The FCC adopted an order to require undersea cable licensees to report many outages on lines that connect the U.S. mainland to Alaska, Hawaii, U.S. territories and other countries. Approved at Friday's meeting by a 3-2 vote with Republican commissioners dissenting, the order sets new rules to allow the agency to monitor the operational status of submarine cables and assist in efforts to ensure their reliability, said an agency release on the action, which wasn't a surprise (see 1606230058). The rules require licensees to report major outages to the agency's Network Outage Reporting System. AT&T slammed the FCC action as disregarding industry recommendations.
The FCC adopted an order to require undersea cable licensees to report many outages on lines that connect the U.S. mainland to Alaska, Hawaii, U.S. territories and other countries. Approved at Friday's meeting by a 3-2 vote with Republican commissioners dissenting, the order sets new rules to allow the agency to monitor the operational status of submarine cables and assist in efforts to ensure their reliability, said an agency release on the action, which wasn't a surprise (see 1606230058). The rules require licensees to report major outages to the agency's Network Outage Reporting System. AT&T slammed the FCC action as disregarding industry recommendations.
The FCC approved 5-0 to launch a rulemaking to speed up Team Telecom review of international companies' buys of U.S. licensees. In a key change from an NTIA proposal, the NPRM, as expected (see 1606150019), proposes time limits. It would be a 90-day time frame for executive branch review, “with an additional one-time 90-day extension in rare circumstances provided the Executive Branch provides a status update every 30 days,” the FCC said.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said Monday he won't commit to stepping down at the start of the next administration, despite the agency’s win last week on net neutrality rules. He was asked at a National Press Club luncheon specifically about whether he had changed his mind on the topic in light of the court’s ruling (see 1606140023) upholding the 2015 rules. Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel should be confirmed “standing on her own” for another term, Wheeler said. “I understand that it is traditional for the incoming president to have an opportunity to name the new FCC chairman. … As a fellow who studies history, I understand the precedent and I respect the precedent.” Wheeler also said emphatically the net neutrality rules won't lead to traditional rate regulation for broadband providers. "That's not changing." he said.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said Monday he won't commit to stepping down at the start of the next administration, despite the agency’s win last week on net neutrality rules. He was asked at a National Press Club luncheon specifically about whether he had changed his mind on the topic in light of the court’s ruling (see 1606140023) upholding the 2015 rules. Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel should be confirmed “standing on her own” for another term, Wheeler said. “I understand that it is traditional for the incoming president to have an opportunity to name the new FCC chairman. … As a fellow who studies history, I understand the precedent and I respect the precedent.” Wheeler also said emphatically the net neutrality rules won't lead to traditional rate regulation for broadband providers. "That's not changing." he said.
The FCC should take care that its efforts to stimulate third party retail set-top box competition don't interfere with ongoing video standards-making proceedings, said Microsoft in a meeting Tuesday with Media Bureau Chief Bill Lake and bureau staff. “It is important for the Commission to be aware of these developments and to ensure that any steps it contemplates taking in this proceeding do not adversely affect these industry efforts.” Time Warner executives met with Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on set-top matters Monday, arguing against the FCC proposal. “It is feasible to increase competition and consumer choice through a regulatory regime based on content companies having a direct licensing relationship with device manufacturers, traditional distributors, and online platforms,” Time Warner said. The filings were made in docket 16-42. Pay-TV companies just made an alternate proposal for an HTML5-based unlock the box approach (see 1606160059), rather than the apps approach the industry has backed and the alternative device tack included in the agency's proposal. CEO Chip Pickering of Incompas, which is part of a coalition of tech and other interests allied with the FCC approach, called it "encouraging" that the cable industry made the proffer. "Their current proposal presents both some positive movement and some familiar limitations that could fall short of delivering an open, competitive marketplace," he said Thursday.
The FCC should take care that its efforts to stimulate third party retail set-top box competition don't interfere with ongoing video standards-making proceedings, said Microsoft in a meeting Tuesday with Media Bureau Chief Bill Lake and bureau staff. “It is important for the Commission to be aware of these developments and to ensure that any steps it contemplates taking in this proceeding do not adversely affect these industry efforts.” Time Warner executives met with Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on set-top matters Monday, arguing against the FCC proposal. “It is feasible to increase competition and consumer choice through a regulatory regime based on content companies having a direct licensing relationship with device manufacturers, traditional distributors, and online platforms,” Time Warner said. The filings were made in docket 16-42. Pay-TV companies just made an alternate proposal for an HTML5-based unlock the box approach (see 1606160059), rather than the apps approach the industry has backed and the alternative device tack included in the agency's proposal. CEO Chip Pickering of Incompas, which is part of a coalition of tech and other interests allied with the FCC approach, called it "encouraging" that the cable industry made the proffer. "Their current proposal presents both some positive movement and some familiar limitations that could fall short of delivering an open, competitive marketplace," he said Thursday.
Some pay-TV carriers and programmers offered what they say is a “third-way” compromise on rules designed to create a competitive retail set-top box market. The new proposal is an alternative to both the FCC set-top proposal and multichannel video programming distributors' preferred app system. Though the FCC released a complimentary statement, supporters of the FCC plan say the compromise plan doesn't go far enough.
Some pay-TV carriers and programmers offered what they say is a “third-way” compromise on rules designed to create a competitive retail set-top box market. The new proposal is an alternative to both the FCC set-top proposal and multichannel video programming distributors' preferred app system. Though the FCC released a complimentary statement, supporters of the FCC plan say the compromise plan doesn't go far enough.
House Communications Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore., holds out hope that Congress can still advance the Senate’s Mobile Now spectrum bill (S-2555) into law despite Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., throwing up hurdles to the bill’s floor passage in the upper chamber, Walden told us Wednesday. The legislation cleared the Senate Commerce Committee in March but now faces Democratic holds on the Senate floor (see 1606070063) and lacks a House companion bill.