Verizon and Tracfone approval appears unlikely until after October, with the companies awaiting clearance from the FCC and California regulators, but the companies appear to be making progress. At least one deal opponent, Public Knowledge, appears poised to withdraw its objections. PK hasn’t filed anything at the FCC, but it's looking to do so soon, a spokesperson confirmed. Industry officials said Communications Workers of America will also soon lay out its latest take at the FCC.
The 2021 nationwide emergency alert system and wireless emergency alert tests appeared to go smoothly in some places but faced reception and transmission difficulties elsewhere, according to anecdotal evidence and early reports from EAS officials. Numerous stations that received their EAS feed from iHeart subsidiary Premiere Radio Networks broadcast a message without an audio alert, several State Emergency Communications Committee chairs told us. “It didn’t go very well,” said Kansas SECC Chair Roy Baum. Reception of the opt-in only WEA test appeared to be inconsistent, but it’s difficult to know if those who didn’t get the message had their phones correctly configured to do so, said Alaska SECC Chair Dennis Bookey.
Gray Television said the FCC’s $518,000 notice of apparent liability against it last month (see 2107070066) creates a new rule against affiliation sales without notice and impermissibly regulates the broadcaster’s content choices. The comments came in Gray’s 55-page NAL response filed Monday. The FCC’s notice was 10 pages.
TikTok is fielding a wave of user complaints about content takedowns and account suspensions, after the platform’s shift to more automated moderation. TikTok is removing content and accounts based on false violations, one user told us. Others expressed frustration over seemingly frivolous takedowns. Content moderation experts told us automation is necessary at TikTok’s scale, but the platform can act to minimize mistakes.
Democratic senators are actively eyeing how to use a planned $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation package to further boost broadband spending beyond the $65 billion in connectivity money included in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (HR-3684) the chamber passed Tuesday. Republicans told us they’re concerned about such an attempt to double-dip on broadband spending given the amount of money they already agreed to allocate via HR-3684 and a set of COVID-19 aid bills. HR-3684 itself still must clear the majority-Democratic House before it goes to President Joe Biden’s desk.
Tech sector and civil society continue to disagree on aspects of a proposed EU AI regulation, they said. The draft Artificial Intelligence Act (AIA) seeks to create trust in AI technologies via a risk-based approach that categorizes them as prohibited, high-risk or limited risk (see 2104210003). The proposal got generally positive though mixed reviews when it emerged in April. A European Commission consultation that closed Friday showed public interest and consumer groups remain worried about the measure's potential impact on human rights, while technology companies are concerned the law is too broad and could be onerous.
DOJ has “grave concerns” about T-Mobile's impending shuttering of its CDMA network and what that means for Dish Network's many Boost customers left in the lurch, said a July letter to Dish and T-Mobile from DOJ antitrust acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Powers that Dish filed Monday with the SEC. Justice said it might “pursue all remedies available” if the CDMA network shutdown means either T-Mobile or Dish not taking necessary steps to ensure Boost customers aren't left stranded without a functioning network. Many think the FCC is unlikely to act on Dish's CDMA complaint (see 2105060024).
Automotive advertising could take a while to recover from vehicle supply shortages and may never return to the prior position as a category, said broadcast executives in Q2 calls last week. “We don’t see it getting back” to being 25% of Nexstar’s ad business, said Chief Operating Officer Tom Carter. This was echoed by Gray Television co-CEO Pat LaPlatney and others.
FCC-proposed two-tier regulatory fees for non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) systems (see 2012100078) are dividing the satellite industry, stirring controversy and leaving stakeholders uncertain if the agency might change course, many involved in the proceeding told us. They agreed it's not clear what the FCC might do next. Industry is lobbying bureau personnel and agency staffers.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., Banking Committee ranking member Pat Toomey, R-Pa., and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., were seeking a Saturday vote on language to clarify new cryptocurrency tax provisions included in the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act substitute for shell bill HR-3684 (see 2108050064). They seek to narrow the definition of “broker” for digital asset third-party tax-reporting requirements. Software developers, e-wallet providers and miners shouldn’t face the same burdensome requirements as entities running crypto exchanges, they said.