The FCC is rechartering its Disability Advisory Committee for a two-year term, said a notice in Friday’s Federal Register. More details, including the first meeting date and agenda topics, will be announced later. The last iteration of the DAC held its final meeting in October (see 2410180032).
Informal consumer complaints to the FCC regarding telemarketing, robocall and caller ID spoofing continue falling, according to an annual agency report to Congress released Friday. The report from the agency's Enforcement, Wireline, and Consumer and Government Affairs bureaus is required under the Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence (Traced) Act. In 2023, the agency received 31,042 complaints about the receipt of unsolicited marketing calls or faxes using an artificial or prerecorded voice or an automated dialer. That compares with more than 39,000 in 2022 and more than 46,000 in 2021. It said it received 57,917 complaints last year about sales calls to residential or wireless telephone numbers in the National Do Not Call Registry, down from nearly 71,000 in 2022 and nearly 98,000 the year before that. It said it received 14,715 complaints involving fax or artificial or prerecorded voice systems, down from 19,000 in 2022 and nearly 29,000 the year prior. The agency received 31,594 misleading or inaccurate caller ID complaints in 2023, compared with nearly 40,000 in 2022 and more than 57,000 in 2021. The FCC's 2023 Traced Act report to Congress reported informal consumer complaints tallied through Nov. 30 of last year. When asked Friday about the change in reporting, with this year's report providing 12 months of 2023 but no 2024 numbers, the FCC didn't comment. The agency said that neither it nor DOJ collected forfeiture penalties or criminal fines for Telephone Consumer Protection Action Act violations in 2023.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr’s recent warning letter to Disney CEO Bob Iger (see 2412240021) appears politically motivated, could be read as a reversal of Carr’s past stances on sticking to the text of FCC rules and evokes the long-defunct fairness doctrine, according to former FCC commissioners, academics and attorneys we interviewed. President-elect Donald Trump has selected Carr to head the FCC.
The FCC Wireless Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics sent letters to T-Mobile and UScellular on Friday asking a battery of questions about their proposed transaction. Responses are due not later than Jan. 17. The T-Mobile letter explores in depth the carrier's arguments made in a September public interest statement (see 2409160029) and an accompanying declaration from Ankur Kapoor, T-Mobile's chief network officer.
Talkie Communications this week urged NTIA to reject Delaware's draft final BEAD proposal. In a letter Tuesday, the ISP raised concerns about the state's draft. For example, it includes 31 locations eligible for funding that overlap with existing FCC Rural Digital Opportunity Fund enforceable commitments, Talkie noted. As such, approving the proposal "wastes taxpayer resources." Talkie accused the Delaware Department of Technology and Information of "favor[ing] and cater[ing] to large businesses," saying the draft "effectively created insurmountable barriers for small businesses." DTI inappropriately proposes spending an "excessive" amount of its BEAD funding on non-deployment initiatives, Talkie added.
The aim of the FCC's one-to-one telemarketing consent rule is stopping abuse of the agency's prior written consent requirement, said an FCC fact sheet in Thursday's Daily Digest. The FCC adopted the rule 12 months ago (see 2312130019); it becomes effective Jan. 27. Lead-generated communications comprise a large portion of unwanted robocalls and robotexts, the commission said, and they "often rely on flimsy or nonexistent" consent claims. The FCC bars lead generators from using a single consumer-written consent for multiple unwanted telemarketing robocalls and robotexts from an array of sellers when a consumer visits comparison shopping websites, and the FCC said it made clear each caller or tester soliciting consumers must obtain express written consent from each consumer before making such robocalls or robotexts. Moreover, the FCC said the consent rule doesn't impact the practice of connecting a third-party agent to a prospective customer on a telemarketing call that isn't autodialed and doesn't include a prerecorded or artificial voice message. The one-to-one rule is the subject of a challenge at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, with judges hearing oral argument earlier this month (see 2412180008).
The FCC approved additional and modified environmental sensing capability sensor deployment and coverage plans for the citizens broadband service band for Federated Wireless in Hawaii, said a notice in Thursday’s Daily Digest. The sensors protect DOD installations from harmful interference. The FCC took the step “in close consultation” with NTIA and DOD, the notice said. The plans cover three dynamic protection areas in the state.
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau in separate orders this week conditionally certified Nagish and InnoCaption to receive compensation from the interstate telecommunications relay services fund for providing IP relay service. However, the companies must demonstrate that their service “meets or exceeds” the commission’s minimum TRS standards. The authorizations run through Dec. 23, 2026, “or the date of grant or denial of full certification, whichever occurs earlier,” the orders said. “Nagish proposes to provide IP Relay on a fully automatic basis, i.e., using text-to-speech technology to deliver the IP Relay users’ communications to hearing call participants and using automatic speech recognition (ASR) to deliver hearing parties’ communications to IP Relay users, without any reliance on communications assistants (CAs),” the bureau said: “Nagish states that it has contracts with various vendors to render speech into text using ASR and can incorporate new ASR vendors as needed.” InnoCaption “proposes to provide IP Relay using either ASR-only or human stenographers, at the IP Relay user’s option, to transcribe the other party’s communications for the IP Relay user,” said the second order. “InnoCaption additionally proposes to use a text-to-speech engine in lieu of a CA to relay the IP Relay user’s text communications to the hearing party.”
Meta's Edge Cable Holdings hopes to start commercial operation of its planned Orca subsea cable system linking Taiwan and California in Q1 2027, it told the FCC in an application posted Thursday. It said the fiber-optic submarine cable network would connect Toucheng, Taiwan, and Hermosa Beach and Manchester, California. Edge said it would use Orca capacity for Meta affiliates' services or to provide bulk capacity to wholesale and enterprise customers. Edge said Orca will provide facilities-based competition with the existing Faster, New Cross-Pacific, Pacific Light Cable and Trans-Pacific Express systems and the planned Taiwan-Philippines-U.S. cable system under construction. Edge said it hoped for an FCC cable landing license by the end of 2025, which would allow construction activities to keep on schedule.
Incompas and its members “generally support” Verizon’s proposed acquisition of Frontier, but with conditions, the group said in a reply comment posted Thursday in docket 24-445. Verizon and Frontier this week urged approval without conditions (see 2412240028). Incompas members are concerned about ensuring that business data services (BDS) the applicants offered “are provided to competitors at just, reasonable and not unreasonably discriminatory rates, terms, and conditions,” the filing said. Incompas also supports a request by the Coalition for IP Network Transition, which said the FCC should approve the deal only if the companies agree that they will “interconnect with all other carriers” on an IP basis (see 2412100021). Incompas is “unwilling to concede to the Applicants’ assertions that the transaction will not result in competitive harms, particularly with respect to the impact pricing decisions associated with business data services and more traditional time division multiplexing services, such as DS1s and DS3s, will have on competitive providers,” the filing said: “According to our members, Frontier currently charges significantly more for its high-capacity BDS connections, including DS1, DS3, and 10-mile circuits.” A competitive LEC, Teliax stressed the importance of an IP connection requirement. “Pre-merger, the Applicants have extended IP interconnection to some but not all interconnecting carriers,” Teliax said: “Should the FCC approve the proposed combination, the FCC should expect that the combined company will continue to use its newfound scale to delay the full transition to IP interconnection, thereby extending intercarrier compensation revenues tied to TDM networks.”