With Europe's AI Act now law, all companies that provide or use AI systems and do business in the EU must begin considering compliance. The measure is rankling the U.S. business sector and government. One major compliance sticking point is a data-quality requirement aimed at rooting out systemic bias, said a European IT attorney.
Media executive Edgar Bronfman entered a bid for Paramount Global, Paramount said Thursday. Acting on behalf of an investor group, Bronfman has extended the "go shop" period under the transaction agreement Paramount already has with studio Skydance Media (see 2407080025), letting Paramount continue soliciting competing offers. The company said the go shop period now runs to Sept. 5. It said that the board's special committee contacted more than 50 third parties to gauge their interest in making a proposal to buy Paramount. Formerly CEO and chairman of Warner Music, Bronfman is chairman of FuboTV.
The FCC asked the 8th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court to schedule oral argument on an industry coalition's challenge of the commission's digital discrimination rules (see 2407080012). In a brief (docket 24-1179), the FCC said issues in the Minnesota Telecom Alliance's (MTA) challenge are "complex" and oral argument "may assist the court." However, in its reply brief, MTA and a coalition of industry groups urged the court should decide that the discrimination rules are unlawful and set aside the FCC's digital discrimination order.
Iridium promotes Vincent O'Neill to CFO and Timothy Last to executive vice president-sales and marketing, effective Jan. 1; they succeed, respectively, Thomas Fitzpatrick and Bryan Hartin, both retiring year-end … Davis Wright taps patent lawyer Alexander Hadjis, ex-Jenner & Block, as partner … Simon Gooch, ex-Accenture, joins Saviynt, cloud security provider, as senior vice president-expert services … Red River hires General Dynamics’ James Matney as senior vice president-solutions and chief technology officer-Government Technology Services … YourSix cloud security company appoints Ryan Gregory, former Axis Communications, as vice president-sales and growth … AppSentinels application programming interface security platform appoints Quick Heal Technologies’ Vishal Salvi as adviser to board.
The First Responder Network Authority board Wednesday approved launching a 10-year initiative with $2 billion in coverage investments. In June, the board approved $534 million for network enhancements as part of a $684 million budget package for FY 2025 (see 2406240031). “We know that the No. 1 priority for public safety continues to be coverage,” said Jocelyn Moore, chair of the board’s Programs and Future Planning Committee. FirstNet has already invested in in-building coverage, building more deployables, priority access for public safety officials and upgrading its wireless facilities to 5G from 4G, she said. FirstNet is focused on expanding its network in tribal, rural and territorial areas, Moore said. FirstNet is also examining satellite-direct-to-device capabilities for users of the network. The network now has more than 6.1 million connections and “we’re far from done.” A FirstNet team attended the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee and is in Chicago this week for the Democratic National Convention, said Sylvia Moir, Advocacy Committee chair. FirstNet has coordinated with AT&T "to ensure needs are met to support public safety operations,” she said. The investments the authority is making in the network will enable 5G for all public safety users across 50 states and outlying territories, said Brian Crawford, Finance and Investment Committee chair. “Those investments ensure that the network not only maintains parity with other commercial service providers but is also able to fully support a suite of evolving 5G-enabled services,” he said. The meeting was the last for five members, who are at the end of their three-year terms -- Chair Richard Carrizzo, Crawford, Moir, Billy Hewes and Paul Patrick. The board met at the Utah Department of Public Safety in Salt Lake City. Authority Executive Director Joe Wassel said board members were in Utah as school starts and keeping 35,000 students and faculty safe is “a serious business.”
Europeans are eagerly analyzing what may happen on telecom and privacy issues in a new U.S. administration. Although Democrats' and Republicans' plans in these policy areas remain opaque, particularly in connection with EU-U.S. discussions, Europeans we interviewed said they're hoping the next president doesn't rock the boat too much.
FCC commissioners unanimously approved an NPRM on further changes to rules for the citizens broadband radio service band that Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel circulated two months ago. The Biden administration has focused on sharing models based on CBRS as part of its assessment of the future of spectrum. The agency posted the NPRM on Friday. Comment deadlines will come in a Federal Register notice.
A change in presidential administration doesn’t worry state broadband offices around the U.S., though stability in NTIA's broadband equity, access and deployment (BEAD) program would help, several directors from red, blue and purple states said. Since President Joe Biden stepped aside, a new president in 2025 is certain. Yet in interviews this month at the Mountain Connect conference in Denver, state leaders stressed that their goal of expanding high-speed internet to everyone will remain no matter who wins in November. A President Kamala Harris is seen as especially unlikely to change NTIA’s BEAD program in major ways, several said.
Streaming services increasingly are cracking down on password sharing as they see the success that Netflix has had with its initiative, industry analysts tell us. Executives at streamers tell Wall Street the effort will help drive revenue growth.
Don’t expect major daylight between a Kamala Harris administration and the Joe Biden White House on major communications policy issues, industry and policy experts predicted. Much focus and effort would center on defending the FCC's net neutrality and digital discrimination orders in the current federal circuit court challenges, as well as pursuing net neutrality rules, they said. Less clear would be the nature of the relationship between Harris' White House and Big Tech. The Harris campaign didn't comment. Deregulation and undoing net neutrality are considered high on the to-do list for the administration of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump if he's elected (see 2407110034).