Opponents and supporters of reclassification filed long, often strongly worded filings in response to what FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski calls his “Third Way” broadband-reclassification proposal. The comments land at a sharply divided agency.
Regulators’ negotiations with industry over broadband reclassification probably will be long and slow, economists and analysts said in interviews. Meanwhile, a third meeting between Hill staffers and industry representatives Friday took up various spectrum policy matters (CD July 16 p9) that could require a rewrite of the Telecom Act, officials said.
The FCC probably will appeal to the Supreme Court its legal defeat over a policy of censuring broadcasters for airing one unintentional curse word during a show (CD July 14 p1), veteran industry lawyers and executives predicted. Many of them, and others we surveyed, also think the commission will at around the same time re-examine through a rulemaking what’s called the fleeting expletives policy. Career staffers continue to sort through filings against stations airing Fox programming over a Jan. 3 episode of American Dad, matching viewers’ complaints with the broadcasters in their markets, commission and industry officials said.
Dish Network’s request for a preliminary injunction that would block a federal statute requiring the direct broadcast satellite service carry significantly more public TV programming in HD fails to meet the necessary criteria, the Department of Justice said in opposing the request. Dish is suing the FCC as the enforcer of the law passed by Congress in May as part of the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010 (STELA) (CD May 13 p2). Dish said the statute violates the company’s First Amendment rights by requiring carriage of certain programming. Per the statute, Dish must reach an agreement with public TV stations for carrying the HD programming by July 27 or face an accelerated schedule to add those broadcasters’ streams in that format.
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- AT&T thinks restrictions on collecting and using information about customers and their actions online should be reduced for telcos and raised to the same level for cable companies and Web publishers, an executive said. Telcos come under “rules that other players in the environment don’t have,” and they apply beyond the wireline voice business that has long been heavily regulated, said Sherry Ramsey, assistant vice president for regulatory planning and policy.
Factors including cost, lack of digital literacy and access are preventing older Americans from getting online, panelists said at a conference by Project GOAL (Get Older Adults online) Thursday. The FCC is actively working on implementation of the National Broadband Plan, said John Horrigan, the agency’s consumer research director.
The FCC received thousands of filings this week in response to its inquiry seeking comments on reclassifying broadband transmission under Title II of the Communications Act, making broadband subject to common carrier regulation. Comments were due Thursday. The FCC remains sharply divided, with few signs that the FCC’s three Democrats, who support reclassification, or two Republicans, in sharp opposition, have moderated their views.
Portable devices that receive mobile DTV broadcasts were exempted from FCC rules that they contain tuners capable of getting regular analog and digital broadcasts, in a Media Bureau decision Thursday afternoon. Cellphones, PDAs, laptops, dongles and devices used in autos can exclude analog and/or ATSC A/53 digital TV signal reception if they can get mobile broadcasts using A/153. The products must be designed to be used “in motion” and give notice to consumers on the package and in certain cases at point of sale about which types of signals can’t be received.
The Senate Commerce Committee unanimously approved amended Internet accessibility legislation by Sens. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., and John Kerry, D-Mass., in a voice vote Thursday morning. The bill (S-3304) aims to increase the number of hearing aid-compatible phones, improve access to 911 emergency services, and expand and update closed captioning and video description requirements. Democrats and Republicans supported the bill, despite lingering concerns by consumer electronics companies (CD July 15 p12) .
A revamped rural health care telecom subsidy program should help more health facilities use broadband to connect to the outside world, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said. The commission initiated a rulemaking Thursday to change the rules of the USF program based on lessons learned from the Rural Health Care Pilot Program. The original program failed to live up to its potential, Commissioner Michael Copps said. In most years it disbursed less than 20 percent of the $400 million that could be spent.