and that many of the modifications the FCC was trying to make were not supported by "a reasoned analysis," and so remanded the rules back to the Commission.
There's a classic footnote in the opinion (very condescending for formal legal writing):
"Our dissenting colleague asserts several times (indeed it is a principal theme) that we somehow substitute our own policy judgment for that of the Commission. Our response is simple. It is impossible to substitute our policy judgment for that of the Commission when we have no view on its policies save that it act with reason."
In essence, the court is saying that Micheal Powell full of shit.
It's also interesting that the court found that the FCC gave too much weight to the internet in its local diversity index calculations.
"According to the record, most sources of local news on the Internet are the websites for newspapers and broadcast television stations. See, e.g., UCC Comments at 33 (62% of Internet users get local news from newspaper websites, 39% visit television station websites). And the examples the Commission does cite—the Drudge Report and Salon.com—have a national, not local, news focus."
The court had this to say about Drudge in a footnote:
"Moreover, the Drudge Report is an “aggregator” of news stories from other news outlets’ websites and, as such, is not itself normally a “source” of news, national or local."
Guess that applies to DU as well. We're "aggregators." B-)
If anyone's interested, the opinion is very readable and it's actually a very good primer on broadcast regulation:
http://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/staymotion/033388p.pdfIf the pdf won't open, you may have to change a preference setting:
http://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/pdfproblems.htm