[n° ou bulletin] Titre : | Iris Spécial - Novembre 2012 - Converged Markets – Converged Power? Regulation and Case Law | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Année de publication : | 2012 | Note générale : | Numéro existant aussi en version française | Langues : | Anglais Français | Catégories : | ECONOMIE - Aspects Généraux MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL
| Tags : | audiovisuel aspect économique régulation convergence concurrence télévision connectée vidéo à la demande Union Européenne must-carry neutralité du net transparence opérateurs | Index. décimale : | 011.37 médias visuels et audiovisuels | Résumé : | "The first part of this IRIS Special explores the European Union’s approach to limiting media power, an approach still dominated by the application of competition law. This IRIS Special explains the general functioning of competition law and other regulatory instruments. It specifically shows how the various services provided in the audiovisual sector are regulated and what markets are to be distinguished.
The second part contains a description of the legal frameworks of 11 European countries used to address media power. For each of these countries you will find in particular information on the regulation of audiovisual media services and enabling services, platforms and converged services, and finally distribution services.
The eleven countries were selected for this study because they either represented major markets for audiovisual media services in Europe, or because they developed outside the constraints of the internal market, or because they had some interesting unique feature, for example the ability to attract major market players despite lacking an adequately sized market.
The third part brings in the economic background in the form of different overviews concerning audience market shares for television and video online. This data puts the legal information into an everyday context.
The fourth and final part seeks to tie together the common threads in state regulation of media power, to work out the main differences and to hint to some unusual solutions. Here and there it will weave in aspects of EU law that have influenced the national legal frameworks."
Source : http://www.obs.coe.int/oea_publ/iris_special/2012_01.html
Consulté le : 22-11-2012 |
[n° ou bulletin] Iris Spécial - Novembre 2012 - Converged Markets – Converged Power? Regulation and Case Law [texte imprimé] . - 2012. Numéro existant aussi en version française Langues : Anglais Français Catégories : | ECONOMIE - Aspects Généraux MEDIAS:AUDIOVISUEL
| Tags : | audiovisuel aspect économique régulation convergence concurrence télévision connectée vidéo à la demande Union Européenne must-carry neutralité du net transparence opérateurs | Index. décimale : | 011.37 médias visuels et audiovisuels | Résumé : | "The first part of this IRIS Special explores the European Union’s approach to limiting media power, an approach still dominated by the application of competition law. This IRIS Special explains the general functioning of competition law and other regulatory instruments. It specifically shows how the various services provided in the audiovisual sector are regulated and what markets are to be distinguished.
The second part contains a description of the legal frameworks of 11 European countries used to address media power. For each of these countries you will find in particular information on the regulation of audiovisual media services and enabling services, platforms and converged services, and finally distribution services.
The eleven countries were selected for this study because they either represented major markets for audiovisual media services in Europe, or because they developed outside the constraints of the internal market, or because they had some interesting unique feature, for example the ability to attract major market players despite lacking an adequately sized market.
The third part brings in the economic background in the form of different overviews concerning audience market shares for television and video online. This data puts the legal information into an everyday context.
The fourth and final part seeks to tie together the common threads in state regulation of media power, to work out the main differences and to hint to some unusual solutions. Here and there it will weave in aspects of EU law that have influenced the national legal frameworks."
Source : http://www.obs.coe.int/oea_publ/iris_special/2012_01.html
Consulté le : 22-11-2012 |
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