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http://www.radioworld.com/article/pirate-radio-thrives-in-internet-age/220315
OTTAWA, Ontario — Unlicensed “pirate” radio stations are thriving in the 
Internet 
age, despite the fact that most people can now operate their own Web-based 
radio 
stations without risking arrest.

“A vibrant pirate radio scene continues in the United States, and also in 
Europe and 
to a lesser extent in South America,” said George Zeller, a pirate radio 
listener/journalist for the past four decades. 

“This includes a very energetic pirate radio scene on shortwave, and also a 
stunningly resilient pirate radio scene on FM and to a lesser extent on medium 
wave, 
despite the frequent busts by the FCC of FM pirates.”

STILL A NEED
“There is most certainly a place for ‘pirate’ radio today — although I would 
debate 
the word pirate,” said Gerry Jackson. She is the founder and station manager of 
SW 
Radio Africa, a pro-democracy station broadcasting into Zimbabwe from an out-of-
country transmitter. “We are a normal radio station, producing news and 
information 
to help inform Zimbabweans in-country.”

So why does SWRA pay hefty electricity bills to broadcast on 4880 kHz, rather 
than 
just streaming its content to Zimbabwe via the Web?

“The age of the Internet is far from global,” Jackson said. “Zimbabweans have 
access 
to very poor bandwidth, unless they are very rich. Plus 90 percent of the 
population 
lives in rural areas where there will be virtually no access to the Internet.” 

She added that there is 90 percent unemployment in Zimbabwe, which effectively 
bars 
the majority from using whatever Web access is available. In contrast, 
“shortwave 
radio reaches all parts of the country,” said Jackson. “If one person in your 
village 
has a radio, then everyone can listen.”


Famed pirate broadcaster Allan Weiner. Credit: Allan Weiner WHY THE PIRATES DO 
IT
There are many kinds of “pirate radio” stations. They run the gamut from 
hobbyists 
broadcasting to their apartment buildings using a low-powered transmitter, MP3 
player 
and cheap microphone to full-blown professional operations, such as SWRA. 
Pirate 
radio stations are also big in major urban centers such as New York and London, 
where 
they tend to lurk at the bottom of the FM bands. 

Many pirate stations have been on-air for decades, said Pat Murphy. He is a 
long-time 
mainstream radio/TV broadcaster in Washington, D.C., pirate radio listener and 
volunteer with the Free Radio Network pirate radio fan website, which has 
merged with 
HFU HF Underground. Long-running pirate stations include “Undercover Radio, 
WBNY(AM) 
(Radio Bunny), Radio Jamba, Wolverine Radio, Channel Z, Blue Ocean, Rave on 
Radio, 
Red Mercury Labs, [shortwave station] WMPR, Radio Free Speech, Captain Ganja, 
Southern Relay Service to name just a few,” Murphy said.

PERSISTENCE
“Some stations specialize in music, others in commentary and talk. WBNY(AM) is 
run by 
a pirate operator who calls himself Commander Bunny and has a rabbit-sounding 
voice, 
has run for president —– with bumper stickers to boot — and is actively sending 
out 
QSL cards (station confirmation of listener reception reports).”

So why do pirate broadcasters risk fines and even jail to broadcast without a 
license? 


A ‘QSL’ issued by Weiner’s Radio Newyork International/RNI on shortwave radio. 
Credit: Allan Weiner “I think the ‘motives’ are different for each person,” 
Murphy 
said. “Some do it for the thrill of it, others to lend a voice to something 
they feel 
the mainstream media has ignored, and others do it for the fun of it.”

In the case of legendary pirate broadcaster Allan Weiner — operator of Radio 
Newyork 
International, which broadcast off the New York Atlantic coast using ship-based 
transmitters in the 1980s — the motivation was exercising his U.S. right to 
“freedom 
of speech.” “My friends and I had tried to open our own station legally, but 
were 
laughed off by the FCC because we were young and not rich,” Weiner said. 
“Pirate 
radio was the only option not just for exercising this right, but allowing 
other 
ordinary Americans to speak their minds on the radio, and to let everyone have 
the 
chance to hear them.” 

Ironically, after decades of pirate broadcasting, in 1998 Weiner succeeded in 
attaining FCC licenses for shortwave radio station WBCQ and WREM(AM), now 
WXME(AM); 
both in Monticello, Maine. Today, he legally owns and operates these two 
stations, 
plus WBCQ(FM) in the same town.

In large U.S. conurbations such as Miami, New York/New Jersey and the Boston 
area, 
the majority of pirate radio stations “are operated within communities that 
have been 
effectively priced out of access to the legal airwaves,” said John Anderson, an 
American academic who has extensively studied pirate radio and operates the 
site 
www.dyimedia.net. “Many of them are commercial, providing an affordable 
advertising 
outlet for local businesses,” he said.


Teenage pirate Weiner broadcasting as Free Radio WXMN(AM) in 1971. Credit: 
Allan 
Weiner. BOOST FROM THE WEB 
As for the risk of being caught? At least in the U.S., “the FCC is really a 
paper 
tiger,” Anderson said. “Field offices are woefully understaffed, and busting 
pirates 
is just one small duty that field agents are responsible for.” 

U.S. fines for unlicensed broadcasting can go as high as $25,000, but since the 
FCC 
is mandated to reduce fines for people who can prove they can’t pay, 
“five-digit 
forfeitures get whittled down to $1,000 or less,” he said. Add the fact that 
the FCC 
doesn’t have the same collection teeth as the IRS, plus a five-year statute of 
limitations on FCC fines, and “it's not unheard of for forfeitures to simply 
expire.”

At first blush, one would expect to have cut into the pool of potential pirate 
broadcasters. After all, sites such as Ustream.tv and Justin.tv let anyone 
produce 
and stream their own audio and video content, for free.

That said, the Web can’t match radio’s ability to provide one-to-many coverage 
immediately and accessibly, said Weiner. “There is also a magic to just going 
live 
on-air that the Web doesn’t deliver. That’s the magic of radio, and there is 
nothing 
like it.”

Meanwhile, the Web has proven to be a boon to pirate radio broadcasters in a 
number 
of ways. “For instance, they no longer have to risk either locating their 
studio with 
their transmitter or antenna — because the latter is what gets found and seized 
when 
regulators track down pirate signals — or using STL links to tie the two 
together, 
said Paul Riismandel. He is a noted pirate radio journalist and co-founder of 
www.radiosurvivor.com, a radio news site. 


WBNY(AM) ‘Radio Bunny’ souvenirs and QSLs. Credit: Pat Murphy. “With the Web, a 
pirate broadcaster can simply stream his or her content to the transmitter. If 
it 
gets found and seized, the pirate’s production center remains undiscovered and 
secure.”

The Web is a great place for pirate radio listeners to band together in chat 
rooms, 
to share information about stations that are popular, or even on-air right now. 
For 
broadcasters, the Web is also a source of easy-to-access, cheap and complete 
radio 
stations. “You can now buy a full setup from the Internet for $200,” said 
Weiner. 
“When I started as a teenage pirate in the 1970s, broadcasting equipment was 
nearly 
impossible to find, and what was available was prohibitively expensive.”

Finally, the Web has made it much easier and far safer for pirate radio 
broadcasters 
to respond to listener reception reports — the only proof these broadcasters 
get that 
someone is actually tuning in to their signals. “It brought about e-QSLs,” said 
Murphy. “Instead of sending your report to a mail drop, you would send it to an 
email 
address and in return get a verification via email as an e-QSL.” 


WBNY(AM) Radio Bunny logo. Credit: Pat Murphy Mail drops were anonymous 
locations 
where listeners could send their written reception reports. They were used to 
prevent 
giving out pirate radio station addresses over the air, where the FCC might 
hear 
them.

The moral to this tale — the Internet age has not reduced potential pirates’ 
urge to 
broadcast. After all, “going online requires an expensive device and a monthly 
connection plan, some of which come with data caps,” Anderson said. “Contrast 
that to 
radio, which I can get with an inexpensive receiver and no recurring charge,” 
he 
said.

“Even today, nothing can touch radio for its reach, immediacy and intimacy,” 
said 
Weiner. “This is why the Web is a boon to pirate radio broadcasters, not a 
bust.”

James Careless reports on the industry for Radio World from Ottawa, Ontario, 
Canada.

http://delicious.com/gr_greek1/zak (all my pages )




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