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Mon, May 12, 9:10pm
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NPR's war on Low Power FM: the laws of physics vs. politics
by Matthew Lasar Apr 26 2008 - 10:00pm Ars Technica story
National Public Radio continues to move aggressively against Federal Communications Commission proposals that would, if not allow nonprofits to build more Low Power FM stations (LPFM), at least let existing ones survive the intrusion of new full power neighbors. NPR is quite plain about the matter in its FCC filings: it stands opposed to the Low Power exceptions, even though they might help keep FM offerings diverse. NPR charges that the FCC is putting feel-good policies ahead of the laws of physics. "The laws of physics have not changed, and a system of full power broadcast stations serves many more listeners with less interference compared to low power broadcasting," NPR told the FCC this month. "While LPFM stations may advance the interests of localism and diversity, the Commission cannot assume that LPFM is inherently better than full power service." ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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LLFCC (Lasar's Letter on the FCC); copyright 2005, 2006, 2007.
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