The FCC Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council meets Dec. 3, the agency said in Friday’s Federal Register. The meeting will be CSRIC’s third as part of its fifth charter. CSRIC working groups are examining the emergency alert system, emergency alerting platforms, evolving 911 services and security by design (see 1509210049). The FCC failed to publish the CSRIC meeting notice within the 15-day threshold but said it couldn’t find an acceptable alternate date for the meeting because “a significant number of CSRIC members have made business and travel plans to attend” the Dec. 3 meeting and there's no other date within one month of Dec. 3 “that will accommodate CSRIC members’ schedules.” Delaying the CSRIC meeting “will also cause undue financial burdens on many of the CSRIC members who have made travel arrangements,” the FCC said. CSRIC’s meeting is set to begin at 1 p.m. in the Commission Meeting Room at FCC headquarters.
More than 222 million numbers were registered with the national Do Not Call registry as of Oct. 1, the FTC said in a blog post Thursday. Bridget Small, a consumer education specialist with the agency, wrote that nearly 5.5 million new cellphone and landline numbers were added to the list over the past year, while the FTC received more than 3.6 million complaints about companies making robocalls or telemarketing calls after they were told to stop. The FTC has brought 105 enforcement actions against companies for violations, including actions against Dish Network for making tens of millions of calls and Caribbean Cruise Line and seven other companies involved in a telemarketing campaign in the past year, she wrote. The U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois on Dec. 12 found Dish liable for violating the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule. The agency alleged Dish or its telemarketer made outbound phone calls to phone numbers on the Do Not Call list. A Dish spokesman at the time told us the company disagreed with most of the court's decision and the FTC "outsourced the management of the National Do Not Call Registry to contractors, with minimal oversight, resulting in a Registry that is inaccurate" (see 1501210040). A Dish spokesman Thursday referred us to statements the company made in January.
National Grid USA can use its doing business as name National Grid when placing recorded voice calls, the FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau ruled in an order released Monday. It granted the limited waiver because it will better serve the public interest by ensuring that National Grid's customers "understand the identity of the calling party and are not confused by the use in prerecorded messages of unfamiliar legacy utility names," the order said.
Ericsson hasn't discussed the possibility of merging with or being acquired by Cisco, Ericsson said in a news release Monday. It said it's aware of rumors suggesting Cisco is interested in acquiring the company, which emerged after they announced a collaborative partnership that included licensing agreements for their patent portfolios (see 1511090044). "The talks leading up to the partnership have been ongoing for a year and there have not been any discussions whatsoever on a merger or an acquisition," Ericsson CEO Hans Vestberg said in a statement.
The FCC Task Force on Optimal PSAP Architecture (TFOPA) will meet Dec. 10, 1-4 p.m., in the commission meeting room, the FCC said in a public notice Monday. Two of TFOPA’s three working groups, the ones on cybersecurity and optimal public safety answering point architecture, are still finishing up their final reports to the FCC.
A federal court should deny Neustar’s challenge to an FCC decision giving Telcordia conditional rights to be the next local number portability administrator (LNPA), argued intervenors CTIA, Telcordia and USTelecom. The FCC in March reasonably rejected LNPA incumbent Neustar’s argument that Telcordia wouldn’t be a neutral administrator, the intervenors said in their brief Thursday to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in Neustar v. FCC, No. 15-1080. They said it was undisputed that Telcordia met the first two prongs of a three-prong neutrality test: that it isn't affiliated with a telecom carrier and that it doesn’t receive most its revenue from, or issue most of its debt to, such a carrier. On the third prong, they disputed Neustar's argument that Telcordia would be subject to “undue influence” by an entity with a vested LNPA interest because its parent Ericsson had contacts with Sprint and T-Mobile. The FCC found no evidence of such undue influence, the intervenors said, but as a precaution it imposed “numerous structural safeguards,” including forcing Ericsson to transfer its Telcordia stock to a voting trust and requiring Telcordia to have an independent board. They said Neustar challenged the FCC’s neutrality finding “largely under the false premise” that Telcordia and Ericsson should have been treated as one entity. “Neustar relies primarily on Delaware law, but Delaware law unequivocally recognizes that a ‘corporation is an entity, distinct from its stockholders even if the subsidiary’s stock is wholly owned by one person or one corporation,’” they said, adding that the question nevertheless is a federal one and the FCC reasonably concluded Telcordia and Ericsson are separate entities. The intervenors said Neustar’s procedural arguments were “equally meritless” for various reasons; “Neustar had more than ample notice and opportunity to comment on the FCC’s selection process and decision -- and it fully availed itself of that opportunity.” Finally, they said, the FCC “correctly” accepted Telcordia’s bid over Neustar’s. Telcordia “refuted Neustar’s inflated estimates of the transition costs," they said. Although their brief redacted the bid amounts, Commissioner Ajit Pai said in March that Telcordia bid less than $1 billion for a seven-year contract (less than $143 million per year), when Neustar’s existing contract cost about $460 million for 2014. “That’s substantial savings for the American public,” he said. The Department of Justice and FCC recently filed a brief defending the commission order (see 1510290029).
Contenders for the GOP presidential nomination would dismantle parts of the federal government relevant to telecom if elected, they said Tuesday during a Fox Business Network debate. “On the regulatory side I think we need to repeal every rule that Barack Obama has in terms of work in progress, every one of them,” said Jeb Bush, a former Florida governor. “And start over. For those that are already in existence, the regulation of the Internet, we have to start over, but we ought to do that.” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, a member of the Commerce Committee, touted his plan to ax many parts of the government. “Today we rolled out a spending plan,” Cruz said during the debate. He outlined “$500 billion in specific cuts -- five major agencies that I would eliminate.” He would kill the Department of Commerce and the CPB, the latter of which he said should be privatized. “For decades, the Commerce Department has funded useless projects,” the Cruz campaign website said in one explanation of the plan. “That said, there are several functions that should be retained through other departments or agencies, including the functions of the … U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the National Institute of Standards and Technology” and NTIA. Cruz also promised to aggressively pursue a smaller federal government: “A Cruz Administration will institute a freeze on the hiring of new federal civilian employees across the executive branch,” he said on his campaign website. “For those agencies in which it is determined that a vacant position needs to be filled, I will authorize the hiring of a maximum ratio of one person for every three who leave.”
About 65 percent of U.S. adults plan to buy technology gifts this season, said Consumer Technology Association Senior Director-Research Shawn DuBravac at the annual holiday sales and year-end analysis during CES Unveiled in New York Tuesday. CTA expects tech holiday spending to rise 2.3 percent in 2015 to $34.21 billion, DuBravac told us. That's slightly off last year’s 2.5 percent growth rate. Within the electronics retail segment, online sales are expected to grow 14 percent this holiday season, compared with 16 percent last year, while mobile sales will see the biggest growth rise, from 25 percent last year to 35 percent this year, said DuBravac. Fifty-seven percent of respondents planned to use mobile devices for research, and CTA estimates mobile sales will be 18 percent of online sales. Mature categories generating more than half of the annual shipment volume in consumer electronics in 2015 include smartphones ($54 billion), tablets ($22.6 billion), laptops ($17.8 billion) and desktop PCs ($6 billion), said DuBravac. He said the association expects emerging categories like drones, smart home devices and smartwatches to become a bigger part of holiday sales in coming years.
AT&T and the International Intellectual Property Alliance praised Trans-Pacific Partnership language, in separate statements Friday. The Obama administration released major portions of TPP’s full text Thursday (see 1511050058). TPP “brings higher standards and protections to countries that represent nearly 40 percent of the global economy,” AT&T Senior Executive Vice President Jim Cicconi said in a statement Friday. “It will open markets, and establish rules of the road for a 21st Century digital economy. The e-Commerce commitments in TPP also provide a benchmark for reference in future trade agreements.” AT&T hopes for ratification soon, Cicconi said. IIPA said it still needs to review TPP’s full text but said IP language in the treaty “is built on the recognition that the creative sector makes an enormous contribution to the U.S. economy, jobs, and global competitiveness, and that further opening the markets of our major trading partners in this sector must be a top national priority.” The treaty's IP section “also contains important provisions aimed at expanding digital trade in creative materials, an increasingly critical sector where U.S. creators face both serious challenges and exciting opportunities in reaching new markets around the world,” IIPA said.
The FCC Wireline Bureau is seeking comment on AT&T's waiver petition for an extra three months to file its Q3 rural call completion report due to system difficulties it encountered (see 1511020060). Initial comments are due Nov. 17, replies Nov. 25, a public notice said.