The FCC denied Globalstar’s extension request for a deadline to reach compliance with the agency’s ancillary terrestrial component rules, in a decision late Tuesday by the International and Wireless bureaus and Office of Engineering and Technology. The denial prevents the company from offering terrestrial services until it regains compliance with the ATC rules. Satellite industry executives found the order surprising, considering recent moves the agency has made to make the MSS/ATC spectrum more usable for mobile terrestrial broadband services. Some consider the move a demonstration of the commission’s commitment to enforce buildout requirements as the agency seeks to increase development in the band (CD July 16 p1).
The telephone and cable industries “endorse” Universal Service Fund legislation by Chairman Rick Boucher, D-Va., and Rep. Lee Terry, R-Neb., USTelecom and NCTA executives said in written testimony for a House Communications Subcommittee hearing Thursday morning. HR-5828 “balances many competing interests to modernize universal service and to bring robust broadband to areas of rural America where today’s business case would not support such deployment,” said USTelecom President Walter McCormick.
The FCC is asking more academics for more help on a wider array of issues under Chairman Julius Genachowski than under predecessors, though the relationship between the agency and academia is inconsistent, said many professors we asked. Systematic and wide-ranging efforts were made in summer 2009, after Genachowski took over in late June, some researchers said. Outreach continues, but not in any way that appears coordinated, and deadlines to contribute to the development of some policies were too short to accommodate academics, they said. There was ample time to respond and there’s “mutual benefit” to the agency and academia when they work together, said FCC Chief Deputy Economist Jonathan Levy.
VILNIUS, Lithuania -- The growing arsenal for cyberwarfare in the hands of countries and their citizens and statements by some military officials, including those of the U.S., that attacks on the critical network infrastructure would justify armed responses has raised concerns among diplomats. When the Council of Europe presented a draft on “Duties of States” on protecting Internet resources at the Internet Governance Forum (IGF), international law experts warned about possible consequences.
The FCC’s proposal to allocate more spectrum to wireless broadband has broad support and could face an easier time politically than most key communications issues before Congress and the FCC, Qualcomm Vice President Dean Brenner said Tuesday at an Information Technology & Innovation Foundation conference. The commission’s National Broadband Plan recommended that 500 MHz of additional spectrum be allocated for wireless broadband within 10 years.
The Senate Appropriations Committee’s defense subcommittee said it marked up Tuesday a fiscal 2011 appropriations bill for the Department of Defense without major amendments on cybersecurity in the chairman’s mark. The measure could be used to attach cybersecurity reform amendments if Senate negotiations on an omnibus reform bill break down, said an analyst with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Software developers making applications for smartphones and new platforms need to keep in mind the looming bandwidth caps and usage-based billing models of network operators, executives said at the Appnation conference late Monday. Wireless bandwidth caps are inevitable, said David Zilberman, a principal at Comcast Interactive Capital, the cable operator’s investment arm. The app developer “ecosystem needs to evolve a bit in the way they build applications and deliver content to devices,” he said.
LAKE GRAPEVINE, Texas -- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) will take a hard line on deep packet inspection (DPI), online and telecom lawyer Ron Del Sesto of Bingham McCutchen told a CompTel audience Tuesday. Even harsh restrictions on the practice may well “open an industry that nobody’s willing to touch” because there will be some needed regulatory clarity, he told us after his panel.
Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., urged Congress to quicken the pace on bipartisan spectrum and public safety network bills. Congress’ sense of urgency about building a public safety network must be raised if it’s to pass any legislation, he told an Information Technology & Innovation Foundation conference Tuesday. Meanwhile, Warner’s spectrum relocation bill is held up by questions about paying for the bill and the roles of agencies, he said.
LAKE GRAPEVINE, Texas -- The FCC will consider whether it can support broadband directly through the Universal Service Fund without reclassification, Deputy Wireline Bureau Chief Don Stockdale told the CompTel convention Monday. He said some have filed comments mentioning that there’s already direct broadband support for schools and libraries. Others have pointed to a November 2008 rulemaking that required companies to agree to build-out requirements in exchange for high-cost subsidy. “This is an issue clearly the commission will be asking about,” Stockdale said. He spoke at two sessions at the CompTel conference. In the first, Stockdale discussed inter-carrier compensation and in the second, USF overhaul under the National Broadband Plan.