Chris Luna, the person the League of United Latin American Citizens wants President Joe Biden to nominate for the vacant FCC seat, has retired as T-Mobile vice president-legal affairs (see 2305090077), the carrier said.
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., filed a Senate version Thursday of the House-passed Stopping Home Office Work's Unproductive Problems Act (HR-139) in a bid to roll back federal agencies’ COVID-19 telework policies. The measure, which the House approved in February, would require the FCC and all other federal agencies to return to using the telework policies in place at the end of 2019. The measure would effectively require all federal employees who were working in the office before the COVID-19 pandemic to return to their former work locations. Unions representing employees at the FCC and other agencies criticized HR-139 before its House passage (see 2302010068). “I regularly hear from Tennesseans struggling to get ahold of a federal agency because of the massive backlog created by employees not being in the workplace,” Blackburn said. The Show Up Act “would help restore accountability and productivity within the federal government, and I urge the Senate to promptly join the House in passing it.” Six other GOP senators are co-sponsors.
Equifax, Experian, Kochava, Oracle and Thomson Reuters are among data broker companies the House Commerce Committee queried Wednesday in its bipartisan investigation into potential exploitation of U.S. data. Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and ranking member Frank Pallone, D-N.J., led efforts to deliver letters to some 20 heads of data broker companies. They presented various questions to the companies in an effort to understand how they “purchase, collect, use, license, and sell Americans’ data.” Passing comprehensive federal privacy legislation to increase Americans’ control over their personal data is a “top priority,” they said.
The Senate Commerce Committee advanced the Securing Semiconductor Supply Chains Act (S-229) on a voice vote Wednesday. The measure and House companion HR-752 would direct the Commerce Department’s SelectUSA program to work with state-level economic development organizations to develop strategies to attract investment in U.S. semiconductor manufacturers and supply chains. Senate Commerce advanced a previous version of the bill in 2021 (see 2112090058).
Testimony and written responses from TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew show he’s as “adept at obfuscating Congressional oversight” as Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, House Innovation Subcommittee ranking member Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., told us Tuesday. She issued a statement in response to the company’s written answers to the House Commerce Committee’s questions for the record (see 2305080041). “Everything we heard at the hearing reinforced what we already knew -- industry-wide privacy issues arising from the vast collection, use, sharing, and monetization of personal data by social media platforms and other technology companies are a threat to Americans,” she said. “This further demonstrates a need for a comprehensive national consumer data privacy framework to create meaningful limits on collection, use, and sale of Americans’ data.”
Google is failing to comply with the House Judiciary Committee’s investigation into the company's alleged collusion with the Biden administration to censor online speech (see 2302150045), Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, wrote Monday, threatening subpoena “enforcement” options. Parent company Alphabet delivered some 4,000 documents in response to the subpoena, but the documents include “improper redactions,” Jordan wrote King & Spalding's Daniel Donovan, an attorney representing Alphabet. The company failed to deliver “material the Committee has reason to believe may be in the company’s possession and is responsive to the subpoena," wrote Jordan. The committee expects unredacted copies of the previous material and other material moving forward, he said. If the company doesn’t comply, the committee “may be forced to consider the use of one or more enforcement mechanisms,” he said. A company spokesperson said Monday: "Since December, we have been producing relevant documents in response to the committee’s requests and will continue to work constructively with them.”
Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., continued Tuesday his recent streak of Senate Armed Services Committee hearings in which he’s pressed DOD officials to support his bid to delay congressional action to repurpose portions of the 3.1-3.45 GHz band for commercial 5G use until after the Pentagon completes a study of its systems on the frequency. Rounds’ concerns about a premature lower 3 GHz repurposing led him to object in March to a House-passed bill that would have extended the FCC’s spectrum auction authority through May 19 (HR-1108), setting the stage for the mandate’s expiration (see 2303090074). Lawmakers haven’t reached a consensus on reconsidering his alternative proposal to restore the authority through Sept. 30 (see 2304280027). “Physics still count” in determining the appropriate use of a particular band, Rounds said Tuesday after Gen. Chance Saltzman, U.S. Space Force chief-space operations, said repurposing parts of the 3.1-3.45 GHz band could force the military to migrate off the frequency a “developmental radar that is going to significantly enhance our ability to do space domain awareness.” Shifting the radar off the band would mean “we lose the time we’ve already invested” plus as much as several hundred million dollars in development costs, and “would also mean that we have to use” different spectrum that “isn’t as capable” for deep space operations, Saltzman said. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Brown said the DOD’s study of the band will be “critical to understand the impact” on U.S. national security that could come from repurposing it for 5G. He said some Special Operations Forces C-130 aircraft equipment utilizes the frequency and it would cost about $2 billion to “redesign it” to operate on another band.
Tweaking current children’s privacy law won’t adequately protect young internet users so Congress must pass a comprehensive federal privacy law, House Commerce Committee members said during a House Innovation Subcommittee hearing Thursday. Witnesses told the panel the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and FTC rules can’t make up for what’s lacking without a federal privacy law. Child safety legislation must be rooted in a comprehensive national standard, said House Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash. She said the FTC should be the preeminent data protection regulator in the world but only at the direction of Congress, voicing her disapproval of the agency “going its own way” through a privacy rulemaking effort. FTC Chair Lina Khan recently told committee members the agency would defer to Congress if legislators pass a federal law (see 2304180077). Ranking member Frank Pallone, D-N.J., agreed with Rodgers, saying protecting children will require passing a federal privacy law. House Innovation Subcommittee Chairman Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., asked witnesses why COPPA doesn’t go far enough in protecting children’s privacy. Salesforce Global Privacy Head Edward Britan noted COPPA doesn’t extend to children older than the age of 13 and said it’s difficult to identify young users using age-verification methods. COPPA applies only to data collected from kids’ online activity, which would surprise most parents, said Public Interest Privacy Center President Amelia Vance. The FTC can’t provide the preemption needed for small businesses to manage compliance, said ACT|The App Association President Morgan Reed, noting 289 privacy bills are being considered at the state level. Congress is the only body that can provide clear privacy rules across the board for companies, he said.
Senate Communications Subcommittee Chairman Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M., confirmed Thursday he plans a hearing as soon as the second week of May with a primary focus on a potential legislative USF revamp. “My intention is for the focus to be in and around USF” given ongoing work with Communications ranking member John Thune, R-S.D., to “create a working group” to draft a legislative revamp, Lujan told us. “Thus far it feels like there’s bipartisan interest from all sides,” so “I’m hopeful this hearing will bring” the issue onto “the front burner and maybe can act as a catalyst for us all to work together and get things done.” Lujan and former Senate Commerce Committee ranking member Roger Wicker, R-Miss., refiled the Funding Affordable Internet with Reliable (Fair) Contributions Act last month to direct an FCC study of expanding the USF funding pool to include edge providers like Google-owned YouTube and Netflix (see 2303160080). Thune and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., refiled the Reforming Broadband Connectivity Act in late March in a bid to revamp USF's funding mechanism (see 2303280071).
The House passed the Precision Agriculture Satellite Connectivity Act (HR-1339) Wednesday on a 409-11 vote. HR-1339 would require the FCC to review and potentially institute changes to satellite rules to promote precision agriculture. The chamber also passed (see 2304260056) the Institute for Telecommunication Sciences Codification Act (HR-1343) and Advanced, Local Emergency Response Telecommunications Parity Act (HR-1353) earlier in the week. House Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and Communications Subcommittee Chairman Bob Latta, R-Ohio, hailed passage of all three bills, which their panel advanced in March (see 2303240065). "Americans need access to reliable, high-speed internet services, whether on the farm, in their home, or in emergency situations," Rodgers and Latta said. "It is essential that America continues to lead in developing these technologies to close the digital divide.”