Dish Network’s Jeff Blum is pleased his testimony will remain in the California Public Utilities Commission’s review of whether T-Mobile misled the commission about the timing of its CDMA shutdown, the executive vice president-external and legal affairs said Friday. Administrative Law Judge Karl Bemesderfer Thursday denied T-Mobile's motion to strike what Blum said at a Sept. 20 hearing in docket A.18-07-011 (see 2110060050). T-Mobile extended its CDMA shutdown three months Oct. 22 (see 2110250042). Blum said Dish will file a brief Nov. 5 "on why T-Mobile should be sanctioned for misleading the Commission about its premature CDMA shutdown.” T-Mobile didn’t comment.
The C-band relocation payment clearinghouse received 703 claims totaling $1.35 billion by Sept. 30, and sent 184 approved claims of $2.8 million to overlay licensees, said a quarterly status report Thursday in FCC docket 18-122. It said this week it's starting to pay claims (see 2110260007).
Broadcast revenue is hurting from the COVID-19 slowdown, but there are signs of a return to normal, with more commercial activity in Europe, Eutelsat said Thursday, announcing quarterly results. It said its Quantum geostationary satellite, launched in July, is getting "a strong pipeline of interest as it prepares for its imminent entry into service." It expects to receive $125 million around the turn of the year for its U.S. C-band Phase I accelerated clearing, saying Phase 2 clearing is "on track."
Automaker production shortfalls induced by the global chip shortage sent SiriusXM “new car trial stats” tumbling 21% in Q3 from the second quarter's “record high,” said CEO Jennifer Witz on a call Thursday. Used car trial stats fell 6% sequentially. “This means that in the fourth quarter, we'll see more than a million fewer conversion opportunities than we saw in the third quarter,” she said. “Most automakers and industry forecasters believe the timeline to recover from supply chain-related issues is sometime between mid-year 2022 and early 2023. Most expect recovery from these issues to be gradual next year, as opposed to a sharp bounceback.”
Eutelsat's Phase I certification of accelerated C-band relocation was validated, the FCC Wireless Bureau ordered Wednesday. The bureau said the new C-band licensees will now pay their portion of the Phase I accelerated relocation payment to the relocation payment clearinghouse. The clearinghouse will disperse it to Eutelsat.
SpaceLink requested FCC International Bureau OK of a fourth satellite for its already-authorized Ka- and V-band medium earth orbit constellation, in an IB license modification application Tuesday. It's also seeking use of the 25.25-27.50 GHz band for inter-satellite service links.
Condition FCC OK of Intelsat's emergence from bankruptcy on the company honoring its commitments, including funding the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization, the group said in docket 21-375 Monday. Intelsat's privatization was contingent on public service obligations, but the company "has used its bankruptcy proceeding as both a sword and a shield to completely undermine those principles and commitments," ITSO said. Intelsat didn't comment Tuesday.
The C-band relocation payment clearinghouse began paying claims by incumbent earth station operators, as it evaluates other claims, it said Monday. It said some entities potentially eligible for reimbursement or lump sum payments haven't filed claims or registered. "The sooner they file their claims, the sooner they can receive" money, said Program Manager Frank Banda.
Ligado said it’s progressing on deploying its spectrum but faces resistance from DOD and the Commerce Department, in a quarterly report to the FCC posted Monday in docket 11-109.Ligado has a “partnership with Mavenir to develop satellite 5G IoT base stations for advanced connectivity,” it said: “This critical partnership is intended to enable always-on, continental coverage by helping to integrate our satellite and terrestrial networks when we deploy.” Ligado is also “partnering with a major 5G chipset vendor to generate 5G chipsets for Ligado’s bands and with a major IoT chipset solution provider to produce satellite 5G IoT chipsets.” DOD and Commerce “have actively heaved roadblocks in the path of the Company in the name of unsubstantiated and baseless concerns of harmful interference to GPS,” the company said: “They assert sweeping concerns and yet have never produced any specific information about that asserted harmful interference despite repeated requests from Ligado and others.” Neither department commented.
Smaller players and new entrants in the commercial space sector need to be aware of cybersecurity threats and make cybersecurity a focus when designing their systems, panelists said Friday at an FCBA cybersecurity committee webinar. Space cybersecurity needs to be holistic, looking at systems from ground stations and antennas to spectrum and software, not just the satellites themselves, said Jaisha Wray, an NTIA associate administrator who until last year was National Security Council Cybersecurity Directorate international cyber policy director. Wray said standard cybersecurity practices can secure space systems, but an added complication is that space systems are physically difficult to access once deployed and cybersecurity activities must be done remotely. That's a big reason cybersecurity must be integrated into system design, she said. Panelists were bearish on cybersecurity regulation. "The second you write a prescriptive regulation ... it's already too late," with hackers and malware ready to circumvent rules, said Inmarsat Senior Vice President-Global Regulatory Donna Bethea-Murphy. She said many operators design systems to be encrypted and secure and comply with such standards. Wray said development of the White House's 2020 cybersecurity space policy (see 2009040042) focused on trying to ensure following voluntary principles. The U.S. can "take it on the road," talk to international partners, make suggestions to other governments and collaborate. Wray said the State Department has been carrying this forward. She said international companies joining the Space Information Sharing and Analysis Center is a hopeful sign.