Expect the Senate Commerce Committee to scrutinize industry and government data sharing as the two sides collaborate on COVID-19 response, various groups said in advance of Thursday’s paper hearing (see 2004030076). Democrats will want to know what data is shared with government and how people are being tracked, Interactive Advertising Bureau Executive Vice President-Public Policy Dave Grimaldi told us Wednesday. He will testify and expects Republicans to explore public safety, economic and consumer benefits.
Despite what could be a massive early sign-up of subscribers and much quality content, prospects for short-form video platform Quibi are bleak due to the pandemic shutdown on new content production, nScreenMedia analyst Colin Dixon blogged Monday. It also will be challenged by such emerging over-the-top competition as Comcast's Peacock streaming service debuts in July and HBO Max in May, and by belt-tightening by consumers, he said. Quibi didn't comment Tuesday.
“Good cause” exists during the COVID-19 pandemic for the International Trade Commission chief administrative law judge (CALJ) to let Sonos and Google have their May 11 settlement conference by phone, said a joint motion (login required) posted Tuesday in docket 337-TA-1191. CALJ Charles Bullock presides over the Tariff Act Section 337 investigation into Sonos allegations that Google smart speakers and other devices infringe five Sonos multiroom audio patents (see 2002060070). His March 11 order ruled out remotely meeting without permission and for “good cause shown.” Sonos and Google employees “with settlement authority” are in California, and their outside lawyers are there and in Illinois and Washington, said the motion. All are under stay-at-home orders. Requiring them to “travel to and conduct an in-person settlement conference would place these individuals at undue risk,” it said. “While it may be possible that some restrictions could be lifted before May 11, it is unlikely that the parties could schedule an in-person settlement conference to occur in the brief window of time after the lifting of any restrictions.”
Consumer purchase intentions for loudspeakers and headphones were flat before COVID-19, and demand will likely spike due to work-at-home and entertainment-in-place practices, Parks Associates reported Tuesday. Parks before the pandemic found U.S. broadband household penetration rates of 44% for speakers, 37% for headphones not bundled with a phone or music player and 33% for earbuds. Recent demand won’t diminish consumer expectations for advanced functionality, "so device manufacturers still need to prioritize app development and software enhancements,” said analyst Steve Nason. “Everyone in the household now needs their own headphones and earbuds for privacy.” Users at home want to integrate stand-alone headphones with smart speakers and other connected devices, he said.
MediaJustice, the United Church of Christ and 60-plus other groups asked FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to facilitate free inmate calling services during COVID-19 pandemic, in a petition in docket 12-375 and as expected (see 2003300022). ICS providers should sign Pai's Keep Americans Connected pledge, and the FCC shouldn't let Securus stop making USF contributions, they asked. Also Tuesday, Worth Rises asked for free ICS calls.
TV viewing in the top 25 markets grew 13% from the week of March 9 to the week of March 16 and 33% from the week of March 18, 2019, said Comscore Tuesday. Much higher ratings for local stations during the COVID-19 pandemic are being driven by a broader demographic representation of viewers than is typically observed during news segments, said the research firm: Viewing for the 18-34 segment is up 38% year on year -- 35% for those 35-54 -- through March 22. Seattle and New York had lower than average week-over-week increases vs. the national average when comparing the week of March 16, 2020, with the previous week; the regions were hit “early and hardest” by the coronavirus, Comscore noted. During the week of March 16, viewing increases were most dramatic in San Francisco, Dallas and some Midwest metropolitan areas.
The U.S. is shifting toward privacy by design and building safeguards into products from the outset rather than into disclosure statements consumers don’t read, FTC Office of Policy Planning Senior Economic and Technology Adviser Liad Wagman told the Technology Policy Institute Tuesday. He noted he was speaking only for himself, which the commission reiterated after his appearance.
Zoom emerged as a tool for everyone from businesses to clubs to houses of worship to hold meetings online in the COVID-19 era. The U.K. government used it for cabinet meetings. The load such conferencing sites are putting on networks appears mostly manageable. Zoom users question whether data is adequately protected.
The FCC seeks comments by May 6, replies May 21, on a petition for expedited declaratory ruling or waiver from the American Bankers Association and other financial groups seeking clarity that banks, credit unions and customer-facing financial service providers can use automatic telephone dialing systems, prerecorded messages and artificial voice for calls involving the COVID-19 pandemic. That's from a public notice in docket 02-278 Monday. Such calls should qualify as "emergency purposes" under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act and be allowable without prior consent, they said.
U.S. importers sourced 5.81 million Chinese smartphones in February, said Census Bureau data we accessed through the International Trade Commission. It's the lowest since such tracking began in 2007. COVID-19 upended the Chinese supply chain after the virus' first outbreak in Hubei province in January. February smartphone imports to the U.S. from all countries declined 29% from January, to 10.17 million handsets, and were down 25% from February 2019. China made 57% of February smartphone imports to the U.S., 19 points lower than January and eight points below its February 2019 share.