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FCC and derives
The FCC derives its jurisdiction to facilitate the deployment of broadband to Americans in Section 706 in the Telecommunications act of 1996.

FCC and regulatory
11501 ( 1998 ), reviewed this policy ( this report was not an order and did not have the effect of regulatory law-it is however, an excellent capture of FCC policy at that time ).
Practical synchronous digital systems radiate electromagnetic energy on a number of narrow bands spread on the clock frequency and its harmonics, resulting in a frequency spectrum that, at certain frequencies, can exceed the regulatory limits for electromagnetic interference ( e. g. those of the FCC in the United States, JEITA in Japan and the IEC in Europe ).
At the same time, a series of regulatory moves by the FCC opened up the more desirable VHF band for additional full power stations in sizable Eastern and Midwestern markets between 1958 and 1963, allowing ABC to acquire full-time affiliation agreements with additional full-coverage stations in key parts of the country.
One reason for this is that a device which outputs an RF signal must in general be certified by regulatory authorities — such as the U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) — and thus by having an external RF modulator, only the modulator itself needed to be certified, rather than the entire video game system.
until the Hush-A-Phone v. United States federal court ruling and the Carterfone FCC regulatory ruling.
Additionally, OPAD carries out research, files reports, letters and formal comments, and proposes and respondes to federal legislation for the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) and other regulatory committees.
The Society continually monitors regulatory issues and frequently files comments with the FCC and other federal and state agencies.
After Margolese had obtained regulatory clearance, the FCC also sold a license to XM Satellite Radio, which followed Sirius's example.
This group deal was granted FCC approval in mid-November 2007 after it faced regulatory review and numerous challenges for over a year, and officially closed on November 30.
Recent FCC regulatory decisions permit such use of a broadcast translator to rebroadcast in standard analog FM the content of a digital-only HD Radio subchannel of another radio station.
According to Behringer, it had overlooked the differences in testing standards and procedures under FCC and European requirements and has since implemented a complete UL certified safety and EMC testing laboratory under the UL certified witness program, including an in-house audit and global regulatory review system.
Such systems are used in military signals intelligence and by radio regulatory agencies such as the U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) for identifying illegal transmitters.
Color broadcasts continued for nearly 30 months, when regulatory and commercial pressures forced the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) to rescind its original color standard and begin the process of adopting the 525-line NTSC-3 standard, developed by RCA to be backwards compatible with the existing black-and-white televisions.
Nominal power is ultimately a historical artifact of the regulatory regime employed by the FCC prior to the 1980s.
When problems arose over patents and corporate marketing strategies, regulatory decisions were made by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) to control commercial broadcasting.
Nielsen Media Research had reclassified KNTV as part of the then fifth-largest market in September 2000 and KNTV had fulfilled FCC regulatory requirements to be considered part of the market by doubling its signal power to better cover the Bay Area.
While regulatory authority rests with the FCC, it usually adopts NRSC recommendations, such as RBDS and spectral masks.
A 1975 deal to sell the station to Donrey Media Group collapsed when the FCC deferred action on the deal due to regulatory issues surrounding the license renewal of Donrey's KORK-TV in Las Vegas, Nevada.

FCC and authority
Herald-Traveler Corp. operated for years under temporary authority from the Federal Communications Commission stemming from controversy over luncheon meetings the newspaper's chief executive had with an FCC commissioner during the original licensing process ( Some Boston broadcast historians accuse the Boston Globe of being covertly behind the proceeding.
In the United States, primary frequency assignment authority is exercised by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration ( NTIA ) for the Federal Government and by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) for non-Federal Government organizations.
In June 2007, in the case Federal Communications Commission v. Fox Television Stations, the U. S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the FCC could not issue indecency fines against the Fox network because the FCC does not have the authority to fine broadcasters for fleeting expletives, such as in the case of the Billboard Awards.
The FCC adopted the FRC's limited authority.
The Court stated that the FCC had the authority to prohibit such broadcasts during hours when children were likely to be among the audience, and gave the FCC broad leeway to determine what constituted indecency in different contexts.
Circuit ruled that the FCC had exceeded its authority in creating this rule.
The court stated that the Commission could not prohibit the manufacture of computer or video hardware without copy protection technology because the FCC only has authority to regulate transmissions, not devices that receive communications.
While it is always possible that the Supreme Court could overturn this holding, the more likely reemergence of the broadcast flag is in legislation of the United States Congress granting such authority to the FCC.
Congress passed the Cable Television Protection and Competition Act of 1992, which gave the FCC authority to create rules requiring cable operators to prohibit certain shows.
Apparently because this had not been approved yet in 2010, the station had special temporary authority to remain silent, though the FCC still allowed commercial WWWQ to be listed as its input signal.
" Under authority provided by the All Channel Receiver Act, the FCC adopted a number of technical standards to increase parity between the UHF and VHF television services, including a 14dB maximum UHF noise figure for television receivers.
Best Buy is disputing both the fines and the authority of the FCC to impose the penalties ; Circuit City and Sears also disputed the charges.
It also requires no FCC approval, coming under a station's subsidiary communications authority.
Because basic radio transmission equipment is relatively easy to obtain in the USA and because it is relatively easy to hide, the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ), which has the authority to regulate radio communications, sometimes has difficulty in finding and prosecuting offenders who transmit without a license.
In the United States, Public Law 97-259, enacted in 1982, gave the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) the authority to regulate the susceptibility of consumer electronic equipment sold in the country.
The new transmitter began operating on program test authority from the FCC, at the WUNI-TV tower on Stiles Hill in Boylston, Massachusetts.
WAAF continued to operate from this site, under the original program test authority until May 26, 2011, when the FCC officially issued a license for the site.
The FTC's powers are statutorily restricted in some cases ; for example, airlines are subject to the authority of the Federal Aviation Administration ( FAA ), and cell phone carriers are subject to the authority of the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ).
On 6 April 2010, the United States Court of Appeal for the District of Columbia in Comcast Corp. v. FCC ruled that the FCC lacks the authority to force Internet service providers to keep their networks open to all forms of content.
The U. S. Telecommunications Act of 1996 granted the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) authority to regulate how customer proprietary network information ( CPNI ) can be used and to enforce related consumer information privacy provisions.

FCC and from
In 1989, the FCC granted carriers an expansion from the current 666 channels to the final 832 ( 416 per carrier ).
RCA began to lobby for a change in the law or FCC regulations that would prevent FM radios from becoming dominant.
Although they denied wrongdoing, David Sarnoff and RCA managed to get the FCC to move the FM radio spectrum from 42-50 MHz, to 88-108 MHz, while getting new low-powered community television stations allocated to a new Channel 1 in the 44-50 MHz range.
The service began operating in Palm Springs, California on November 27, 1953, but due to pressure from the FCC, the service ended on May 15, 1954.
The FCC approved the use of ASCII by Amateur Radio stations on March 17, 1980 with speeds up to 300 baud from 3. 5 to 21. 25 MHz and 1200 baud between 28 and 225 MHz.
When the steel is in an austenitic phase and then quenched it forms into martensite, because the atoms " freeze " in place when the cell structure changes from FCC to BCC.
Many complaints ( all radio stations are required by the FCC to maintain, in their public files, copies of all correspondence from the public relating to station operations – for a period of three years from receipt ) have been received from fans of this musical genre ( Tony Bennett, Frank Sinatra, big band music ," etc.
60 speed became the de facto standard for amateur radio RTTY operation because of the widespread availability of equipment at that speed and the U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) restrictions to only 60 speed from 1953 to 1972.
Also, some UPN stations aired a block of cartoon programming from DIC Entertainment ( such as Trollz and Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century ) which was designed to meet the minimal three hours of E / I programming required by the FCC, and usually airs either six days a week for a half-hour each day, or in three hour-long blocks throughout the week.
By 1971, the FCC introduced the Prime Time Access Rule, which freed local network affiliates in the top 50 markets ( in practice, the entire network ) to take a half hour of prime time from the networks on Mondays through Saturdays and one full hour on Sundays.
It was only when the FCC returned an hour to the networks on Sundays ( for children's / family or news programming ), taken away from them four years earlier, in a 1975 amendment to the Access Rule that CBS finally found a viable permanent timeslot for 60 Minutes.
An example would be WBAI's broadcasting the track " Filthy Words " from a George Carlin comedy album, which eventually led to the 1978 Supreme Court case of FCC v. Pacifica Foundation.
In 1968, FCC regulators intervened when the Bell System tried to prevent a mobile communications system, the Carterfone, from connecting to telephone lines.
In the U. S. Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) proceeding the Second Computer Inquiry, the FCC ruled that telecommunications carriers could no longer bundle CPE with telecommunications service, uncoupling the market power of the telecommunications service monopoly from the CPE market, and creating a competitive CPE market.
As the FCC was investigating the broadcasts, in 2004, Fox announced that it would begin extending live broadcast delays to 5 minutes from its standard 5 or 10 seconds to more easily be able to edit out obscenities uttered over the air.
That fine was reduced to $ 91, 000 after it was discovered that the FCC originally claimed to have received 159 complaints, it later admitted to only receiving 90, which came from only 23 people.
For example, in the United States, signal leakage from cable television systems is regulated by the FCC, since cable signals use the same frequencies as aeronautical and radionavigation bands.
Other commercial names from around the world are Algofrene, Arcton, Asahiflon, Daiflon, Eskimo, FCC, Flon, Flugene, Forane, Fridohna, Frigen, Frigedohn, Genetron, Isceon, Isotron, Kaiser, Kaltron, Khladon, Ledon, Racon, and Ucon.
DuMont was in financial trouble for a number of reasons, not the least of which was an FCC ruling that barred it from acquiring two additional O & Os because of two stations owned by Paramount.
The Federal Radio Commission ( FRC ) was a government body that regulated radio use in the United States from its creation in 1926 until its replacement by the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) in 1934.

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