Industry counseled against FCC regulation on vulnerabilities to the security and integrity of border gateway protocols (BGP), in early comments on a February notice of inquiry from the FCC (see 2202250062). Cisco and other commenters said the issues are difficult and complex and require an international approach. The notice is part of the FCC’s cybersecurity focus as it looks at vulnerabilities posed by Russian companies (see 2203180051).
The FCC is working on a proposal on siting wireless and broadcast towers, small cells and other facilities in flood plains. An NPRM, circulated last month by Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, takes on how the FCC should help the U.S. meet targets in executive order 13690, handed down under President Barack Obama in 2015, rescinded during the Trump administration and reinstated in the early days of the Biden administration.
Antitrust filing fees should be increased and enforcer deadlines extended to reflect modern markets, FTC Chair Lina Khan said Friday. Congress’ assumptions when the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act passed in 1976 are now severely outdated, considering the recent surge in merger filings, she said during the American Bar Association’s antitrust law spring meeting in Washington.
Accenture CEO Julie Sweet joined Microsoft President Brad Smith and security experts Friday in seeking more focus on “responsible” AI. It's time for a broader national discussion, involving the government, interest groups and the companies building AI systems, said speakers during a Center for Strategic and International Studies webinar Friday. CSIS plans to launch a project in coming months.
Competitors raised concerns with Delaware limiting eligibility for $56 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding to big ISPs with existing cable franchises. Competitive telecom groups said they hoped for open and technology-neutral bidding processes there and in other states. A Delaware official defended the state program’s eligibility restriction, which excluded a Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) winner, as an “edge-out” strategy to extend broadband more quickly.
Almost two years after FCC commissioners approved a Further NPRM allowing more widespread use of the 6 GHz band, the agency hasn’t finalized the rules. To some industry experts, the delay has been a surprise. The agency appeared close to acting at the end of the Trump administration (see 2012180057). Later speculation was that an order would have to wait for a ruling on a challenge to the broader order before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (see 2104160053).
Broadcast groups and the FCC will face off in oral argument before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Tuesday over the agency’s foreign-sponsored content disclosure rules, and broadcast and appellate attorneys told us it's especially difficult to predict how the matter will play out, with rules that were unanimously approved and with the Russian invasion of Ukraine as a backdrop. “There is simply no need -- and it is unlawful -- to force broadcasters leasing to churches, schools and local businesses, among others, to do pointless research as to whether those lessees are foreign agents,” said an NAB spokesperson Friday. NAB is challenging the rules alongside the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters and the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council.
The FCC’s new consumer broadband labels "must be simple, accurate, and user friendly," said Commissioner Geoffrey Starks during the agency’s second virtual public hearing on the subject (see 2203110064). The FCC is "working to resolve questions" about whether the way consumers use broadband has "significantly changed since 2016 in ways that call for revisions to the format or content of the proposed labels," where the labels should be displayed, how to ensure accuracy of the labels, and the "appropriate time frame" for providers to meet the labeling requirements, Starks said.
California legislators urged the Public Utilities Commission to pause before approving rules for a $2 billion last-mile federal funding account (FFA) required by the state’s $6 billion broadband law. At a hearing livestreamed Wednesday, Assembly Communications Committee members grilled CPUC Communications Division Director Rob Osborn on a proposed rule to prevent ISPs from increasing prices for FFA-funded plans for 10 years.
With three months to go before the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline begins accepting calls and texts via 988, promotion and efforts at raising public awareness will be decentralized, with a national campaign geared to the public possible next year. 988 services are to be available nationwide effective July 16. The federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) told us 988 won't be available nationally before then, so it recommends not promoting its use to the public in advance.