House lawmakers dealt a pair of potentially temporary setbacks Thursday to CPB and commercial broadcasting legislative interests. The House Appropriations Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies (LHHS) Subcommittee advanced its FY25 bill without advance FY 2027 funding for CPB, as expected (see 2406250056). Meanwhile, the House Commerce Committee abruptly canceled a planned Thursday markup of the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act (HR-8449). The American Privacy Rights Act (HR-8818) and Kids Online Safety Act (HR-7891) were expected to draw contentious debate during the markup (see 2406260062).
FCC commissioners will vote July 18 on a notice seeking comment on uniform, industrywide handset unlocking requirements, as expected (see 2406250049), FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced Wednesday in her Note from the FCC. Commissioners will also vote on a controversial proposal allowing schools and libraries to use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots and wireless internet services, a plan to cut the cost of correctional institution phone rates and rules to improve video programming accessibility for the deaf and hard of hearing. Next-generation 911 rounds out the agenda.
The FCC moved quickly and effectively to clamp down on a January robocall that created a deepfake of the voice of President Joe Biden urging recipients to skip the New Hampshire primary (see 2402060087). However, preventing similar fakes may prove more difficult, Greg Bohl, chief data officer at Transaction Network Services, warned the FCC’s Consumer Advisory Committee Wednesday. CAC is focused on AI this term (see 2404040040).
It appears House Republican leadership isn’t willing to bring the House Commerce Committee’s bipartisan privacy bill to the floor because it lacks the necessary votes to pass, members and sources close to discussions told us Wednesday.
The century-long congressional impasse on radio performance rights didn’t appear close to changing at a House Judiciary Intellectual Property Subcommittee hearing Wednesday on the proposed American Music Fairness Act. “We are here once again to ask why it is the U.S. joins the likes of North Korea, Iran and Cuba in not recognizing public performance right in radio music broadcast,” said Subcommittee Chair Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif. “We need to guard against unintended outcomes,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif. “What impact would this legislation have on the critical role of radio stations in providing emergency broadcasts?”
The FCC, intervenors and amici who benefit from E-rate funding contend that authorizing Wi-Fi on school buses will advance students’ education, but there’s “powerful and growing evidence to doubt that claim,” petitioners Maurine and Matthew Molak said in their 5th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court reply brief Monday (docket 23-60641).
California’s Senate Judiciary Committee voted 9-2 Tuesday to advance a bill that would force tech platforms to pay news publishers for the news content they carry, similar to approaches seen in Australia, Canada and Europe.
To fulfill its “broad mandate” under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the FCC in the digital discrimination order on review “adopted rules that prohibit practices with unjustified discriminatory effects on access to broadband service,” plus intentional discrimination, the commission’s brief said Tuesday (docket 24-1179) in the 8th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court was "wrong" when it affirmed a district court’s “sweeping” preliminary injunction that barred dozens of White House officials and four federal agencies from coercing social media platforms to moderate their content, the U.S. Supreme Court said in a 6-3 decision Wednesday in Murthy v. Missouri (docket 23-411).
Smart city applications are joining the list of factors driving the need for more licensed and unlicensed spectrum, spectrum and smart city experts said Wednesday during a Broadband Breakfast panel discussion. Beyond more spectrum, smart cities will require a lot of spectrum sharing and maximized use of existing allocations, they said. There isn't one route to smart cities, and the spectrum isn't needed for a single purpose, said Richard Bernhardt, Wireless ISP Association vice president-spectrum and industry. Cities rely particularly heavily on unlicensed spectrum for smart city applications, said Ryan Johnston, Next Century Cities senior policy counsel. He said municipal governments are often left out of spectrum strategy and policy discussions, even though they are becoming big consumers of spectrum. He said they should be at the table for spectrum sharing and allocation discussions.