Complete Story
 

08/29/2017

FCC Seeks Input on Competition Among Video Providers

The FCC has issued its call for comment on the next (19th) video competition report and it is particularly interested in answering the question of whether, or how much, broadcasting, cable and over-the-top are substitutes for each other, which would help it determine how competitive the video marketplace is.

Historically the competition report has not actually drawn a conclusion about the competitiveness of the market, instead summarizing the business models and strategies in various sectors and providing financial and operating data. But that could change.

"We are especially interested in intergroup competition between the video services offered by MVPDs, OVDs, and broadcast television stations," the FCC's Media Bureau said in seeking comment on the new report.

Related: FCC Posts 1.5M Net Neutrality Comments Since Extending Deadline

Key to that assessment is whether they are substitutes or supplements. The more substitutable (competitive) they are, arguably the less need there is for regulation to promote competition.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has been critical of past reports for not acknowledging what he sees as the growing intergroup competitiveness, a video marketplace that Pai and fellow commissioner Michael O'Rielly have called "objectively more vibrant and competitive than at any time in history."

Click here for the full story.

Printer-Friendly Version