commercial television industry peak body. FARB FCC FIRB FM GHz HORSCOTCI MDS MHz OFLC OLE PIN Federation of Australian Radio Broadcasters - commercial radio industry peak body. Federal Communications Commission - US communication industry regulator. Foreign Investment Review Board - reviews foreign investment proposals and makes recommendations to the Government. frequency modulation - a scheme for coding information on electromagnetic radiation so that the information varies the frequency relative to a stable reference. gigahertz - measure of the frequency of electromagnetic radiation. 10 9 cycles per second. House of Representatives Standing Committee on Transport Communications and Infrastructure. multipoint distribution systems - microwave band services to multiple users. megahertz - measure of the frequency of electromagnetic radiation. 10 6 cycles per second. Office of Film and Literature Classification - Commonwealth body which classifies material. object linking and embedding - technique used by Microsoft to integrate software packages operating in the Windows environment. personal identification number. Page xii

PMT PSTN RCTS SBS SMA STD TPC UHF VHF US VAEIS WAN Packer/Murdoch/Telecom - syndicate formed in 1993 to pursue pay TV opportunities in Australia. public switched telephone network. Remote Commercial Television Services - commercial television for remote areas delivered by satellite. Special Broadcasting Service - publicly funded national broadcaster. Spectrum Management Agency - organisation within the Transport and Communications portfolio established to administer the radiofrequency spectrum. subscriber trunk dialling - long distance telephone service. Trade Practices Commission - trade practices and competition policy regulator. ultra high frequency - band of the radiofrequency spectrum between 300 MHz and 3 GHz. very high frequency - band of the radiofrequency spectrum between 30 MHz and 300 MHz. United States - United States of America. video and audio entertainment and information services - broadcasting like services to non-domestic premises, authorised by the Government in 1986. wide area network - computer networking over a large geographic area. Page xiii

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Contents Abstract...iii Acknowledgments...v Commonly Used Abbreviations ix 1. Introduction... 1 Scope of the Study... 1 Convergence... 1 Electronic Mass Communication... 2 Research Questions... 4 Limitations of the Study... 4 Methodology... 5 Assumptions... 6 Ethical Considerations... 6 Format... 7 Importance of the Study... 7 2. The state of regulation...11 Introduction...11 Constitutional Authority...11 Electronic Communication...11 Broadcasting Regulation... 12 The Rationales for Broadcasting Regulation... 15 Rationales and the Current Regulatory Approach... 19 Current Objectives... 19 Categories of Services... 20 Planning the Broadcasting Services Bands... 21 Licensing services... 21 Ownership and Control of Commercial Services... 22 Class licensing... 22 Program Standards... 22 Administrative Provisions of the BSA... 23 Summary... 23 3. Convergence of Technology and Services... 29 Introduction... 29 Technical Developments... 29 Digitisation... 29 New Developments in Telecommunications... 31 Telecommunications Network Productivity... 32 Page xv

Digital Coding of Broadcast Media... 33 Digital Coding of Other Media... 34 Multimedia - a New Service Development... 36 Satellite Technology... 37 Encryption and the Rise of Transactional services... 38 Technical Regulation... 39 Broadcasting Reforms... 40 Telecommunication Reforms... 41 Radiocommunication Reforms... 42 Summary... 44 4. Convergence and the Rationales for Regulation... 49 Introduction... 49 Status of the Rationales in the 90s... 49 Scarcity... 49 Economic Management... 52 Public Property - Public uses... 55 Impact, Influence and Pervasiveness... 57 The Public Interest... 58 Cultural Protection... 59 Welfare of Children... 59 The Quid Pro Quo Rationale... 61 Summary... 62 5. The Public Interest - In Whose Interests?... 65 Introduction... 65 Australian Broadcasting Policy and the Public Interest... 68 The Market Discourse... 69 Public Trustee... 69 Public Participation... 71 The Public Trust Confronted... 73 Classifications of Public Interest Theory... 75 Rationality and the Public Interest... 76 Idealist Constructions of the Public Interest... 79 Realists and the Public Interest... 83 Circularity of the Theoretical Debate... 84 Placement of Australian Media Within Public Interest Theory... 87 The Public Interest as a Justification for Regulation... 88 Conclusions for Australian Broadcasting Policy... 89 6. Implications and Conclusions... 95 Introduction... 95 Planning of Broadcasting Services... 95 Page xvi

Licensing... 97 Ownership and Control of Commercial and Subscription Broadcasting Services... 98 Codes of Practice and Program Standards... 100 Cultural Protection... 100 Protection of Children from Harmful Material... 101 Children's Programs... 101 Administrative Provisions... 102 An Alternative Vision of Regulation... 102 Some New Issues... 102 Media Content as a Commodity... 103 Information Classes in Society... 104 Conclusions... 105 Bibliography... 109 Index...117 Page xvii