Opponents and supporters of reclassification filed long, often strongly worded filings in response to what FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski calls his “Third Way” broadband-reclassification proposal. The comments land at a sharply divided agency.
A revamped rural health care telecom subsidy program should help more health facilities use broadband to connect to the outside world, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said. The commission initiated a rulemaking Thursday to change the rules of the USF program based on lessons learned from the Rural Health Care Pilot Program. The original program failed to live up to its potential, Commissioner Michael Copps said. In most years it disbursed less than 20 percent of the $400 million that could be spent.
Portable devices that receive mobile DTV broadcasts were exempted from FCC rules that they contain tuners capable of getting regular analog and digital broadcasts, in a Media Bureau decision Thursday afternoon. Cellphones, PDAs, laptops, dongles and devices used in autos can exclude analog and/or ATSC A/53 digital TV signal reception if they can get mobile broadcasts using A/153. The products must be designed to be used “in motion” and give notice to consumers on the package and in certain cases at point of sale about which types of signals can’t be received.
The FCC voted to loosen rules in the 2 GHz band allocated to mobile satellite services Thursday, opening the process toward making MSS spectrum more accessible for terrestrial broadband. The rulemaking also would make MSS spectrum fall within secondary market spectrum leasing policies already in place in other bands. A separate notice of inquiry adopted Thursday focuses on eliciting investment in MSS spectrum and how to handle the increased value of the spectrum. The proceedings are part of the FCC’s National Broadband Plan.
Factors including cost, lack of digital literacy and access are preventing older Americans from getting online, panelists said at a conference by Project GOAL (Get Older Adults online) Thursday. The FCC is actively working on implementation of the National Broadband Plan, said John Horrigan, the agency’s consumer research director.
The FCC received thousands of filings this week in response to its inquiry seeking comments on reclassifying broadband transmission under Title II of the Communications Act, making broadband subject to common carrier regulation. Comments were due Thursday. The FCC remains sharply divided, with few signs that the FCC’s three Democrats, who support reclassification, or two Republicans, in sharp opposition, have moderated their views.
The Senate Commerce Committee unanimously approved amended Internet accessibility legislation by Sens. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., and John Kerry, D-Mass., in a voice vote Thursday morning. The bill (S-3304) aims to increase the number of hearing aid-compatible phones, improve access to 911 emergency services, and expand and update closed captioning and video description requirements. Democrats and Republicans supported the bill, despite lingering concerns by consumer electronics companies (CD July 15 p12) .
FCC proposals to reclassify broadband transmission under Title II of the Communications Act and impose net neutrality rules on the industry could have a chilling effect on investment in broadband, two analysts and an investor said Wednesday. Telecom companies look at whether there is the “commercial opportunity” for more profits by increasing investment in broadband, Citigroup Managing Director Mike Rollins said at a panel at a New York Law School. “Investors like certainty and visibility of policy,” he said. “The reason it’s so important in telecom is these investments are very long term in nature.”
A wide range of pay-TV companies panned the idea of FCC standards for what the agency calls gateway devices to let all subscribers connect consumer electronics devices bought at retail to multichannel video program distributors (MVPD). Cable, satellite and telco filings posted by the FCC Wednesday in docket 97-80 sought flexibility in their services connecting to what are also called AllVid user interfaces. Google, Intel and major CE companies including Sony backed the commission proposal for an AllVid device, which also could get online content.
A group of pay-TV operators, independent programmers and non-profit groups formed the American TV Alliance to lobby Congress and the FCC on changes to retransmission consent rules. The group, which announced itself in ads in Communications Daily and the Washington Post, includes DirecTV, Verizon, AT&T, Time Warner Cable and the American Cable Association, programmers Discovery, Outdoor Channel and groups including the New America Foundation and Public Knowledge. It sees potential to change the rules both at the FCC, where a petition from many of those entities is pending, and in Congress where leaders have discussed a rewrite of the Telecom Act, said Mediacom Vice President Tom Larsen. “Either would be a positive result for us,” he said. “I don’t think we're going to isolate ourselves to any single strategy.” Among the group’s main goals is to have carriage of TV stations preserved during disputes with distributors, it said.