Huawei disputed the need for the FCC to clamp down on equipment certifications, as proposed by Commissioner Brendan Carr Tuesday (see 2103300071). “Extending the FCC’s evaluation and approval process to prohibit equipment that is already accredited by the FCC is misguided and costly to American companies,” emailed a Huawei spokesperson later Tuesday: “Blocking the purchase of such equipment, based on a ‘predictive judgment,’ related to country of origin is without merit, discriminatory and will do nothing to protect the integrity of U.S. communications networks or supply chains.”
Country of origin cases
Democrats are eager to leverage their newfound unified control of Congress to advance their preferred form of net neutrality legislation, after more than a decade in which conditions in one or both chambers inhibited their path. Some advocates believe lawmakers should move beyond simply codifying FCC-rescinded 2015 rules into statute. Opponents of bringing back those rules believe Democrats’ narrow margins in both chambers preclude them from enacting a measure during this Congress.
Verizon said Tuesday it will shutter its 3G CDMA network at the end of next year. Verizon noted it has said it would shut the network down since 2016, with an original target of 2019. “We worked for the past several years to help those who still have 3G devices transfer to devices capable of accessing the 4G LTE or 5G networks and continue to actively work with remaining 3G customers to migrate them to new devices and technology,” the carrier said: Fewer than 1% of its customers use 3G.
Copyright royalty judges’ initial determination in a webcasting rate-setting proceeding is now due June 14, the Copyright Office said Monday, citing COVID-19. The original Dec. 16 due date was first postponed to April 15 (see 2007060031).
An FCC draft equal employment opportunity proposal seeks comment on reviving long-stalled collection of minority employment data from broadcasters, said agency and industry officials in interviews last week. It stems from proposals by Geoffrey Starks shortly after he became commissioner to refresh the record on collecting such data through Form 395-B. Such collection was part of a proceeding in 2004 that stalled over confidentiality issues, broadcast officials said. The draft Further NPRM now on circulation seeks comment to refresh that record and doesn’t contain specific proposals, FCC and industry officials said.
Active removal of orbital debris carries technological, legal and policy challenges that need hammering out, experts told an Aerospace Corp. webinar Thursday. Chris May, Aerospace engineer-Human Exploration and Spaceflight Division, said methodologies have been suggested, including electromagnetic tethers and harpoons, and no single approach will work for all types of debris due to varying sizes and orbital mechanics. He said money has been a big hurdle to development of an active debris removal industry, with little ADR funding available beyond the R&D and demo stage. George Washington University Space Policy Institute graduate student Tyler Way said policy challenges include export concerns for the technology involved and liability issues about which party is ultimately responsible: the state licensing the client satellite or the company providing the ADR service. He said there are "legally daunting" issues with removal of small debris, since its origin is often unknown, making it difficult to go up in good faith and remove it. Way said there have been discussions about an international body or agreement that would focus on ADR regulation and help alleviate some legal complications, and that could take years to establish.
The FCC Office of Engineering and Technology extended through Sept. 30 a waiver of the push notification requirement for fixed and mode II personal/portable TV white space devices, set to expire March 31. The original waiver was approved in a 2015 order on Part 15 rules.
Communications Decency Act Section 230 “would benefit from thoughtful changes,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg plans to tell House Commerce Committee members during Thursday’s virtual hearing (see 2103190054). Google CEO Sundar Pichai defends the statute in prepared testimony, saying recent proposals could have unintended consequences. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey instead focuses on transparency, procedural fairness, algorithmic choice and privacy.
Colorado Senate President Pro Tempore Kerry Donovan (D) received threats on social media for her proposal to stop hate speech on those platforms, she told a Senate State Committee livestreamed hearing: "This bill is a new idea in an uncomfortable space.” The committee voted 3-2 Tuesday to adopt the bill with an amendment proposed by Donovan to order a study. The original bill (SB-132) would have created a digital communications division and commission to regulate social media platforms. "The division shall investigate and the commission may hold hearings on claims filed with the division alleging that a digital communications platform has allowed a person to engage in one or more unfair or discriminatory digital communications practices on the platform," including hate speech, intentional disinformation and conspiracy theories, it said. Social media companies have been "petulant children" for not acknowledging what happens on their platforms, said Donovan, author of Colorado's 2019 net neutrality law. Their business model is to keep people engaged online and gather their information, she said. "What we are seeing from these social media companies is not a bug." The Senate leader added, "Russia didn't hack Facebook. It just used the platform.” The Internet Association didn't comment Wednesday. Government should “step in and bring an ax down to start protecting consumers,” testified Joe Toscano, a former Google consultant. “We are not their customer. We are their product.” The Computer and Communications Industry Association worried "that Colorado is one of multiple states proposing a patchwork of contradictory regulations. Complying with these would be difficult and costly for all platforms, particularly so for smaller companies." CCIA supports "the decision to study consumer protection concerns related to digital communications platforms," said President Matt Schruers Wednesday. "We encourage the study committee to consult with industry and issue area experts.”
Local and union officials support an imminent appeal to the Supreme Court of the FCC’s 2018 small-cell orders Monday. Many localities were expected to have challenged the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' decision upholding much of the FCC orders by Monday’s deadline (see 2102080058). Local governments' expected cert petition wasn't yet available.