NTCA asked the FCC to "recognize and seek input on the multi-sided nature of the internet ecosystem" as it seeks comments on net neutrality rules. The group raised concerns in a meeting with an aide to Commissioner Geoffrey Starks about the draft NPRM, saying it "appears to presume that concerns regarding the ability and incentives to engage in certain kinds of conduct arise only from" retail ISPs, said an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 23-320 (see 2309280084). NTCA also urged the "use of open-ended questions" on the potential benefits and costs of "forbearance from contribution obligations," saying the only rationale offered in the draft NPRM was "the mere fact that such forbearance was temporarily applied previously."
The FCC committed nearly $38 million in additional Emergency Connectivity Fund support Wednesday. The new funding supports about 220 schools and school districts, two library systems and four consortiums from the third application filing window, said a news release.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr warned against following Europe in establishing "internet controls," saying in a statement Wednesday that he hopes the FCC will "change course" on a draft proposal to reintroduce net neutrality rules (see 2309280084). "Later this month, the FCC will vote on a Biden Administration plan for government control of the internet that mimics Europe’s centralized approach," Carr said. Doing so would be a "serious mistake," he said: "America’s networks are not broken. Our light-touch regulatory model has not failed."
Consumers' Research filed its second challenge of the FCC's quarterly USF contribution factor in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Monday. Oral argument for its challenge of the Q1 2022 contribution factor was heard during an en banc hearing in September (see 2309190072). In a new challenge of the Q4 2023 contribution factor, the group said the USF factor is an illegal tax and should be rejected. The petition was posted Tuesday in case 23-60525.
The FCC should adopt an intent-based definition of digital discrimination to avoid "imposing liability for unintended differences in broadband access outcomes," said an analysis Tuesday by Seth Cooper, Free State Foundation director-policy studies. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act mandated the agency to adopt rules combating digital discrimination by Nov. 15 (see 2302220045). Cooper warned that a disparate impact standard would "create uncertain legal risks for broadband providers and reduce investments in service deployments." The law gave the FCC "clear authority" to prohibit "intended discrimination against protected classes," he said, allowing the commission to "hold broadband providers responsible for their actions and promote timely deployment of broadband networks to all."
The FCC Precision Ag Task Force will meet in person Nov. 6 at 10 a.m., said a notice for Friday's Federal Register. The group will vote on "reports and recommendations discussed during the task force's term."
The FCC and Department of Health and Human Services are pushing the wireless industry for a means of 988 georouting that could be deployed nationally. "We strongly encourage your members to take the necessary steps to identify and develop a 988 georouting solution that could be deployed in their wireless networks within a reasonable time," said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and Miriam Delphin-Rittmon, HHS assistant secretary-mental health and substance abuse, Thursday in letters to CTIA CEO Meredith Atwell, Competitive Carriers Association CEO Tim Donovan and Rural Wireless Association President Jack Baldwin. In similar letters to T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert, Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg and AT&T CEO John Stankey, the agencies say FCC Wireline Bureau staff will contact the companies in coming days "to discuss your plans to move toward a georouting solution for 988."
NTIA awarded 28 tribes more than $74 million in additional tribal broadband connectivity program grants Wednesday (see 2308250055). The new funding fulfills the program's equitable distribution requirement, which ensured all eligible federally recognized tribal governments that submitted a qualifying application received funding, said a news release.
Representatives of Cisco, Fortinet and Microsoft supported a pilot program that would invest in cybersecurity services for eligible K-12 schools and libraries (see 2307120027), in a meeting with aides to FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington. The companies urged the commission “to act quickly to advance the proposal to a formal rulemaking,” said a filing posted Tuesday in docket 13-184.
ClearCaptions raised concerns about the FCC's ratemaking for IP captioned telephone services, in a meeting with FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau and Office of Economics and Analytics staff, said an ex parte filing posted Monday in docket 03-123. The company said it "has every economic incentive not to provide purpose-built customer premises equipment" because it "has to absorb the expense" of training and installing the equipment. ClearCaptions said it preferred providing IP CTS "through end of life" and with the use of communications assistants (CA) because "they perform better on some calls" than automatic speech recognition (ASR). The company also backed the use of a blended rate for IP CTS, saying it "makes continued provision of CA IP CTS possible because retaining customers, and the margin on ASR, offsets any loss on those calls that require CAs to maintain service quality."