ComScore broadband test results understate the speeds offered by ISPs, the NCTA said in a letter to the chief of the FCC’s Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau. The association said it sent the letter in response to assumptions about retail broadband speed disclosures in the National Broadband Plan that relied on comScore figures. “The comScore data cited in the plan suffers from a variety of problems and should not serve as the basis for concluding that there is such a significant gap between maximum speeds and ‘actual’ speeds,” NCTA Vice President Neal Goldberg wrote Joel Gurin, the chief of the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau.
Changing the Wiretap Act to ban video surveillance could cause more problems than it solves, a former federal prosecutor said Monday at a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Crime Subcommittee in Philadelphia. Chairman Arlen Specter, D-Pa., the only lawmaker at the hearing, said he will introduce a bill to expand to still pictures and video the legal protection given oral communications, according to media reports. We couldn’t reach his office for comment. Several civil-liberties groups also said they will propose Tuesday changes in the underlying Electronic Communications Privacy Act.
Ericsson won $1.8 billion in contracts to provide equipment to two of China’s largest operators, China Mobile and China Unicom, the manufacturer said Monday. The manufacturer still is likely to see growth in China slow down this year after the three major Chinese operators cut their investments in 3G, analysts said.
The Senate and the House late Thursday passed a 30-day extension for the license allowing satellite TV companies to import distant signals. The license was set to expire at the end of the month. The legislation (S-3186) gives DBS providers and legislators until the end of April to pass another extension or a longer-term reauthorization. It’s the third time the license, which was originally set to expire at the end of 2009, has gotten a reprieve. The measure was passed without debate in both houses. The Senate also passed a 10-year reauthorization of the distant signal license Friday.
TORONTO -- Seeking to “encourage the creation of high-quality Canadian television programs,” the Canadian Radio-TV and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) is for the first time imposing spending requirements on the nation’s three largest private, English-language broadcasters.
GENEVA -- The ITU Radiocommunication Bureau (BR) has begun consultations with countries and satellite companies over discrepancies found between satellite networks logged in the master register and their actual use. The BR also started to enforce certain regulatory provisions by removing unused frequency assignments from the register when their use hasn’t been suspended as required. A BR study showed about 10 to 15 percent of geostationary positions with satellite networks recorded in the register may not be in regular operation.
Historically non-regulated media companies are approaching the FCC’s Future of Media proceeding cautiously, industry officials said. Most newspapers will leave it to their trade associations to file comments, and some question the agency’s jurisdiction in the area. “I don’t expect them [our members] to file anything that is exhaustive,” said Newspaper Association of America President John Sturm. “It just doesn’t seem to warrant that, at least from the newspaper side. I don’t know what they'll do with regard to their broadcast interests,” he said. “The bottom line is there will be some general information filed on a respectable basis to the commission, but unlikely to be any kind of serious data dump."
The FCC needs more data before it can make any decisions about whether to move forward on allocating spectrum to an advertising-supported free or low-cost broadband service, one of the suggestions in the National Broadband Plan, Blair Levin, executive director of the FCC’s Omnibus Broadband Initiative, said Friday during a taping of C-SPAN’s The Communicators, to be telecast over the weekend. Levin also responded to criticisms of the plan from both Democrats and Republicans that were voiced during last week’s House hearing on the plan.
The Commerce Department will have made more than $4 billion in grants by September to help connect to broadband communities that are unserved or underserved, Secretary Gary Locke said at a briefing Thursday run by the Democratic Leadership Council. The department is funding “middle-mile highways of high-speed Internet” connecting community anchor institutions like colleges, hospitals and government institutions, Locke said.