Licensees and authorized telecom providers with reportable foreign ownership, investment or control need to file "prompt, accurate, and complete information," the FCC Enforcement Bureau said in Friday's Daily Digest. "When it comes to assessing U.S. national security and law enforcement interests, we will be vigilant in ensuring that companies comply with these important disclosure requirements," Bureau Chief Loyaan Egal said. The commissioners last week unanimously approved a framework for requiring companies to renew their Section 214 authorizations to provide international telecommunications services to and from the U.S. (see 2304200039).
Law firms Kirkland & Ellis and Latham & Watkins topped the ranks of tech, media and telecom M&A advisers in Q1, GlobalData said Thursday. It said Kirkland & Ellis topped the rankings in value as it advised on deals totaling $18.1 billion while Latham & Watkins led in terms of volume by advising on 27 deals. Both the deal value and volume top numbers were down sharply from Q1 last year, when firms in the No. 1 spots had $93 billion and 84 deals, respectively.
United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong and Malaysia are the world's most-connected nations, when judging by a collection of metrics including average time online daily, average number of social platforms used, and fixed and mobile broadband subscriptions per capita, IP proxy services firm Proxyrack said Tuesday. It said the U.S. ranked 25th.
If an international Section 214 authorization holder has had an application to transfer control or assign the authorization in the past five years and ownership hasn't materially changed, the FCC should give a way to certify this, Incompas said in a docket 23-119 filing Friday. Doing so would lower the burden and costs for complying with the Section 214 draft order on the April agenda and ensure the agency knows where it has information it needs in its records for a 214 review, it said. Rather than require 10-year renewals or three-year information submissions from 214 authorization holders, the agency could look at getting information it needs from authorization holders that have national security agreements from the agencies that require them to keep up-to-date information about their ownership and operations, it said. The filing recapped meetings with aides to the three regular commissioners and with Office of International Affairs Chief Ethan Lucarelli.
The deadline for nominations for membership to the Intergovernmental Advisory Committee is being extended to May 12, the FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau said Thursday. The original deadline was April 7.
Lowering reportable foreign-ownership interests from 10% to 5% would result in "significant real-world consequences that are contrary to the Commission's desire to encourage investments in telecommunications infrastructure" in the U.S., said DigitalBridge Group and Searchlight Capital Partners Thursday in docket 23-119. The investment companies said their limited partners and co-investors, especially sovereign wealth funds, treat their investments as highly confidential for competitive investment strategy reasons. They said there's no reason for the agency to change its rules because its disclosure threshold has no impact on the ability of national security agencies to continue doing their confidential reviews of foreign ownership at a 5% threshold, but it wouldn't promote national security to require public disclosure of passive limited partners and co-investors with insignificant equity interest and that lack any control of day-to-day operations of an FCC licensee.
April 21 is the deadline for comments on the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference Advisory Committee's proposed recommendations, the FCC Office of International Affairs said in a public notice in Thursday's Daily Digest. "We can generally support most" of the draft recommendation, OIA said.
The FCC's International Bureau Filing System is now the International Communications Filing System, the FCC said, citing the order in Monday's Federal Register making official the International Bureau's reorganization. The order delegates authority to the Space Bureau and Office of International Affairs to make rule changes needed to rename IBFS to ICFS. The agency marked the creation of the Space Bureau and OIA Tuesday (see 2304110002).
The cost of residential phone service and of cable, satellite and livestreaming TV service increased faster than overall inflation in March, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index unadjusted data released Wednesday. Cost of internet service in the U.S. in March was up 3.9% year over year, it said. Residential phone service costs were up 6.8%, and wireless service costs were up 1.2%. Cable, satellite and livestreaming TV service costs were up 5.9%. January prices overall were up 5% year over year before seasonal adjustment, BLS said.
Early comments on a November Further NPRM asking about further steps clamping down on gear from Chinese companies (see 2211230065) is raising some concerns, based on the first comments posted Friday in docket 21-232. NTCA said it supports enhancing U.S. cybersecurity but “the Commission must ensure any equipment certifications fall within the appropriate Commission authority, are narrowly tailored to prevent harm that would result from adding further delays to equipment availability and are not applied retroactively.” Providers, including NTCA members, “typically have no role in the equipment design, manufacturing, or assembly processes, and thus must rely entirely upon information from manufacturers and vendors identifying the equipment components.” IPVM, a security industry research group, reminded the FCC the landscape is complicated. ADI, America’s largest security distributor, recently “placed a considerable order” with China’s Hikvision “which we estimate is valued in the low-tens of millions of dollars” and at least 100,000 more Hikvision devices “are now headed for shelves at ADI stores across America,” IPVM said. The group cited a similar deal involving Dahua-made Lorex cameras: “If the FCC plans to proceed with revoking existing authorizations, we advise that it do so expeditiously. The cost and complexity of such action -- both to the FCC and Americans generally -- only increases over time as droves of devices are continually imported into and installed in the US.”