Broadcasters and satellite operators got some of what they wanted in the FCC FY 2019 regulatory fees order. As expected (see 1908220040), there's no sign of overhaul both sectors want in the unanimous ruling. An accompanying Further NPRM tees up issues like the assessing regulatory fees on foreign satellites allowed to communicate with U.S. earth stations. Some say history shows the agency isn't likely to go that route. The money is due Sept. 30.
Some customer confusion greeted Verizon’s announcement it's automatically enrolling some in the free version of its Call Filter service that it introduced in March. Upgrades will start to become available on select Android devices immediately, Verizon said; all eligible customers can actively enroll in the free version anytime.
Don’t cap the overall budget for the various USF programs or alter the USF funding mechanism, asked many replies, worried about prioritizing funds over one another. At least one reply favored halting the fund’s growth at 2018 levels. Replies posted through Tuesday in FCC docket 06-122.
SEATTLE -- 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges questioned whether groups petitioning to repeal parts of a 2017 declaratory ruling on whether and how to notify customers when carriers retire copper networks had demonstrated sufficient injury to merit standing, during oral argument Tuesday in Greenlining v. FCC (17-73283). The FCC and the DOJ asked the court in November to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction or on its merits. Judge Margaret McKeown said a court of appeals "shouldn't have to hunt and peck" for clear evidence of standing and jurisdiction. "This is a threshold issue in every case."
Size matters when considering safe harbor protections for voice service providers' blocking of robocalls. Parties squared off before the FCC about how broad or narrow such protections should be in docket 17-59 replies posted through Friday. There's disagreement on creation of a critical calls list. Some questioned the need for a secure handling of asserted information using tokens (Shaken) and secure telephone identity revisited (Stir) mandate since industry is implementing it fine.
Leaders of the House Communications and Senate Appropriations Financial Services subcommittees are using the month-plus August recess to finalize their plans for a legislative solution to the debate over how to clear spectrum in the 3.7-4.2 GHz C band for 5G use. Some lawmakers said they need to reach a quick decision on how to proceed to influence the outcome before the FCC releases its proposal. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai appears to be aiming for a plan to clear at least 300 MHz of C-band spectrum (see 1908200044). The sides offered conflicting readings earlier this month of initial comments to the FCC on alternative plans (see 1908150042). Those comments showed little move toward consensus (see 1908080041).
Consumer groups are heading to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Tuesday in Seattle to challenge a 2017 FCC order that relaxed regulations on how telcos retire copper phone lines and how they notify customers (see 1906170005). Appellants said in recent interviews they like their odds, while the government and its allies in the case weren't talking. Last September, The Greenlining Institute, Public Knowledge, The Utility Reform Network and National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates petitioned the 9th Circuit to challenge the order, claiming the agency hid intentions during a comment period and predetermined the outcome in striking down the functional test standard in service discontinuances (see 1809270036). The California Public Utilities Commission later added its support to the petition (see 1810040059).
The White House’s potential draft executive order directing the FCC and the FTC to police social media content moderation blatantly violates the First Amendment and is likely to face years of legal battle, representatives from the tech industry and academia told us. Days before President Donald Trump’s proposal emerged, senators from both parties said the tech industry’s content liability shield, which the draft order seeks to modify (see 1908090053), needs re-examining.
The Wireless Infrastructure Association plans a push in coming months to get the FCC to move forward on an additional wireless infrastructure order, focused on rules for approving collocations, President Jonathan Adelstein said in an interview last week. Last year, the agency, where he used to be a Democratic commissioner, approved two major wireless infrastructure orders. Both are targets of court actions.
Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., plans to introduce legislation in September or October on strategies websites use to “glue” children to devices, said Senior Policy Adviser Joseph Wender Thursday. Markey, who will prioritize two other privacy-related legislative items after congressional recess, is having ongoing conversations with lawmakers about co-sponsoring the Kids (Kids Internet Design and Safety) Act, Wender told us after a Family Online Safety Institute event.