More substance and detail are needed in guidelines the Interagency Labor Committee intends to follow for enforcing the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement's free-trade labor rules, commented retail, manufacturing and business groups as posted Monday in docket USTR-2020-0028. The treaty took effect July 1, giving Mexican workers collective bargaining rights for the first time, plus protecting them against retaliation for joining unions or refusing to join.
ATSC 3.0-focused entities BitPath, OneMedia and Pearl TV want the FCC to delay or ameliorate congressionally required ancillary services fees on broadcaster datacasting, while public interest groups believe those fees should be used to cover costs to consumers from purported disruptions in the 3.0 transition, said comments posted at the FCC in docket 20-145 (see 2006090055). Noncommercial educational broadcasters want to be exempt from the fees, and low-power TV groups seek more flexibility to benefit from 3.0.
Open radio access networks (ORANs), the topic of an upcoming FCC forum (see 2008180012), dominated the discussion during a Qualcomm-sponsored webinar Tuesday. Dean Brenner, Qualcomm senior vice president-spectrum strategy and technology policy, sees promise in ORAN. “It’s going to accelerate the 5G rollout dramatically,” he said: “It’s going to lower the costs for deploying. … It brings in a whole new group of players.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and state legislators expect to talk broadband, after the governor set a goal of 100 Mbps download speeds through executive order Friday, said the governor’s office and an aide to Sen. Lena Gonzalez (D) this week. Legislators are weighing two bills to raise the state standard from 6 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload for the California Advanced Services Fund. The executive order put legislative negotiations in flux, said Electronic Frontier Foundation Senior Legislative Counsel Ernesto Falcon.
With the UAS Integration Pilot Program (IPP) to expire in October (see 2006150056), FAA officials stressed Tuesday that drones are moving to a new stage with long-awaited rules almost ready for release, during a virtual conference sponsored by the agency and the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI). The much-watched annual conference went virtual because of COVID-19, with sessions in July and this week, continuing Wednesday (see 2007080059).
Q2 smartphone imports to the U.S. increased by double digits sequentially from Q1, amid China's supply chain recovery to pre-COVID-19 levels after the pandemic brought factories to a halt in much of February into March. The quarter-to-quarter increase masked subdued smartphone demand attributable to the decline in consumer spending. Year-over-year smartphone imports fell by double digits in Q2, consistent with IDC reporting a 12.6% decrease in second-quarter U.S. handset shipments.
Antitrust Chief Makan Delrahim is more likely to act to change the ASCAP and BMI music licensing degrees than Congress is, and any move DOJ makes in that direction is likely to be an uneasy process and complicated by the presidential election, broadcast and music licensing attorneys said in interviews this and last week. DOJ held a workshop on the possibility last month (see 2007290068). “It remains apparent from the continuing attention that the Antitrust Division is paying to the issue of consent decree reform that the DOJ may act” to modify the decrees, said Weil Gotshal intellectual property attorney Benjamin Marks, who represented the TV Music Licensing Committee. “I don’t think Congress is likely to take up the issue before the election or in the short term."
All Applied Materials factories and R&D labs “are running smoothly at pre-COVID levels of productivity,” said CEO Gary Dickerson on a fiscal Q3 call Thursday. “We remain mindful of global economic concerns and that consumer spending is a potential headwind for many sectors, including the electronics industry.” The company supplies vapor-deposition equipment and services to Chinese panel makers and can be a bellwether of display industry health.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit's 2-1 ruling Friday knocking down two FCC conditions on Charter Communications' buying Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks didn’t get to the merits (see 2008140018). It nonetheless could have implications for future consumer challenges of regulations, said cable attorneys and appellant the Competitive Enterprise Institute in interviews. Industry and public interest lawyers disagree how the ruling will affect a parallel FCC proceeding on sunsetting Charter/TWC/BHN conditions (see 2007230015).
The FTC should investigate TikTok’s “consumer data collection and processing practices,” Senate Majority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., and Senate Consumer Protection Subcommittee Chairman Jerry Moran, R-Kan., wrote FTC Chairman Joe Simons Thursday.