LTD Broadband said there’s no urgent need for the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to resume proceedings on revoking LTD Broadband’s eligible telecom carrier (ETC) designation. The Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) winner disagreed with state industry groups and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison (D) in reply comments filed Monday in docket 22-221. "The contention of these parties that LTD’s FCC application could suddenly spring to life and result in LTD obtaining immediate authorization for [RDOF] support, thereby barring others from seeking alternative funding for broadband deployment, has no basis in fact," the ISP said.
The wireless industry asked the FCC to go slow on major changes to wireless emergency alerts, in reply comments posted Tuesday in docket 15-91. Commenters also raised privacy concerns. A Further NPRM, approved by commissioners 4-0 in April, proposed to require participating providers to ensure mobile devices can translate alerts into the 13 most commonly spoken languages in the U.S. aside from English, to send thumbnail-sized images in WEA messages, and other changes (see 2304200040).
ASPEN, Colo. -- The level of content moderation that online platforms exercise -- and how much leeway they should have to moderate -- was the subject of dispute in a panel Tuesday at the Technology Policy Institute (TPI) Aspen Forum. Odds are good the U.S. Supreme Court will consider NetChoice's challenge of Florida and Texas social media content moderation laws in its coming session since there's a Circuit Court split on the issue, said Ashkhen Kazaryan, Stand Together senior fellow. Laura Bisesto, Nextdoor global head-policy, privacy and compliance, said she hopes the Texas and Florida laws are enjoined, but there's also a problem of state-by-state approaches to legislating moderation rules and Congress instead should take it up. Nextdoor is a NetChoice member.
An expected gap in the creation of new media content caused by the ongoing writer and actor strikes is likely to lead to increased advertising on free ad-supported streaming (FAST) TV channels, but the industry still faces difficulty in reliably measuring reach and return on advertising spend, said streaming and ad industry officials on panels at the virtual StreamTV Advertising Summit Tuesday. “We need to have best practices, we need to have consensus around a coin of the realm,” said Tastemade Head-Global Sales Jeff Imberman.
Republicans have grown more comfortable with allowing consumers a private right of action to sue tech companies, said staffers for the Senate Commerce Committee and House Commerce Committee Tuesday during a panel at the Technology Policy Institute's Aspen Forum in Colorado, also livestreamed. A separate Aspen panel debated the future of social media content moderation and the potential for the U.S. Supreme Court to weigh in (see 2308220048).
The FCC has the authority to designate Fox-owned WTXF-TV Philadelphia for hearing over the false reporting on the 2020 election by its parent company, said the Media and Democracy Project Tuesday in a filing in support of its petition to deny the station’s license renewal. “Designating a hearing on this basis would not be regulation of cable content any more than revoking a convicted felon’s broadcast license would be an intrusion into law enforcement and the judicial system,” said MAD.
ASPEN, Colo. -- The FCC broadband equity, access and deployment program’s spending will have a “huge stimulative effect” on private investments in network infrastructure over the next decade, said New Street Research’s Jonathan Chaplin Tuesday. BEAD will drive a lot of buildout by mobile carriers and wireless ISPs, said Will Adams, T-Mobile vice president-strategic policy and planning, at the Technology Policy Institute's Aspen Forum. FCC Chief of Staff Narda Jones said robocalls will remain a consumer issue focus for the agency. Panels also discussed online platform content moderation controversies (see 2308220048) and broadband deployment in Mexico and Canada.
There will be a “structured discussion” about how to regulate AI when Congress returns in September, but the most important thing remains passing privacy legislation, Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., said Monday.
Interest is growing in the November window for low-power FM applications, but finding frequencies for would-be LPFMs is going to be difficult, said Prometheus Radio Project Engineering Director Paul Bame and REC Networks founder Michelle Bradley in a Society of Broadcast Engineers webinar Monday. Most inquiries received by Prometheus are coming from groups in highly populated urban areas that are unlikely to have room for new LPFM stations, Bame said: “The cities are tight; most of them are full.”
ASPEN, Colorado -- State and federal lawmakers have significant interest in regulating AI, but that may be premature, said industry, government and academic experts Monday at Technology Policy Institute's Aspen Forum. Later, Oren Etzioni, Allen Institute for AI CEO, was critical of what he said was AI alarmism. Speakers also discussed Congress' tech, media and telecom legislative priorities (see 2308210009).