The House Rules Committee will decide Tuesday whether to allow floor votes on a slate of tech and telecom amendments to the chamber’s version of the FY 2024 National Defense Authorization Act (HR-2670), including several requiring the State Department to do more to address the security of international telecom infrastructure and internet freedom. House Rules’ meeting on HR-2670 amendments will begin at noon in H-313 in the Capitol. The House is expected to vote on the measure later this week.
Expect an adequacy decision on U.S.-EU data transfers "soon," a European Commission official said on a Friday Atlantic Council Europe Center webinar. The EC is "very confident" the proposed framework will survive a challenge in the European Court of Justice (ECJ), said Lucrezia Busa, a member of Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders' cabinet. If it doesn't, several alternatives could be considered, including some sort of multilateral scheme, panelists said. An adequacy decision is a finding by the EC that a non-EU country's data protection regime affords privacy protections essentially equivalent to those granted under EU law.
California consumer and county groups protested an AT&T request for carrier of last resort (COLR) relief in most of the state. The California Public Utilities Commission is reviewing the carrier’s amended application after an administrative law judge found an initial request lacked specificity. Plain old telephone service (POTS) remains a lifeline for many rural residents, especially in disaster-prone areas, said officials from Rural County Representatives of California (RCRC), The Utility Reform Network (TURN) and the CPUC’s independent Public Advocates Office (PAO) in interviews Friday.
The FCC appears unlikely to grant T-Mobile special temporary authority to launch service in the markets where it won licenses in last year’s 2.5 GHz auction, which ended almost a year ago. The agency declined to award the licenses, or grant a STA, after its auction authority expired earlier this year (see 2304260058).
The Senate Commerce Committee plans to vote Wednesday on three FCC nominees and commission inspector general candidate Fara Damelin, as expected (see 2306270067), the committee said Thursday. Incumbent Democratic Commissioner Geoffrey Starks and new pick Anna Gomez got copious questions from Senate Commerce ranking member Ted Cruz of Texas and other panel Republicans, but none of them indicated the same level of negativity that ex-nominee Gigi Sohn faced during her often-fractious year-plus confirmation process. Committee Democrats, meanwhile, probed Republican Commissioner Brendan Carr on controversial statements he made since becoming a commissioner during the Trump administration.
Here are last week’s most-read stories on court proceedings affecting telecom, tech and media that were covered in-depth by our sibling publication Communications Litigation Today. Current subscribers can click the reference number hyperlink or search the story title. Nonsubscribers can gain access by signing up for a complimentary preview.
Industry groups supported a March petition by the Competitive Carriers Association seeking tweaks to the FCC’s 911 outage reporting rules, approved 4-0 by commissioners last year (see 2211170051). APCO and the Boulder Regional Emergency Telephone Service Authority (BRETSA) opposed the petition in the initial comment round (see 2306270045). But most groups waited for the reply round to weigh in.
A petition from the Media and Democracy Project (MAD) and former Fox executive Preston Padden asking the FCC to hold a hearing over and block a Fox-owned TV station’s license renewal isn’t likely to lead to agency action and would raise First Amendment concerns if it did, said attorneys we spoke with. Said MAD: “Owning a broadcast station is more than a business -- it is a public trust. Never before has the Commission been confronted with so much evidence attached to a petition that clearly shows that an FCC broadcast licensee undermined that trust." The FCC has historically stayed out of broadcaster editorial decisions and isn’t likely to change that, said Fletcher Heald broadcast attorney Frank Montero.
Support continued in comments from industry groups on the use of third-party caller ID authentication and other efforts to address Stir/Shaken implementation (see 2306060073). Some urged the FCC to clarify which levels of attestation should be allowed for authenticating calls. Reply comments were posted through Thursday in docket 17-97.
The U.S. has an opportunity to set AI rules that give American companies a competitive advantage over EU counterparts facing an overly prescriptive regulatory scheme, CTA Vice President-Emerging Technology Policy Doug Johnson said in a recent interview.