President Barack Obama’s proposal for improving cybersecurity information sharing will center on a plan to work with the private sector to expand the nation's information sharing apparatus, two industry officials who attended White House briefings on the proposals told us Monday. Obama is to discuss cybersecurity information sharing during a speech Tuesday at the Department of Homeland Security’s National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center (NCCIC).
Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., reintroduced the controversial Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) Friday, but a new year and a new session of Congress hasn’t substantially changed the bill’s prospects for enactment, industry lawyers and lobbyists told us. Ruppersberger cited North Korea’s December data breach at Sony Pictures Entertainment as the impetus for his early reintroduction of the bill, saying in a statement that “we must stop dealing with cyber attacks after the fact.” The version of CISPA for the 114th Congress (HR-234) is a near facsimile of the version the House passed during the 113th Congress (see report in April 19, 2013, issue). The Senate didn’t vote on the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA), which was substantially similar to CISPA, before the 113th Congress adjourned in December.
FairPoint Communications continued negotiations Monday with the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) to end a monthslong strike in northern New England, though none of the parties would say how the talks are progressing. More than 1,700 FairPoint workers affiliated with the CWA and IBEW have been on strike since mid-October in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont over what the workers view as unacceptable conditions included in a new FairPoint contract proposal. FairPoint is also contending with related broadband and wireline service quality issues in New Hampshire and Vermont that have attracted state governments’ scrutiny.
Sony said its PlayStation Network was “back online” Sunday, after a multiday outage resulting from a Christmas Day distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on the system. Hack activist group Lizard Squad claimed responsibility for the DDoS attack, which also downed Microsoft’s Xbox Live network. Sony Entertainment Vice President Catherine Jensen confirmed in a blog post that a DDoS attack caused the PlayStation Network outage, saying the network “and some other gaming services were attacked over the holidays with artificially high levels of traffic designed to disrupt connectivity and online gameplay.”
Lawmakers in California and Florida bowed legislation this month to overhaul ethics rules within their states’ utility regulatory commissions in response to recent controversies. Both the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) have faced similar legislation before. This time, legislators have shied away from focusing on provisions to reform state revolving door laws related to the private sector. Public interest advocates who continue to support strengthening revolving door laws say they believe strengthening existing laws can be difficult.
Kentucky will partner with the Macquarie Group investment firm to deploy a 3,000-mile fiber “middle mile” network in the state, Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear and Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., said Tuesday. The Next Generation Kentucky Information Highway (I-Way) project is meant to fix the state’s long-standing lack of broadband access, which “has damaged our ability to attract business and to explore modern opportunities in healthcare and education,” Beshear said during a news conference. Kentucky ranks 46th nationally in high-speed broadband availability, with 23 percent of its rural areas lacking broadband connectivity, Beshear’s office said.
Congress and Cuba will need to make their intentions clear before it will be evident how much of an effect President Barack Obama’s plan to restore diplomatic ties and some commercial ties with Cuba (see 1412170053) will have on the U.S. communications sector’s presence in that island nation, telecom industry lawyers told us. The White House partially focused Obama’s announcement of the plan on how it could increase Cubans’ access to telecom and the Internet, but Wednesday’s announcement alone does little to advance beyond previously announced changes in U.S. telcos’ ability to connect with Cuba, the lawyers said.
The Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) voted unanimously Tuesday to allow the city of Chanute to issue revenue bonds for its planned expansion of its municipal broadband network, affirming a KCC staff recommendation that said the expansion wouldn’t duplicate existing private sector broadband services (see 1412090041). The KCC’s approval of the Chanute expansion caps a year in which the city also opposed the controversial Municipal Communications Network and Private Telecommunications Investment Safeguards Act (SB-304), which would have restricted municipal broadband deployments. The state Senate Commerce Committee scuttled SB-304 in February amid opposition from Chanute, Google and others (see report in the Feb. 4 issue). The Kansas Legislature appears unlikely to reconsider municipal broadband restrictions during its next session, but 2015 could prove active for such legislation elsewhere, industry observers told us.
Iridium remains optimistic it has a strong future in areas of the satellite industry where it already holds a competitive advantage, particularly as it prepares to launch its Iridium NEXT system, said CEO Matt Desch Tuesday. Iridium plans to launch 81 satellites over the next few years to accommodate the NEXT constellation, with the first two deploying next summer, Desch said during a Washington Space Business Roundtable event. All 81 satellites should be in orbit and operational by the second half of 2017, he said. Iridium has said the NEXT satellites will provide significantly more capacity than the company’s current satellite constellation and will allow more efficient spectrum use (see 1412020050).
The California Public Utilities Commission confirmed Monday that it won’t hold hearings Wednesday and Thursday as part of CPUC's review of Comcast's proposed buy of Time Warner Cable. The CPUC had budgeted time Wednesday and Thursday for evidentiary hearings on the deal as part of its revised review timeline, but canceled them after the commission’s Office of Ratepayer Advocates filed a motion declining to request hearings. CPUC Administrative Law Judge Karl Bemesderfer subsequently denied a hearing request from the National Asian American Coalition. The CPUC holds hearings on a proceeding only in response to a stakeholder request. ORA said in its filing, posted Friday, that it didn’t believe it and other stakeholders would have adequate time under the revised timeline to adequately prepare for a hearing. Comcast and other companies involved in Comcast/TWC and related deals filed their opening briefs on the deal Dec. 1, while other stakeholders had until Wednesday to file reply comments. Media Alliance Executive Director Tracy Rosenberg told us she believes the CPUC can still do a thorough review of Comcast/TWC without the hearings because of the material included in other parties’ reply comments, which generally opposed the deal. Hearings would have been preferable because they would have allowed the public an additional opportunity to comment on the deal, Rosenberg said.