The next three Fridays will mark some important deadlines in the Section 301 litigation inundating the U.S. Court of International Trade after months of inertia. New complaints continue trickling in at the rate of about one a day to join the roughly 3,500 on file since beginning in mid-September, virtually all seeking to get the Lists 3 and 4A Chinese tariffs vacated and the duties refunded. Many thousands more importers are represented in the filings, including many consumer tech companies -- Bose, Clarion, Denon, Gibson, Harman, Jasco and Voxx among them.
Senate Intellectual Property Subcommittee ranking member Thom Tillis, R-N.C., hopes to introduce bipartisan legislation in late April or early May updating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, he told us Monday. His office gathered comments from groups through Friday on a discussion draft titled the Digital Copyright Act of 2021. As chairman last session, Tillis worked with then-ranking member Chris Coons, D-Del., on a multi-hearing review of the DMCA.
Stakeholders suggested changes to rules for a 3.45 GHz auction, in recent calls with eighth-floor FCC staff. Public Knowledge asked the agency to allow shared use of spectrum not sold in the auction. Rather than selling the licenses in a future auction, the commission should add them to the citizens broadband radio service database and “permit general authorized access (GAA) pursuant to the CBRS service rules,” PK said in calls with aides to Commissioners Geoffrey Starks, Brendan Carr and Nathan Simington. “Extend the CBRS framework on a more permanent basis into the 3.45-3.55 GHz band,” the group said: “Doing this will ensure valuable spectrum will be used without leaving GAA dependent networks stranded when licensees deploy.” Rationalize the CBRS rules with rules for 3.45 GHz, Dish Network urged: “Such an effort could provide the Commission with a win-win outcome that raises revenue for the U.S. Treasury … while preserving the investment-backed plans of the many entities that successfully participated in the CBRS auction." Offer county-sized, 10-MHz licenses, consistent with the CBRS auction, Southern Linc asked a Carr aide and staff from the Wireless Bureau, Office of Economics and Analytics and Office of Engineering and Technology. “In addition to nationwide, regional and rural service providers, the licensing framework for the CBRS band drew participation from electric utilities and other private network operators with a pressing need for spectrum to support operations that play a crucial role in the US economy,” Southern Linc said. Filings were posted Friday in docket 19-348. The FCC is unlikely to backtrack from acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel’s approach on the auction (see 2102240063), Cowen’s Paul Gallant told investors Friday. “Although the agency is currently split 2-2, we doubt Chairwoman Rosenworcel would have circulated it unless it was going to be adopted,” he said: “It would set C Band-like rules rather than CBRS rules that helped Comcast and Charter win 3.5 GHz spectrum last year.”
Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., and others cited proposed funding for E-rate remote learning (see 2103040067) in the American Rescue Plan Act COVID-19 budget reconciliation package during floor debate before delayed votes. HR-1319 “is urgently needed” to aid post-pandemic economic recovery, President Joe Biden told reporters before an economic briefing. The Senate was in the early stages Friday afternoon of voting on what’s expected to be a litany of amendments, likely pushing final passage until at least Saturday. The $7.17 billion in E-rate funding proposed in a substitute version is “so important” for “children who are at home” to receive adequate remote learning services, Cantwell said. “It is important that we get the dollars out the door. This will help us” recover. “One in four students lack access to internet at home” during the pandemic, making the E-rate money important, said Senate Education Committee Chair Patty Murray, D-Wash. Some Republicans raised concerns about keeping this in HR-1319, making it possible the Senate would vote on amendments that could pare back the funding or create additional eligibility requirements for receiving it (see 2103030063).
Congress and the FCC should “explore how to improve” the Telecom Act as a way to revamp “our system of universal service contributions,” acting commission Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said in letters to Senate Commerce Committee ranking member Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Communications Subcommittee ranking member John Thune, R-S.D., released Friday. The GOP leaders wrote Rosenworcel in February to raise concerns about long-term funding sustainability. The current USF funding mechanism “is based on assessments to the interstate portion of carriers’ end-user telecommunications revenues” that are “born out” of the 1996 law, Rosenworcel said. The FCC recognizes its “important responsibilities as a steward” of USF and its Wireline Bureau is exploring reinterpreting statute to allow program funding to be used for remote learning (see 2102080054). “We will be mindful” of the senators’ concerns, “including how this effort could complement other sources of funding, the need to engage in reasoned analysis by experts at the agency including the Office of Economics and Analytics, how to account for school needs in light of remote learning and re-opening plans, and how to develop smart programmatic controls,” Rosenworcel said.
The coming weeks will mark some important deadlines in the Section 301 litigation inundating the U.S. Court of International Trade after months of inertia. New complaints keep trickling in at the rate of about one a day to join the roughly 3,500 on file beginning since mid-September, virtually all seeking to get the lists 3 and 4A Chinese tariffs vacated and the duties refunded. Many thousands more importers are represented in the filings.
European Commission proposals don't go far enough to address problems raised by online platforms, stakeholders told a webcast conference Thursday. EU lawmakers, civil society, internet companies, broadcasters and others backed the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act. But they said DSA and DMA need work. DSA measures could counter illegal content and require platform transparency, building on EU e-commerce directive intermediary liability rules (see 2012150022). DMA further obligates very large platforms ("gatekeepers").
European Commission proposals don't go far enough to address problems raised by online platforms, stakeholders told a webcast conference Thursday. EU lawmakers, civil society, internet companies, broadcasters and others backed the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act. But they said DSA and DMA need work. DSA measures could counter illegal content and require platform transparency, building on EU e-commerce directive intermediary liability rules (see 2012150022). DMA further obligates very large platforms ("gatekeepers").
The FCC is seeking comment by March 23, replies by April 2, on what "911 fees by states and other jurisdictions" support "the provision of 911 services," in docket 20-291, said Wednesday's Federal Register. The Consolidated Appropriations Act directed the FCC to raise such questions.
Aerospace representatives have concerns about the draft order on shared use of the 3.1-3.55 GHz band, set for a vote March 17 (see 2102240063), they told an aide to acting FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. Industry needs access to nonfederal experimental licensees in the 3.45-3.55 GHz band after a proposed auction, said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 19-348. “A solution put in place before the auction commences is critical to ensure that all parties bidding will have full information regarding the coordination framework,” said the Aerospace Industries Association, Ball Aerospace, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and others: Make clear “good-faith coordination requires parties using the spectrum to accommodate the other party when planning operations so as to minimize impacts on the other party while taking into account the parties’ relative priority of spectrum access.”