Capital Audiofest 2020 will roll over to 2021, Director Gary Gill told us Monday. The consumer high-end audio show reached agreement with the Hilton Washington, D.C./Rockville Hotel & Executive Meeting Center in Maryland “to move the show from 2020 to 2021 without any issues,” said Gill. The 2021 show is scheduled for Nov. 5-7. Last year's show drew about 3,000 attendees; this year's event was to be Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Though Gill didn’t want to cancel, “it’s the direction the industry was going,” he said, referencing other cancellations. “I didn’t want to put people at risk. At a trade show, people sit shoulder to shoulder in small listening rooms.” Virtual vendor additions could be part of the 2021 program, Gill said.
Extend the 2.5 GHz tribal priority application window beyond Aug. 3, through February, Public Knowledge officials told an aide to FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly. COVID-19 means “the vast majority of application workshops were canceled, as were other forms of in-person outreach,” surveys of tribal lands to confirm maps “have been difficult to complete, and requests for waivers based on survey data are time consuming” and “stay-at-home orders have delayed tribal decision making,” PK said Monday in docket 18-120.
Copyright royalty judges’ initial determination in a webcasting rate-setting proceeding is now due April 15, the Library of Congress said Monday, citing COVID-19. The original Dec. 16 due date was postponed four months, given the “scope and severity of the COVID pandemic and its commensurate disruption of the Web V proceeding.”
The public can virtually access four administrative litigation proceedings, the FTC announced in orders Monday, citing COVID-19. The public won’t be allowed inside the hearing room, with in-person access limited to the witnesses, counsel, judicial staff and the court reporter. One such proceeding involves Axon having bought body-worn camera rival VieVu.
The Illinois broadband office urged the FCC due to COVID-19 to expand broadband where it’s unavailable or unaffordable. Immediately fund off-campus connectivity and wireless hot spots, urged the office’s director Matt Schmit in a letter posted Monday in docket 17-287. Increase the $9.25 monthly Lifeline discount, he said. The FCC declined comment.
That the pandemic showed "we can't imagine a future" with Americans lacking a connection is no reason to regulate broadband service as a utility, USTelecom CEO Jonathan Spalter told C-SPAN's The Communicators scheduled to have been televised this weekend. "To wrap it in the red tape of regulatory strictures, the overhang of bureaucracy that would be required if we were to make it a utility, would take us backward." He's "confident a wise administration that believes in the future of progress in our internet will understand this framework and will continue it." He has seen bipartisan support for keeping the internet open and transparent and for closing the digital divide, and cited predictions it could take $100 billion in government support to extend broadband to all unserved areas. That's adequate, he said, in the context of a broader U.S. infrastructure investment that may approach $1 trillion. Asked about the debate over changes to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, Spalter said: "The issues concerning content moderation are complex and thorny. It’s not our job, it’s not our business, and we’ll be watching with interest as these discussions take place."
E-commerce experts say COVID-19 boosts e-commerce, often for the big players (see 2007010054). The winners are well-known retail brands Amazon, Target and Walmart that gained new customers who didn’t shop online before the pandemic or had limited experience, said Kaitlyn Glancy, Flexport general manager-Northeast. “The big names are continuing to get bigger.” Electronics are a beneficiary of pandemic stay-at-home trends, said Glancy, citing spending on TVs and gaming devices. Consumers are also upgrading, she said on her freight transportation company's webcast Wednesday. Consumers are responding to “click and collect” options, where they can choose to have products delivered or picked up in store, said Glancy: Some 87% hope, and expect, the model to exist beyond the pandemic.
Registration for the Sept. 3-5 IFA 2020 show opened Wednesday, the same day the EU lifted some travel restrictions, but won't allow residents of the U.S., where COVID-19 isn't contained, to enter its external borders. IFA organizers “very much hope that the travel restrictions for US travelers will be eased” by the beginning of September and that “physical participation” in the show will "be possible -- hopefully without a quarantine,” emailed spokesperson Nicole von der Ropp Thursday. The EU says it will revisit the travel-ban policy every two weeks. IFA organizers said they're confident conditions will permit a vastly downsized in-person event at the Messe Berlin fairgrounds, limited to 4,000 people daily (see 2005190035). Samsung announced Tuesday it was pulling out and will stage its own virtual event in early September.
Warehouse staffing, consumer expectations for delivery and the Trade Act Section 301 tariffs on Chinese goods are among challenges Sonos is juggling as the company ratchets up e-commerce amid the novel coronavirus, said John Hills, senior manager-logistics, America. Hills told a webinar hosted by freight logistics company Flexport that during the pandemic, which slammed brick-and-mortar sales worldwide, Sonos is “not only dealing with the impact of COVID, we’re still navigating some of the waters with these 301 tariffs” imposed last year by the Trump administration on goods imported from China. Higher tariffs led Sonos to steer production of most U.S.-bound goods to Malaysia. Sonos CEO Patrick Spence highlighted a spike in direct-to-consumer sales (D2C) in April when consumers turned to e-commerce to buy goods they couldn’t get when stores temporarily closed. More people are required to move 1,500 units in a D2C model vs. a “handful” of pallets destined for one retailer, Hills said Wednesday. Forecasting D2C sales fluctuations can be unpredictable, said the executive: “It’s much more challenging to capture spikes in demand for D2C than it is for B2B.” An online article or blog can drive a surge, or a successful promotion can produce an unexpected order spike, he said. Sonos is also competing with big box retailers that have bigger warehouse staffing needs due to the pandemic-fueled jump in e-commerce business. FedEx also is getting more e-commerce consumer interest (see 2007010052).
The FTC got more than 34,000 online shopping complaints from consumers in April and May, the agency reported Wednesday. “More than 18,000 of those complaints related to items that were ordered but never delivered,” the FTC said. “The most common item reported not delivered was facemasks, with other reports including sanitizer, toilet paper, thermometers, and gloves as not received.” Reports of unreceived items in May were near double those of December, which is peak holiday shopping season. The agency sent warning letters in June to marketing companies to remove and address online and social media posts claiming their products can treat or prevent COVID-19 (see 2006050059).