Supreme Court TV moved one step closer to show time after the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday voted 11-7 to approve S-1945 by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill. Ranking Member Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and one other Republican voted for the bill, while Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California cast the sole Democratic vote against. Feinstein argued forcefully that the bill is an unwelcome breach of the separation of powers envisioned by the U.S. Constitution.
For K-12 schools to switch to digital textbooks by 2017 is a good goal, but it may be easier said than done, experts said. The FCC and the Department of Education recently endorsed an effort for schools to implement digital textbooks as replacements for paper texts. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski challenged schools to complete the transition in the next five years, a goal recently echoed by the Obama administration. Digital books are “one of the cornerstones of digital learning,” Genachowski told a meeting on e-books for schools last week, and they're the next step in education technology. Interested parties told us they see several hindrances to the change.
GENEVA -- How to carry out ITU-R studies for mobile broadband over the next 30 months is an important remaining discussion, following initial agreement on a 2015 World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC) agenda item, officials said. A 2012 WRC sub-working group on unmanned aerial systems (UAS) agreed to no change on the satellite component for command and control, chairman Eric Allaix told us. A 2015 agenda item was agreed to, he said.
When a Defense Department official accused most of the five Networx carriers of shunting aside federal agencies’ requests to do mandated IPv6 upgrades (CD Nov 3 p8), Verizon was already providing the department under his leadership with data-transport services supporting the protocol, an executive said Thursday. “We're very supportive of the Department of Defense IPv6” transition, the chief technology officer of Verizon Public Sector, Steve LeFrancois, said in an interview. He said he could see no reason for other carriers to discourage requests for help adopting the technology, which the Networx contractors have committed to offering.
Broadcast TV should be regulated by individual households, not the government, said opponents of the FCC’s “fleeting expletives” rule during a debate Wednesday at the American University law school. Panelists included four filers in FCC vs. ABC and Fox, heard last month by the Supreme Court: David Petron from Sidley Austin (for Fox) and Trevor Burrus from Cato Institute opposing the rules; and rule supporters Chris Gacek from Family Research Council and National Religious Broadcasters Senior Vice President Craig Parshall.
The FCC should not stay an initial decision by an administrative law judge ordering Comcast to carry the Tennis Channel on the same tier as its Golf network, the FCC Enforcement Bureau said in a filing. Comcast sought a stay last month (CD Jan 27 p6), but the Enforcement Bureau said there’s no merit to Comcast’s claims that requiring carriage would violate its constitutional rights. Pointing to previous FCC decisions and the congressional record, the bureau said: “If anything is to be drawn from their collective voice, it is that where a cable carrier has been found to have engaged in affiliation-based discrimination, the public interest manifestly requires an immediate remedy.” A Comcast spokeswoman declined to comment.
An online news company may avoid the public furor that two piracy bills saw last month by signing licensing deals with major websites that aggregate content, its CEO told old- and new-media executives and lobbyists in Washington. NewsRight’s David Westin said the debate over the Stop Online Piracy Act and the PROTECT IP Act -- which led the bills to be put on hold -- doesn’t apply to his company. That’s because the consortium of 29 media companies hopes to pursue contracts with websites and not seek legislation or file lawsuits to get content aggregators to stop carrying news without paying the creators. Westin said last month that he wouldn’t “rule out” litigation (CD Jan 10 p8). Claims that SOPA or PIPA would lead to censorship were overblown, Westin told a Media Institute luncheon Wednesday.
States are likely to see regulatory reforms going forward, panelists said at NARUC’s winter meeting Wednesday. But state legislators need to ensure that deregulation doesn’t harm consumers, some said.
From Sprint Nextel’s perspective the biggest news for Q4 was AT&T’s decision to drop its plans to buy T-Mobile, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse said Wednesday. Sprint, a leading opponent of the deal, reported quarterly results for the first time since the transaction fell apart. “We believe the industry outlook would have been bleak, had this takeover succeeded,” Hesse said. “We also believe that Sprint’s successful championing of a healthy industry and customer choice will have lasting benefits for the way business customers and consumers view Sprint.”
Two draft FCC items move the agency closer to implementing legislation signed into law in January 2011 letting the agency license low-power FM stations closer on the dial to full-power radio. Agency and industry officials said a draft rulemaking asks about technical provisions for second-adjacent separation, which would require LPFM outlets to be two notches on the dial away from full-power stations versus the current third-adjacent limit. The rulemaking also asks about waivers for second-adjacent rules, the officials said.