Comcast's Peacock, with 54 million signups, is rolling out to Europe later this year to Sky's 20 million customers, and the next aim is global availability of the streaming service, said the company Thursday. Comcast executives waved off the need for more mergers and acquisitions as a prerequisite to become a viable international streaming power, during a call with analysts. "I love the company we have," and more organic growth is ahead without further acquisitions, said CEO Brian Roberts. "I think we do have the scale. We don't need M&A."
Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge John Bush repeatedly raised red flags during oral argument Thursday about the different liabilities government and private sector robocallers face under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act and how that seems to run afoul of the First Amendment. He twice said he was "bother[ed]" by what appears to be speakers treated differently due to the content of their speech. It's an appeal of a lower court's tossing TCPA litigation against Realgy Energy on grounds the act was unconstitutional until the Supreme Court severed the government-debt exception from the general robocall ban last year, with severance retroactive to 2015 (see 2102020068).
A draft NPRM on largely administrative changes to broadcast political advertising rules isn’t considered controversial and will likely be unanimously approved at or before commissioners' Aug. 5 meeting, said FCC officials and broadcast attorneys in interviews. The draft seeks comment on proposals to formalize policies about filing political ad information that the Media Bureau had long conveyed to licensees informally, attorneys said. “Some of it was already required, so I’m not sure that it makes much of a difference,” said Fletcher Heald's Anne Crump.
Provisions in the $65 billion broadband title in a developing infrastructure spending package weren't completely finalized Thursday, a day after the Senate cleared an initial test cloture vote 67-32 on proceeding to a shell bill (HR-3684). A bipartisan group of senators agreed Wednesday on the outlines of the package (see 2107280065). The Senate will vote Friday on the motion to proceed to HR-3684. Telecom-focused senators in both parties told us through Thursday that the thorniest broadband issue -- the extent of pricing transparency and digital redlining language -- remained in flux.
The full FCC voted to impose a per station penalty of $512,228 against 14 broadcasters and a reduced $30,000 penalty against another over violations of good faith negotiation rules in retransmission consent negotiations with AT&T and subsidiary DirecTV. The 4-0 heavily redacted forfeiture order was released Wednesday afternoon.
The FCC should establish a definition for “functional equivalence” and create uniform metrics for telecom relay service providers, said deaf and hard of hearing advocates in recent interviews. Hundreds of deaf and hard of hearing consumers submitted comments in docket 10-51 over the past two weeks urging this. Stakeholders said functional equivalency means a relay user can call or text using one number and have access to technologies similar to those of hearing consumers.
NTIA hasn't relaunched the Commerce Spectrum Management Advisory Committee or announced a meeting of what has emerged as one of the most important federal advisory groups on spectrum. Current and former CSMAC members said they have been told little, though they expect meetings to start again this year. Members said they're eager to get back to work, with many spectrum issues looming as 5G is deployed nationwide.
Bipartisan Senate negotiators were finalizing language Wednesday for their long-sought infrastructure spending package, after reaching a deal earlier in the day to resolve outstanding broadband and other items that had divided the group in recent days (see 2107220040). The measure is expected to keep broadband funding in the package at the agreed-upon $65 billion (see 2106240070), Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, told reporters. It’s also expected to include an extension of the FCC-led emergency broadband benefit, part of what’s expected to be a split decision between Democratic and Republican positions on connectivity affordability, lobbyists told us.
The prospect of an FTC privacy rulemaking is facing a partisan divide in the agency and on Capitol Hill. House Commerce Committee ranking member Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and House Consumer Protection Subcommittee ranking member Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., told us the agency shouldn’t issue a rule because it’s a legislative issue Congress needs to fix.
The House Science Committee advanced the National Institute of Standards and Technology for the Future Act (HR-4609) on a voice vote Tuesday despite some lawmakers' misgivings about how the agency’s proposed role in spectrum and telecom tech research could clash with NTIA. Chairwoman Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Texas, was awaiting feedback from the Department of Commerce. House Science also advanced the National Science and Technology Strategy Act (HR-3858) and other measures that mirror elements of the Senate-passed U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (S-1260).