Sharper pencils resulted in satellite operators upping the amount of C-band spectrum that could be available for terrestrial use (see 1810220053), they told us, saying it's unlikely they will propose freeing up even more of the 3.7-4.2 GHz. A lawyer with a client involved in C-band said the additional spectrum will get the FCC's attention, and the proposal fits squarely into what the agency was believed to have wanted -- repurposing 200 MHz.
Media market stakeholders are likely to launch further salvos over the next two months in a bid to define the contours of the coming Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act reauthorization debate, but Capitol Hill is unlikely to wade further into the issue until the 116th Congress convenes next year, lawmakers and lobbyists told us. The recertification process was seen as unlikely to start in earnest until after January. The issue factored into a September House Communications Subcommittee hearing (see 1809270062).
The FCC approved revised rules for the 3.5 GHz citizens broadband radio service band, as expected (see 1810160068), over a dissent by Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel. Commissioner Mike O’Rielly, who crafted the revised rules, said changes were necessary to spark interest in the priority access licenses that will be sold as one tier of the band.
LOS ANGELES -- Intel estimates autonomous vehicles will form a $7 trillion “passenger economy” by 2050 that includes creating “immersive media” for in-car consumption “when us drivers become idle passengers,” said Doug Davis, senior vice president-Intel Automated Driving Group, in a SMPTE conference keynote Monday. The 2050 estimate doesn’t include “the value of the cars,” he said.
BARCELONA -- ICANN faces five key challenges for which it must rethink its vision, Chairman Cherine Chalaby said at Monday's opening of the internet body's weeklong meeting. He cited exponential growth in security problems that challenge security and stability of the Domain Name System; the possibility the multistakeholder system could become more expensive but less effective as it scales up; and that new unique identified regimes are emerging. He said growing importance of the internet to all sectors increases the possibility governments will try to control the DNS, and domain name market consolidation makes expansion of the generic top-level domain name (gTLD) space uncertain.
Sprint, Twitter and three tech and telecom industry groups reported increasing Q3 lobbying expenditures over the same period in 2017. Cox and others said spending dropped. The filing deadline was Monday night. Outside firms reported substantial income from lobbying on behalf of other telecom and tech companies and industry groups.
FCC commissioners approved 4-0, largely as circulated by Chairman Ajit Pai, revised rules for public land mobile radio use of the 800 MHz band. The item was taken off the agenda for Tuesday’s commissioners’ meeting. Late discussions on the eighth floor concerned questions raised last week by APCO, the Enterprise Wireless Alliance and others about including in the rules a contour matrix developed by the Land Mobile Communications Council in 2015 (see 1810190056). But the order wasn’t changed substantially to address those questions, officials said Monday. Among the few tweaks, questions were added about low power in the UNII-5 and -7 bands and questions were also added on portable devices.
San Jose is finding early success speeding up permitting process for small-cell wireless infrastructure that will be used for 5G, city officials said in an interview. FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel and local governments have touted San Jose’s public-private partnerships with AT&T, Verizon and Mobilitie as a model that could be applied nationally, without pre-emption (see 1806280007). Verizon said its agreement with the city is meeting expectations.
NTIA officials organized private meetings this summer with at least 14 different groups representing tech, telco and other industry interests to discuss the Trump administration’s privacy principles (see 1810100057), according to documents we obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Of the 21 groups included in some 60 NTIA documents, four were consumer or privacy advocates. Industry representatives and a former senior-level FTC official defended the gatherings. Consumer groups said the process was skewed.
A draft on eliminating requirements broadcasters send hard copies of contract documents to the FCC hasn’t been subject of negotiation among eighth-floor offices, we're told. The order isn’t expected to change ahead of Tuesday's commissioners’ meeting, said officials Friday.