Level 3 made public details about its peering arrangements. The transit provider has tens of thousands of customers but only 51 peers interconnected in 45 cities, Mark Taylor, vice president-content and media, said in a Monday blog post (http://bit.ly/Rp4os6). Of those, he said, 48 are “settlement free” -- no money changes hands. “Our policy is to refuse to pay arbitrary charges to add interconnection capacity,” he said. As for shared costs for the networks to interconnect, each party typically pays to augment its own network to allow more traffic exchange, he said. Most peers aren’t anywhere near capacity, but six peers have congestion on “almost all of the interconnect ports between us,” Taylor said. That congestion is “permanent,” he said, “where our peer refuses to augment capacity.” They're deliberately harming the service they deliver to their paying customers, he said. They're not allowing us” to fulfill “the requests their customers make for content,” he said. Five of those congested peers are in the U.S., and all of them are large broadband consumer networks with dominant or exclusive market share in their local markets, he said: “Shouldn’t a broadband consumer network with near monopoly control over their customers be expected, if not obligated, to deliver a better experience than this?"
Top Senate Democrats weren’t ready to say when they would take on draft legislation for Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act reauthorization, they told us Tuesday at the Capitol. The House Commerce Committee scheduled a markup of its STELA draft, the only legislative text introduced so far, for Thursday. (See separate report below in this issue.) The Commerce and Judiciary committees in both chambers have jurisdiction over STELA, which will expire at the end of the year unless Congress reauthorizes it. “We're anxiously watching to see what the House will do and see what their final bill looks like,” said Senate Communications Subcommittee Chairman Mark Pryor, D-Ark. “We'll see what they do and look forward to seeing what they come up with.” He acknowledged legislative days left in the year “are short.” Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., seemed familiar with the markup planned in the House but did not pay it much mind: “We don’t sort of decide what we're going to do because the House does or doesn’t do something, but we'll be marking that up,” Rockefeller said of STELA. “We've got about 10 things we have to do, but that’s going to be one of them!” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., declined to weigh in on precisely where his committee stands. But when asked, Leahy said, “I'd love to mark it up today.” Both Commerce and Judiciary have held STELA hearings this year. Pryor also didn’t rule out the possibility the Communications Subcommittee would hold a hearing on Comcast’s proposed buy of Time Warner Cable. “I need to talk with Chairman Rockefeller on that,” Pryor said. “He and I have discussed that a couple of times before, as I have with Senator [John] Thune,” R-S.D., ranking member of Commerce. “But we'll just see what we're going to do on that.”
Correction: The dates of the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council telecom policy conference are July 28-29 (CD May 5 p21).
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear T-Mobile South v. Roswell, Ga., on whether local governments have to provide detailed written explanations when they deny carriers’ applications to build new cell towers in their jurisdictions. The case will be argued during the court’s October 2014 term (http://1.usa.gov/1iQXU16). The court also granted leave for the Competitive Carriers Association to file an amicus brief. In seeking cert, T-Mobile said there’s a split in the federal circuits on how to interpret Section 332(c)(7)(B)(iii) of the Communications Act, which “specifies that any local government’s denial of an application for the placement, construction, or modification of a personal wireless facility “shall be in writing and supported by substantial evidence contained in a written record.” The case is from the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is at odds with other circuits, T-Mobile said (http://bit.ly/1iQXvM5). The circuit court handed down its decision last year (CD Oct 2 p 12). “According to the majority of the federal courts of appeals to address the issue, this provision dictates that an issuance denying such an application must be separate from the administrative record and ‘contain a sufficient explanation of the reasons for the permit denial to allow a reviewing court to evaluate the evidence in the record supporting those reasons,'” T-Mobile said. “The Eleventh Circuit expressly ‘rejected’ that view and instead joined the Fourth Circuit in holding that a denial letter need only advise the applicant of the fact that the permit has been denied.” The city asked the court to turn down the appeal. “Even a cursory review of the more recent decisions and the relevant Eleventh Circuit Opinion appealed underscore the reality that the Circuit Courts are now reaching a consensus in theory or practice such that this issue does not necessitate or merit review,” the City of Roswell said (http://bit.ly/1mw1AI6). “Finally, Petitioner has not and cannot show that the Eleventh Circuit erred in its interpretation of the straightforward language of the Act, thereby failing to set forth any underlying error and basis for granting of the Petition.” Said T-Mobile General Counsel Dave Miller: “We believe local governments should clearly state ‘in writing’ the reasons why an application to build new or modify existing wireless infrastructure is denied.” “Building and improving mobile infrastructure is critical for consumers to fully benefit from our broadband economy."
Until nations achieve acceptable intellectual property protections, they will “remain second-rate powers,” said Vice President Joe Biden at the Motion Picture Association of America’s creativity conference Friday. ABC News and Microsoft helped sponsor the event. How can a nation say it’s “law-abiding” when its government and people “steal the most valuable ideas from our country?” Biden asked. The “choices” of governments on intellectual property “in the next few years will shape the character” of a “global system of competition for decades to come,” he said. “President Obama and I are not going to sit by and let the outcome of this new system be determined by others,” which is why they are negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership in parts of the Asia-Pacific and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) in Europe, he said. The TTIP would “significantly deepen” economic ties with the European Union, including on intellectual property, he said. If the playing field in intellectual property protections is “even remotely level,” the U.S. will “succeed,” he said. The Congressional International Anti-Piracy Caucus is planning to change its name, because the word “piracy” has an “allure,” said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., at the event. Goodlatte co-chairs the caucus. Piracy is “stealing,” he said. The name change will need approval from some Congressional members, he said, declining to elaborate. “I think we're making progress, but we have a long way to go” in improving China’s intellectual property enforcement, he said. Thirty-seven countries were featured on the U.S. Trade Representative Special 301 Watch List 2014 for insufficient enforcement of intellectual property rights, said a USTR report released earlier in the week (http://1.usa.gov/R32RYF). Ten countries, including China and India, were designated as priority watch list countries, it said.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s fellow commissioners weighed in on net neutrality at a Cable Show policy luncheon Thursday, but didn’t comment directly on whether they agreed with his proposal (CD May 1 p1). The commission should seek congressional guidance on how to proceed before taking action, said Commissioner Ajit Pai, who called the matter “a solution in search of a problem.” Commissioner Mike O'Rielly said he worries that the agency doesn’t have jurisdiction over the Internet, though he added that he would keep “an open mind.” Commissioners Jessica Rosenworcel and Mignon Clyburn said they support an open Internet, and that they were still considering Wheeler’s NPRM, which is currently circulating on the eighth floor. (See separate report above in this issue.) Clyburn said she is “still evaluating what the chairman circulated. Rosenworcel has “heard a lot from a lot of people” and said she will take “a hard look” at the proposal and the public perception of it.
Correction: Matthew Berry, aide to Commissioner Ajit Pai, said the FCC has enabled the cable industry to make better use of spectrum (CD May 2 p1), not that the industry needs to make better use of it.
Cable providers cutting a deal to provide faster service to certain companies isn’t bad for their other customers, said Cox Communications President Patrick Esser at the NCTA Cable Show’s general session Thursday here in Los Angeles. “I don’t think if Netflix is getting a faster lane that I'm hurting anybody,” Esser said. The cable CEO emphasized that his company would never block customers from having access to Internet content. Blocking access would be “the worst decision” a company could make, Esser said. However, he distinguished allowing access for all from deals granting faster access to certain parties. “We do commercial arrangements in our industry every day,” Esser said. He also commented on the Comcast/Time Warner Cable deal and Charter’s involvement, saying that greater cooperation in the industry is good for all. Several industry observers told us that Cox had been interested in acquiring the 3.9 million divested subscribers from Comcast before the announcement of the deal sending them to Charter. Asked about whether the growth of Comcast and Charter might lead to higher or lower programming costs for Cox, Esser disagreed with the question. “I don’t think it’s a content discussion, it’s a platform discussion,” he said. Platforms and increased use of the cloud are the future of the cable industry, said Rob Lloyd, Cisco president-development and sales. Companies will increasingly update their systems through software updates rather than new hardware, and cloud technology will eventually replace much of the functionality of set-top boxes, he said. These new systems will test new features and be updated in much the same way smartphone apps are, Lloyd said. The cable industry will move to the cloud as the new “manufacturing plan,” Lloyd said.
Applications will be filed “expeditiously” on cable system divestitures among Charter Communications, Comcast and Time Warner Cable, executives for those companies told acting FCC General Counsel Jonathan Sallet and another staffer in his office. The companies asked the commission to consider those coming applications contemporaneously with Comcast’s applications to buy Time Warner Cable, said a filing posted Thursday in docket 14-57 (http://bit.ly/1miNoSp). The companies agreed this week (CD April 29 p4) to system deals that will expand Charter and reduce the size of Comcast/Time Warner Cable, which they noted to the FCC will mean the combined company would have less than 30 percent of U.S. pay-TV subscribers as previously promised to the agency. It’s hard to suggest that Comcast’s plan to divest 3.9 million subscribers doesn’t advance the company’s Time Warner Cable acquisition case by alleviating claimed competitive concerns, said Free State Foundation President Randy May. The end result is that Comcast’s total number of subscribers, post-acquisition, will be less than 30 percent of all pay-TV subscribers, he said in a blog post Thursday (http://bit.ly/1lElSMz). It’s a bit “out of sorts” to use the occasion of the announcement “as another opportunity to engage in overheated anti-merger rhetoric,” he said. “It would seem more fitting to acknowledge that such subscriber divestitures at least lessen professed concerns about concentration.” The competitive impact of the proposed combination relative to the broad broadband market should be the primary focus of the acquisition review, he said.
An April 9 and 10 outage that resulted in thousands of failed 911 calls in Washington state also disrupted calls in Minnesota and North Carolina, CenturyLink acknowledged in an April 24 major outage report (http://1.usa.gov/1hVzai5) filed with the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (WUTC). The incident occurred when a public safety answering point trunk member (PTM) threshold counter, which routes calls to the appropriate PSAPs, ran out of capacity, CenturyLink said. The PTM is run by CenturyLink contractor Intrado, in the Englewood, Colo., Emergency Call Management Complex. When the counter reached capacity, calls couldn’t be assigned a trunk for delivery, said the telco. It said Intrado has increased the thresholds “so that it is not theoretically possible to exhaust the threshold ranges” and has created an alarm should the threshold be met. The contractor will also begin manually checking to see if the system is nearing capacity, said CenturyLink. A spokeswoman said the majority of the 4,500 calls impacted nationally were in Washington state but had no breakdown of how many calls were affected in North Carolina and Minnesota. John Garrison, director of the North Carolina Utilities Commission, said the outage affected PSAPs in a small number of rural areas in eastern North Carolina, and the PUC likely would not open an investigation. Intrado referred questions to CenturyLink. The WUTC has opened an investigation into the case (CD April 18 p11) and plans to hold an as-yet-unscheduled public hearing, a spokeswoman said. The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission isn’t investigating the outage, a spokesman said.