Henry Waxman

The U.S. government is wading into deliberations over the future of journalism as printed newspapers, television stations and other traditional media outlets suffer from Americans' growing reliance on the Internet.

With the media business in a state of economic distress as audiences and advertisers migrate online, the Federal Trade Commission began a two-day workshop Tuesday to examine the profound challenges facing media companies and explore ways the government can help them survive.

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski said Monday that Internet providers, including wireless, phone, cable and satellite companies, should not be allowed to block some types of content traveling over their broadband networks.

He told the Brookings Institute in Washington, D.C., that wireless carriers should be held to the "open Internet" rules by which home broadband providers are already abiding.

Now that President Barack Obama is settled in, his administration's push to delay the transition from analog broadcast television to digital is in full swing. Senate Republicans, who initially didn't support the DTV delay, now favor pushing the transition from Feb. 17 to June 12. The Senate is expected to vote next week and the House soon after.

The reintroduced DTV Delay Act, pushed by Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.), still keeps the June 12 date, but now allows broadcast stations to switch to digital signals before June 12.

A much-publicized meeting by the Federal Communications Commission later this month has been canceled. The meeting's agenda included a vote on a plan that could have provided free broadband wireless service to underserved areas of the U.S.

The FCC said the meeting for Dec. 18 was canceled following a request from Sens. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) that the agency scale down other efforts in order to concentrate on the switch to digital-television broadcasts in February.

Pressure From Both Sides

In a scathing report released Tuesday, congressional investigators outlined a pattern of mismanagement, dysfunction and abuse of power at the Federal Communications Commission under the agency's Republican chairman, Kevin Martin.

The report -- the result of a nearly yearlong, bipartisan investigation by the House Energy and Commerce Committee -- accuses Martin of manipulating data and suppressing information to influence telecommunications policy debates at the agency and on Capitol Hill.