The Office of Communications, usually known as Ofcom, is the UK's communications regulator.
The inaugural chairman of Ofcom is David Currie, Dean of Cass Business School at City University and a life peer under the title Lord Currie of Marylebone. Its chief executive Stephen Carter was formerly a senior executive of J Walter Thompson UK and NTL.
The short form of the name is given as OFCOM (all capitals) in the Communications Act 2003, which established the Office of Communications. Ofcom itself uses the mixed case form seen here, which is also the more widespread in the media.
Ofcom's main office is at Riverside House, 2a, Southwark Bridge Road, Southwark, London SE1 9HA.
Some of the main things which Ofcom preside over are licensing, undertaking research, creating codes and policies, addressing complaints and looking into competition. Ofcom has also become well known for its tendency to issue lots and lots of consultations (there was even a consultation on the consultations). However, this is the way Ofcom intends to run its business, being more open, accountable, and receptive to public and industry comments.
Ofcom will then usually allow a period of ten weeks for interested persons, companies or organisations to read the document and send in their responses. After this ten week period, Ofcom will normally publish all of the responses on their website (excluding any which are marked by the respondent as confidential).
After the consultation has closed, Ofcom will prepare a summary of the responses, and may use this as a basis for some of their decisions. *
In June 2004, Ofcom, having received complaints from twenty-four viewers, censured Fox News commentator John Gibson for stating that the BBC had "a frothing-at-the-mouth anti-Americanism that was obsessive, irrational and dishonest", that the BBC "felt entitled to lie and, when caught lying, felt entitled to defend its lying reporters and executives", that BBC reporter, Andrew Gilligan, had "insisted on air that the Iraqi army was heroically repulsing an incompetent American military", and that "the BBC, far from blaming itself, insisted its reporter had a right to lie—exaggerate—because, well, the BBC knew that the war was wrong, and anything they could say to underscore that point had to be right" Ofcom held that these statements were untrue opinions based on false evidence that necessitated that Fox offer the BBC rebuttal time [http://www.ofcom.org.uk/tv/obb/prog_cb/pcb_11/upheld_cases?a=87101.
Perhaps one of the most controversial decisions made by Ofcom regarding a complaint was that regarding Jerry Springer: The Opera. Having received a large number of complaints from various viewers, Ofcom decided there had been no breach of the broadcasting code, citing the broadcaster's right of freedom of expression under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
British radio | British television | Communications authorities | Communications in the United Kingdom | Portmanteaus | Public bodies and task forces of the United Kingdom government