The FCC’s wireless competition report cites a Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) increase as a clear warning sign that the industry has grown less competitive. But the CTIA questions the commission’s reliance on the index as one of the key measures in the report, the first in years that didn’t find the industry competitive (CD May 21 p1). CTIA also questioned how the measure was calculated for the report.
The president needs to order the departments involved to develop a national strategy for dealing with cyberattacks, Michael Chertoff, a former Homeland Security secretary, said at a Bipartisan Policy Center briefing Monday. The challenge was raised by the Cyber ShockWave exercise (CD Feb. 17 p4), said Stewart Baker, a former assistant secretary for policy at Homeland Security. The plan should identify issues like authorities, capabilities, consequences and attributions, Chertoff said. And coordinating with other countries, especially those with advanced cybersecurity capabilities, is critical, he said.
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s proposed “third way” regulation of broadband is already having a “dampening effect” on investment in telecommunications equipment, former FCC Commissioner Harold Furchtgott-Roth said Friday during a webinar sponsored by TIA. The FCC is expected to vote on a notice of inquiry and notice of proposed forbearance on the reclassification proposal at its June 17 meeting.
Cable operators large and small largely are unified on many issues that affect the industry, some of them high profile, that are pending before the FCC, our survey of executives found. Retransmission consent deals, where pay-TV operators contend broadcasters force them to pay unfair carriage fees, are the latest example of a unified message across operators of all sizes (CD May 20 p4) and the NCTA, representing big operators and programmers, and the small-operator lobbying group American Cable Association (ACA). Concern about FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski’s plan to reclassify broadband transport under parts of Title II and a desire to use cheap HD set-top boxes with integrated navigation and security features are shared by many cable system owners.
CE makers are seeking a blanket waiver to exempt mobile DTV devices from FCC Part 15 requirements that all TV devices include analog and legacy ATSC DTV tuners. Dell and LG filed a joint petition, seeking a waiver for battery-operated mobile devices. Separately, Hauppauge Computer Works sought a broader waiver to cover any “television receivers capable of mobile use by consumers” that has a mobile DTV receiver. Comments on both requests, which the commission will consider together, are due June 4 under an accelerated process. Replies are due June 11.
STANFORD, Calif. -- An FCC media-ownership workshop on new technologies became a platform for executives to lobby against taking spectrum away from broadcasters and the exclusion of low-power stations from must-carry requirements, as well as for dropping cross-ownership restrictions. “The time for repeal of the newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership rules is long overdue,” because of the hardships and diminished roles of older outlets resulting from the rise of the Web and other digital technologies, Los Angeles Times Publisher Eddy Hartenstein said in prepared testimony at Stanford University.
Intel is “putting all our energy” into “working with Google on enabling” Sony and Logitech TV products based on the Android operating system (CED May 21 p5) to be sold at retail this year, Eric Kim, senior vice president and general manager for Intel’s Digital Home Group, said in a phone briefing Friday. But he said, “We are also very deeply engaged with many other major CE OEMs, so you could expect there to be many additional CE products -- TVs, set-top boxes, media players -- hitting the retail shelves in spring of 2011.” He declined to name other OEMs, citing “very strict confidentiality” deals, but said Intel is “definitely putting a huge amount of energy to scale this out very, very rapidly."
The FCC approved the 4.8 million-line transfer from Frontier to Verizon. The transaction, approved Friday, will bring “broadband to millions of consumers and small businesses and anchor institutions in 14 states,” the commission said in a news release. Frontier’s voluntary commitments include offering new broadband deployment with actual speeds of at least 1 Mbps upstream and providing the FCC with data on its deployment progress “at an unprecedented level of detail,” the commission said.
Tech and advertising groups prefer the Senate financial overhaul bill passed late Thursday to the House version, they said Friday. The groups have voiced concerns about the FTC expansion envisioned by the House bill, among other things (CD May 5 p6). But so far, few Capitol Hill legislators have commented directly on the tech community’s concerns.
House Oversight Committee leaders seemed poised at a hearing Thursday to act to accelerate government agencies’ transition to Networx. That’s a General Services Administration program under which federal agencies can buy telecom, network and information services. Agencies must sign on to the program by June 2011, the expiration date for the GSA’s old telecom program, FTS2001. The transition is behind schedule for several reasons, said government and industry officials.