Broadcasters say they need to use encryption and digital rights management (DRM) on their ATSC 3.0 streams to make the service a safe place for content, but early adopters, consumers and public interest groups say doing so cuts off the only existing low-cost ways to receive ATSC 3.0 transmissions. Broadcast consortium Pearl TV told us new, working external tuners will be available in weeks, but until they hit the market, the only option is “a $600 television set,” said Tyler Kleinle, who discusses broadcast tech on YouTube as The Antenna Man. “I do not like the fact all these broadcasters are putting DRM up before there are any solutions to this issue,” said Jason Shallcross in one of hundreds of similar comments that appear to be posted by individual consumers in the past week in docket 16-142: “Its like they are trying to implement it as fast as they can before anyone can comment on it.”
Implementing proposed 988 outage reporting requirements shouldn't be very onerous, Jonathan Gilad, National Emergency Number Association government affairs director, told us, predicting 4-0 approval of the draft order on the FCC's agenda (see 2306290056). CTIA didn't comment, and there hasn't been lobbying on the docket 23-5 draft order. It will take years of 988 promotion and use before the Lifeline has the kind of recognition and automatic use that 911 does, speakers said Thursday at an event sponsored in Washington by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) marking a year since 988's official rollout. "‘911 didn't start off with instant success either; it takes a while," said Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra. HHS said Thursday it's adding Spanish-language text and chat services to Lifeline.
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel opened a Thursday FCC workshop on AI saying she sees more reason to be hopeful about what the technology can do than pessimistic about potential threats. Commissioner Nathan Simington warned against reactive regulation of AI. The National Science Foundation co-sponsored the forum.
The use of AI and other technologies in managing how spectrum is used tops the agenda for the FCC’s Aug. 3 meeting, Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said Thursday (see 2307130025). The FCC also released the draft items. Commissioners will vote on proposals on power levels for digital FM radio. Also on the agenda, a draft order establishing an up to $75 monthly broadband subsidy for eligible households in high-cost areas through the affordable connectivity program.
The Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday unanimously advanced its version of a FY 2024 federal spending bill that proposes increased annual funding for the FCC and FTC. The House Appropriations Committee voted 34-26 that afternoon to advance the Financial Services Subcommittee's FY24 spending bill, which would decrease funding for both agencies. The House Appropriations Commerce, Justice and Science and Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies subcommittees plan to mark up their FY24 spending bills Friday with proposals to decrease funding to NTIA and other tech-related Commerce Department agencies and end CPB’s traditional “two-year advance funding status” altogether.
Incarcerated people's communications service (IPCS) providers and advocates continued to disagree on how the FCC should implement the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act, in reply comments posted Thursday in docket 23-62 (see 2305090066). The issue remained whether the commission should allow for safety measures or site commissions in the final rate caps.
The FBI isn’t “in the business” of moderating social media content or forcing companies to limit speech, Director Christopher Wray told the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday.
The Maryland Supreme Court couldn't allow Comcast and Verizon to circumvent state legislative intent to resolve tax disputes through the administrative remedy process, Chief Justice Matthew Fader said Wednesday on the ISPs' challenge to the state's digital ad tax. The state’s high court released an opinion explaining its May 9 decision to overturn a Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County ruling that the tax is unconstitutional. The companies should have challenged the tax in the Maryland Tax Court, an expert administrative agency, before seeking judicial review, Fader said.
Companies holding international Communications Act Section 214 authorizations should be preparing for the FCC’s one-time data collection authorized in April (see 2304270039) and brace for tighter foreign-ownership disclosure rules and additional filing requirements to come out of that order’s accompanying NPRM, said Morgan Lewis attorneys Patricia Cave and Ulises Pin in an Incompas webinar Wednesday. Once the data collection order takes effect, companies need to “start reacting relatively quickly because there's going to be a short window in order to react” -- probably 30 days -- and the penalty for failure to do so could be “significant,” said Pin.
The House Communications Subcommittee unanimously approved the NTIA Reauthorization Act (HR-4510), the Spectrum Relocation Enhancement Act (HR-3430) and two other telecom bills in a show of bipartisan cooperation Wednesday, promoting the authority of the NTIA (see 2307110079).