NTIA plans its next facial recognition multistakeholder meeting Nov. 6, the agency said Tuesday on its website (http://1.usa.gov/1ev31lr). The group hasn’t met since late July (CD July 25 p14), and stakeholders have been split over whether it can move toward consensus and a code of conduct after talks resume (CD Sept p13). After the November meeting, the group will reconvene Dec. 15. The group had been expected to restart in September, but scheduling conflicts pushed the timeline back, participants told us.
Mobile Future warned the White House against subjecting wireless carriers to the same net neutrality rules imposed on wireline providers, in comments submitted Tuesday to the Obama administration’s Office of Science and Technology Policy and National Economic Council’s request for information on an administration innovation strategy. “Subjecting wireless broadband networks to rules that dictate how wired networks are designed and operated would be a mistake,” Mobile Future said (http://bit.ly/1mqZlWL). “It is imperative that the FCC keep this urgent demand-versus-capacity challenge in mind as it considers adding new net neutrality rules to the books. Everyone supports an open Internet. That’s why -- despite the call for more regulation -- not a single formal net neutrality complaint has been filed with the [FCC] since the adoption of its 2010 Open Internet Order.” Mobile Future blasted the possibility of subjecting “the entire mobile ecosystem to Title II regulations written to micromanage the businesses of local telephone monopolies. One can hardly envision a more anti-innovation approach, and the Administration should flatly and publicly reject these extreme calls.” Mobile Future urged the administration to focus on freeing up more spectrum for an expansion of mobile broadband. The Partnership for American Innovation, with Apple, IBM and Microsoft among members, also commented, highlighting the importance of a strong intellectual property system and a properly functioning patent system. “Heated rhetoric often based on the bad behavior of a few patent assertion entities has fueled an environment where a company is demonized for good faith enforcement of its hard-earned, legitimate property rights,” said the partnership (http://bit.ly/Y2AMEn). “The corresponding policy discussions lead our country away from a balanced IP system that enables collaboration and innovation. If this lopsided model of innovation is adopted, we risk creating a system where foreign competitors gain a competitive advantage by patenting their ideas while copying American IP without consequence.”
MediaTek launched MediaTek Labs, a global initiative that allows developers “of any background or skill level” to create wearables and Internet of Things devices, the chip maker said Monday (http://bit.ly/1wGFNhL). Its launch will open up “a new world of possibilities for everyone -- from hobbyists and students through to professional developers and designers -- to unleash their creativity and innovation,” the company said. “We believe that the innovation enabled by MediaTek Labs will drive the next wave of consumer gadgets and apps that will connect billions of things and people around the world."
Though details “are not yet clear” on President Barack Obama’s forthcoming executive order on privacy concerns about commercial drones, it’s expected to “task” the NTIA with convening a multistakeholder process to develop privacy guidelines, “likely either in the form of best practices or a voluntary code of conduct,” said Wiley Rein lawyers Kathleen Kirby and Ari Meltzer in a blog post Friday (http://bit.ly/1poKN4V). “Best practices generally are not enforceable,” they said. “A voluntary code of conduct, however, is legally enforceable against companies that affirmatively commit to follow it. While the decision to adopt a code of conduct is voluntary, a public pledge to follow the code generally would amount to a representation enforceable by the FTC under its consumer protection authority.” There are incentives to adopting voluntary codes of conduct, as NTIA has done in its previous proceedings, they said. “Companies build consumer trust by engaging with consumers and other stakeholders in multi-stakeholder processes and by adopting privacy codes of conduct developed during those discussions,” they said. “Enforceable codes of conduct provide the public clear, understandable baseline protections and offer businesses greater certainty about how agreed upon privacy principles apply to them. Indeed, in any enforcement action based on conduct covered by a code, the FTC likely would consider a company’s adherence to such a code favorably. In the absence of a generally agreed upon code of conduct, the FTC could enforce privacy guidelines on a case-by-case basis, with less predictability and thus greater risk for businesses."
The FCC sought more information from companies involved in AT&T’s proposal to buy AWS-1 licenses, as well as adding customers and related assets, from Plateau Wireless. The small carrier serves New Mexico and West Texas. The FCC sent information requests Monday to AT&T (http://bit.ly/1x2mhiP) and Plateau (http://bit.ly/1siGRu8). Among the questions for Plateau: “Explain in detail the decision made by Plateau Wireless to assign the spectrum, customers and network assets that are the subject of this application to AT&T, including any attempts made to enter into a sale of this wireless business or alternative arrangements with parties other than AT&T.” Plateau indicated in June it plans to exit the wireless business, selling its remaining assets, to concentrate on its wireline business, according to media reports.
The American Heart Association and American Stroke Association stressed the importance of improving indoor wireless 911 location accuracy, in a Sept. 11 FCC filing posted Monday in docket in 07-114. Time spent searching for a caller is “valuable, lifesaving time not spent treating patients suffering from an acute cardiovascular event,” the groups said (http://bit.ly/1porHM4). The “FCC’s proposed standards will have significant health benefits.” There are almost 424,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests yearly, and “tragically most result in death,” the groups said. “Timely cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation in these cases, when coupled with early advanced care, can increase long-term survival rates."
Apple’s shortage of the iPhone 6 is good for business on eBay, we found by monitoring various auctions for the four-day-old phones. Apple said Monday it sold more than the available 10 million iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus models in the three days after the phones went on sale in the U.S., Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Puerto Rico, Singapore and the U.K. “We could have sold many more iPhones with greater supply and we are working hard to fill orders as quickly as possible,” said CEO Tim Cook in a statement (http://bit.ly/1tV4wzg). Business was brisk at eBay Monday, which featured the new Apple phones on its landing page. Our midday search for the iPhone 6 brought up 1,913 results. The lowest price we found was $700 for a 16 GB model of the 4.7-inch version with the disclaimer in the product description, “Long story short I got scammed by a seller. The phone is being financed through tmobile and will eventually be blocked on their network... . It has or will eventually have a BAD IMEI (International Mobile Station Equipment Identity).” The item condition was listed as “for parts or not working” and 17 people were watching the item, which had a day to go in its “buy it now” auction. We saw an auction for a new, unlocked 64 GB 6 Plus silver phone end at $2,550 Monday, surging more than $1,000 in the last 40 minutes of bidding, which began Friday at $400. The phone’s suggested retail price is $399 at the Apple website.
The U.S. machine-to-machine (M2M) market is 10 percent of all mobile connections in the automotive and utilities sectors, a GSMA report said (http://bit.ly/1sV4bsb). The U.S. had 35 million connections, or 19 percent of all global M2M connections at the end of 2013, GSMA said in a news release Monday (http://bit.ly/1v04KEw). The U.S. is expected to reach 41 million connections this year, it said, driven by advances in the automotive, utilities, and oil and gas sectors. The U.S. M2M market is still in its early stages of development and needs to address significant challenges to fulfill its potential, GSMA said. The market lacks standardization, and there is little cooperation between the private and public sectors in many parts of the M2M economy, it said.
The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) and the American Council of the Blind (ACB) complained to the FCC that makers of wireless devices have a long way to go to make them more readily usable by people with impaired vision. Both groups filed in docket 10-213 offering comments for a biennial FCC report to Congress on implementation of the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act (CVAA). Both said in comments posted by the FCC Monday that “gaps” remain. “While industry has begun to demonstrate, through both words and actions, that it is largely taking seriously the access obligations of equipment manufacturers and service providers imposed by the Communications Act, many significant gaps remain,” AFB told the commission (http://bit.ly/1r0Vyk4). That few complaints have been filed at the FCC doesn’t mean there are no problems, the group said. Consumers continue to “struggle” to find accessible handsets “and there continues to be a failure at critical points along the sales, marketing and customer service chain to be aware of and communicate accurate information about accessible features and functions,” AFB said. Devices are better than they were but problems remain, ACB said. All features that are part of a phone should be accessible using screen reader and screen magnification programs, ACB said (http://bit.ly/1uSVgvG). “On [A]ndroid, even with the latest operating system, a person who is blind encounters significant challenges in independently enabling TalkBack, Android’s default screen reader,” ACB said. “There is still too much leeway for carriers to customize the [A]ndroid operating system, and in doing so, leaving TalkBack out.” CTIA said the FCC report must reflect the work the wireless industry is doing to comply with the CVAA. CTIA members “have gone further to undertake voluntary collaborative efforts in the spirit of the Act that have contributed to the widespread availability of, and information about, accessible wireless products and services,” the group said (http://bit.ly/1siqVYE).
Six years ago, when Qualcomm collaborated with Google on the first Android smartphones, “I remember people telling us, ‘This will never be successful,'” Qualcomm CEO Steve Mollenkopf said Thursday in a keynote webcast on the Qualcomm website (http://bit.ly/1wwRXcX) from his company’s Uplinq 2014 developers conference in San Francisco. Fast forward to 2014, Mollenkopf said, and more than a billion smartphones cumulatively have been shipped with Qualcomm Snapdragon processors built in. “So it’s really been an incredible, incredible thing, and it’s just the beginning,” he said. “If you look at the scale of what we're working on today, last year, calendar year 2013, we shipped a little bit shy of 750 million chipsets. That’s more than twice the number of worldwide PCs. It’s incredible scale that happens in mobile.” Qualcomm estimates there are more that 1,350 models of Snapdragon-equipped devices announced or commercially available throughout the world, Mollenkopf said. “But what we're excited about is that scale is actually going to go into a number of adjacent markets and adjacent categories. We look at every area of consumer electronics, and it’s leveraging all the scale and technology that we're developing and others are developing in mobile.” For example, Qualcomm views tablets as “a scaled-up smartphone,” Mollenkopf said. “They use the same ecosystems. It’s not a secret as to why they use the same chipsets and the same technology.” As for computing, it’s “definitely about mobile computing today,” and “it’s going to be about wearable computing and pervasive computing in the future,” he said. In cars, they're “really all about trying to get connected now,” he said. “You have people that are trying to decide when to buy their car based on what type of modem is actually going to be included in the car. It’s incredible.” If one looks at the Internet today, “the really interesting things” are no longer happening “on your desk,” he said. They're happening “in your pocket through the phone, and where they're really going is that all these different devices are going to be connected together.” Qualcomm predicts that more than 8 billion new smartphones will ship globally in the next five years, he said. “And in the developed world, many of those smartphones are going to be connected to a sea of many other devices, and those devices are not only going to be connected to the smartphone, but connected to each other.” As a result, Qualcomm sees “an enormous amount of innovation and experimentation that comes [into] play when people start to innovate at the edge of the network,” he said.