Todd Schlekeway, president of NATE: The Communications Infrastructure Contractors Association, called for changes in how the wireless industry does business with tower companies. Schlekeway's open letter came as earnings season begins for carriers and NATE members.
The FCC Office of Communications Business Opportunities on Tuesday issued small-entity guides on compliance with the agency's wireless handset hearing aid order, "all-in" video pricing order and pole attachment disputes order. It said in docket 23-388 that the hearing aid compatibility rule for handset manufacturers will take effect on or after Dec. 14, 2026, while the hearing aid compatibility rule for nationwide service providers will take effect after June 14, 2027, and after June 13, 2028 for non-nationwide service providers. In docket 23-203, the FCC said that while the all-in pricing order is already in effect, cable operators with annual receipts of $47 million or less have until March 19 to comply. The agency said in docket 17-84 that the pole attachment disputes order went into effect July 25.
A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law requiring ByteDance to divest TikTok, citing Congress’ “well-supported national security concerns.”
T-Mobile and UScellular countered opposition filed against their deal that has T-Mobile acquiring “substantially all” of the smaller provider’s wireless operations, including about 30% of its licensed spectrum. Numerous commercially sensitive details were redacted from the filing posted Friday in docket 24-286. In December, the Rural Wireless Association, EchoStar and Communications Workers of America asked the FCC to reject the deal (see 2412100044), which was announced in May. In the filing, T-Mobile and UScellular pointed to the transaction's economic benefits, laid out (see 2409160029) in a September public interest statement (PIS). “Unsurprisingly, the petitioners and commenters questioning the consumer benefits described in the PIS fail to provide any credible evidence or technical analysis to support their allegations,” the filing said. “Instead, these parties baselessly assert that the Transaction will harm competition among mobile wireless providers and result in higher prices for consumers.”
The FCC revised the reporting templates and certification forms for annual reports from incarcerated people’s communications services providers, said an order Wednesday from the Wireline and the Consumer and Public Affairs bureaus. The changes include expanding the reporting to video IPCS providers, moving detailed facility and contract information to a single worksheet and revising the reporting instructions, the order said. The updates are intended to “both enhance the value and usefulness of the Annual Reports and reduce existing or proposed reporting burdens, while continuing to enable the Commission to monitor the IPCS marketplace,” the order said. The changes “will bring increased transparency to IPCS providers’ rates, charges, and practices, help ensure compliance with the Commission’s IPCS rules,” and allow the FCC to “monitor pricing practices and trends in the IPCS marketplace generally.”
FuboTV's merger with Disney's Hulu+ Live TV will mean two major players in the virtual multichannel video programming distribution landscape -- New YouTube TV and the New Fubo entity -- with an array of much smaller services following in their wake, Ampere Analysis' Andrew Dougert wrote Tuesday. Announced Monday (see 2501060003), the merger could take up to 18 months to close, he said. By then, YouTube TV will likely have around 10.5 million subscribers, while Fubo and Hulu+ Live TV are expected to collectively have nearly 6.4 million, he said. Behind them, EchoStar's Sling TV currently has a little more than 2 million subscribers. The Fubo/Hulu deal has Fubo dropping its litigation seeking to block the Disney/Fox/Warner Bros. Discovery sports streaming joint venture Venu. The parties on Monday filed a stipulation of voluntary dismissal (docket 1:24-cv-01363) with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, asking that the preliminary injunction against Venu (see 2408160040) be lifted.
Gray Media, Nexstar, E.W. Scripps and Sinclair Broadcast have launched an ATSC 3.0 joint venture focused on delivering data using broadcast signals. Called Edgebeam Wireless, the new company will “provide expansive, reliable, and secure data delivery services,” said a joint news release Tuesday. It was launched ahead of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the release said. Financial details of the joint venture weren’t disclosed. Combining four of the country’s largest broadcasters, the new entity “creates a spectrum footprint that no individual broadcaster could achieve on its own,” and allows “nationwide coverage for data delivery to billions of potential devices,” the release said. Nexstar and Sinclair also own Bitpath, another ATSC 3.0 joint venture focused on datacasting, founded in 2018. “Our vision is to be at the forefront of the wireless revolution, harnessing the power of ATSC 3.0 to establish a nationwide broadcast data network,” said BitPath’s website. "BitPath’s efforts will be integrated into this new JV—the formation of the JV joins together all the efforts of these four broadcasters to build and utilize this nationwide network ATSC 3.0 network," said a Nexstar spokesperson. Edgebeam will represent an increased effort and focus on datacasting, a broadcast executive told us. EdgeBeam “will be able to deliver data across the country to any civilian or military device with an ATSC 3.0 receiver, such as cars and trucks, drones, marine vessels, phones, tablets, and television sets,” the release said. Potential applications for data delivery include connected cars, content delivery, and high-accuracy enhanced GPS, businesses where the companies have existing efforts. Sinclair announced a deal to deliver 4K video content at the 2024 NAB Show (see 2404150031), while BitPath offers a precision GPS service called Navpath. Nexstar and Scripps have also long been working on experimental efforts using datacasting to update connected cars. “EdgeBeam Wireless will have benefits for the entire wireless ecosystem, helping to relieve congestion while also offering competitive pricing for wide area data distribution,” said Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley.
CTA urged President-elect Donald Trump's administration to move with care on proposals for imposing higher tariffs on imports, warning they could result in sharp declines in the purchases of smartphones and other devices. With CES beginning in Las Vegas, CTA also projected retail revenue in the consumer tech industry of $537 billion this year, up 3.2% over 2024.
The FCC commissioners' unanimously adopting a retransmission consent blackout reporting requirement for multichannel video programming distributors (MVPD) likely doesn't mean the agency will also mandate rebates for subscribers due to those blackouts anytime soon, pay-TV and broadcast experts tell us. The blackout reporting order was released Friday. The FCC is unlikely to push rebates during the last days of outgoing Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel's administration and incoming Chairman Brendan Carr is unlikely to consider rebates, some pay-TV watchers say. Neither Rosenworcel's nor Carr's offices commented Monday.
The International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE) told the FCC that T-Mobile’s proposed buy of “substantially all” of UScellular’s wireless operations, including some of its spectrum (see 2405280047), should have little effect on wireless competition. “UScellular is a struggling regional carrier with significant structural disadvantages compared to national carriers like AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 24-286: “T-Mobile sets its plan prices nationally and does not adjust them based on localized competition, including UScellular’s presence, pricing, or service offerings and quality.” ICLE said given UScellular’s size, “limited footprint, and uncompetitive pricing,” it “plays no role as a ‘maverick’ disrupting the market and is unlikely to do so into the foreseeable future.”