Expect legislation for regulating artificial intelligence from Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Josh Hawley, R-Mo., to be introduced “soon,” Hawley told us Thursday.
The FCC’s final 42 GHz NPRM, released Friday, got few changes from the draft proposed by Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, as expected (see 2306020048). Commissioners approved the 42 GHz item 4-0 Thursday (see 2306080042). The final version of the next-generation 911 NPRM adds numerous questions to the draft and got the most tweaks among the items approved Thursday. No major changes were made to the final NPRM on robocalls and robotexts, which were also approved unanimously (see 2306080043).
The California Public Utilities Commission authorized pilot programs to allow low-income consumers to stack state and federal benefits to pay for wireline and wireless broadband services. At a virtual meeting Thursday, commissioners voted 5-0 for a revised draft (see 2306060048) in docket R.20-02-008. Meanwhile, a consumer group is raising concerns about Verizon’s Friday letter to the commission on its struggles to migrate TracFone California customers to its network. Ensuring those customers weren’t abandoned was a “central issue” in the state commission’s merger review two years ago, Center for Accessible Technology (CforAT) legal counsel Paul Goodman said in an interview.
Making content providers pay telcos to carry traffic may not be a good idea, several speakers said Thursday at a streamed Information Technology & Innovation Foundation event on the future of the internet in Europe. The European Commission has been consulting on the future of e-communications in the bloc, and one aspect of the inquiry is "fair compensation" for ISPs that carry traffic of major content producers (see Ref: 2303220017]). One question is whether this is even a problem, and whether regulation could have unintended consequences, said Analysys Mason Manager-TMT Strategy Shahan Osman.
The satellite industry is playing defense at the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference against potentially opening some bands allocated for satellite use to terrestrial mobile service, said Hogan Lovells space lawyer George John Thursday at an ABA space law symposium in Washington.
The FCC approved 4-0 NPRMs on expediting the transition to next-generation 911 and giving consumers more choice on the robocalls and robotexts they’ll receive (see 2305180069). Both were approved with limited comments from commissioners.
FCC commissioners approved an NPRM 4-0 Thursday seeking comment on potential sharing in the 42 GHz band. Industry officials disagree how much interest there will be in using the band on a shared basis (see 2305300055). But all commissioners welcomed the NPRM.
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Pennsylvania House committees passed bills on 911 and 988 funding Wednesday, though some lawmakers voiced concerns about the state's means of funding of the emergency call services.
The Regulatory Commission of Alaska (RCA) adopted emergency regulations to extend the Alaska USF (AUSF) until Oct. 29. At a partially virtual meeting Wednesday, commissioners voted 4-0 for draft rules that largely track with a Department of Law (DOL) proposal last month, but with two changes that respond to industry concerns. Also, commissioners unanimously agreed to extend the statutory deadline for docket R-21-001 by 90 days until Sept. 27. This will give the RCA time to adopt a three-year extension through regular procedure. AUSF stakeholders applauded the commission's actions.