California lawmakers advancing net neutrality legislation sends a message to Washington that Americans want an open internet, supporters said after Thursday’s vote (see 1808300056). FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly condemned the action, which Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel welcomed. National industry groups called for a federal law, saying state-specific rules threaten broadband investment. Lawsuits could come, said observers, although three other states earlier enacted net neutrality bills without legal challenge.
Senate Judiciary Committee members are certain to bring up Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's views on the Chevron doctrine and net neutrality during his confirmation hearing, lawmakers and lobbyists told us. They cautioned those issues will compete for attention with higher-profile ones like limits of executive power, abortion and same-sex marriage, as happened during 2017 confirmation hearings for now-Justice Neil Gorsuch (see 1703200051 and 1703210065). Kavanaugh's hearing begins at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in 216 Hart and continues through Thursday or Friday.
A long-awaited FCC order on changes to rules for the citizens broadband radio service band is unlikely for the Sept. 26 commissioners’ meeting, but should get a vote at the Oct. 23 meeting, said industry officials active in the 3.5 GHz proceeding. FCC Commissioner Mike O’Rielly said in early July he started to share his long-awaited proposal for the band with Chairman Ajit Pai (see Notebook section at end of 1807120033).
A hallmark of the Ajit Pai FCC chairmanship is that he has almost complete support from fellow Republicans, who have maintained party discipline. Republican Mike O’Rielly has had one full dissent and 12 partial dissents, our review found. Former officials told us Pai has no reason to complain.
BERLIN -- Sony executives are big on 5G, they told a consumer electronics conference Thursday. They said it will benefit gaming and other user experiences. The company also unveiled a new smartphone.
PHILADELPHIA -- NATOA is mobilizing members for an autumn battle expected at the FCC over wireless infrastructure deployment in the right of way, while the Wireless Infrastructure Association is hearing from local government concerns about small cells, said the groups’ officials in interviews this week. Local representatives asked hard questions of industry officials -- and tensions sometimes flared -- at NATOA’s annual conference (see 1808290044 and 1808280032). “Not always an easy conversation, but it is an appropriate conversation,” said WIA Director-Government Affairs Zac Champ.
The House and Senate Commerce committees are aiming to continue working on telecom and media issues in September, lawmakers and lobbyists said in interviews. Senate Commerce leaders plan additional work to create a spectrum and 5G-related legislative package as the committee’s top telecom priority. House Commerce is eyeing a September media marketplace hearing with a likely focus on the Next Generation Television Marketplace Act (HR-6465). Lobbyists and communications sector observers cautioned that Capitol Hill’s rapidly closing legislative window means there's only a limited chance new telecom bills will advance before November elections and the subsequent lame-duck session.
FCC Republicans Ajit Pai, Mike O’Rielly and Brendan Carr have voted together the vast majority of the time. Carr partially dissented once and has been mostly in step with Pai since he became a member a year ago. O’Rielly, a commissioner throughout Pai's chairmanship, has disagreed more, based on our review. O’Rielly has had partial dissents 12 times and a full dissent once.
BERLIN -- IFA executives are hedging their bets on GfK forecasts that the global consumer electronics industry will grow marginally in sales this year because the U.S. trade wars with China and the EU make it impossible to foretell what the fallout might be on the tech industry, they told IFA’s annual opening news conference Wednesday. GfK estimates global CE shipments will rise 0.8 percent in 2018 to 854 billion euros ($999 billion), after a 1 percent increase in the year’s first half, said the executives.
Some of the gray legal issues for the Digital Millennium Copyright Act aren't likely to become more black and white in the near future, with the Supreme Court unlikely to take up one petition for writ of certiorari filed last week on safe harbor issues and no looming good test cases for a host of others, copyright experts said. District Court rehearing of BMG's copyright complaint against Cox, which was to start this week after last week's settlement, pre-empted a 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals remand and decision that the cable operator wasn't entitled to safe harbor protections (see 1808240013).