The FCC will hold a forum on direct video calling (DVC) and related issues July 30. The session will explore how government agencies can implement DVC, an internet service that allows communication between American sign language users without the need for a translator. The session will begin at 1 p.m. in the Commission Meeting Room at FCC headquarters. The forum "features an overview of relevant Executive Orders regarding accessible Federal customer services ... and exhibits by DVC providers," the FCC said.
An attorney for Rochester, New York, is examining the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which overturned a four-decades-old standard on judicial deference to regulatory agency decisions (see 2406280043). In February, U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Wolford for Western New York in Rochester found in favor of Crown Castle, Extenet and Verizon on their consolidated claim that the city violated sections 253 and 332 of the Telecommunications Act in the unlawful manner in which it assessed fees for telecom deployments within its jurisdiction. “My office is presently reviewing the Loper Bright decision to determine its implications for the instant matters, particularly as to this Court’s summary judgment analysis,” city lawyer Patrick Beath's filing said: “Plaintiffs believe that Loper Bright has no impact here. I need additional time to make that assessment and confer with my client.”
ATIS fired back at an Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials' opposition to the standards group’s petition for reconsideration or clarification of the FCC’s January outage reporting order (see 2406120043). APCO found the petition confusing. “ATIS’ request is clear, and there is adequate notice from an [Administrative Procedure Act] perspective to grant” the relief, said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 21-346. ATIS had asked the FCC to clarify the application of its waiver of network outage reporting system filings during disaster information reporting system (DIRS) activations. “Granting ATIS’ request would facilitate service restoration by allowing service providers to focus on repairing and restoring the network, rather than on notifications,” ATIS said: “DIRS was adopted to provide a simplified and consistent process for service providers to report communications infrastructure status and situational awareness information during times of crisis.” In creating DIRS, the commission “acknowledged the need to reduce reporting-related burdens on service providers during major disaster and recovery events,” ATIS said.
The FCC again extended by one year its waiver pausing the phase-out of Lifeline support for voice-only services and increasing minimum service standards for mobile broadband data (see 2307070056). A Wireline Bureau order in docket 11-42 Wednesday noted the "marketplace for affordable broadband services is undergoing significant changes as a result of the end of the affordable connectivity program." The waiver now expires Dec. 1, 2025.
The creator of an automatic speech recognition (ASR) app criticized the long period he and other small providers have endured waiting for FCC approval before they could begin offering IP captioned telephone services supported by the Telecom Relay Services Fund. Rogervoice founder-CEO Olivier Jeannel spoke with an aide to Commissioner Nathan Simington about the need for an “emergent rate” for small providers of IP CTS service. The company applied for certification in March 2022 and the FCC acted in January, said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 03-123. “The nearly two-year wait for Commission action on their applications has made it all the more challenging to break into the IP CTS market, where established providers have had that much more lead time to develop and market their ASR-based captioning services,” Rogervoice said.
The FCC sought comment Wednesday on Inland Cellular’s proposed acquisition of Commnet’s rural digital opportunity fund support obligations in parts of Washington and Montana. Comments are due July 17, replies July 24, in docket 24-134. “Applicants state that Inland and its affiliates have deployed wireless and broadband networks and served customers since 1989 in rural areas of Washington and Idaho,” said a Wireline Bureau notice: “They further assert that Inland is uniquely situated to efficiently deploy RDOF-supported voice and broadband service in the Assigned Census Blocks.”
Data submissions for the FCC's fifth broadband data collection are due Sept. 3, an FCC public notice said Thursday in docket 19-195. Submissions should include broadband availability as of Sunday.
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel asked nine telecom companies how they will prevent politically motivated "fraudulent robocalls" that use AI (see 2204220051). A Thursday news release said Rosenworcel sent letters to AT&T, Charter, Comcast, Cox, Dish, Frontier, Lumen, T-Mobile and Verizon. The letters come after the agency responded to an AI-assisted fraudulent robocall campaign that targeted New Hampshire voters (see 2402060087). "This is just the beginning," Rosenworcel said. "We know that AI technologies will make it cheap and easy to flood our networks with deepfakes," she said: "As AI tools become more accessible to bad actors and scammers, we need to do everything we can to keep this junk off our networks."
Zayo became the first ISP to begin construction on a project that includes funding from NTIA's middle mile broadband infrastructure grant program, the agency said Monday. Zayo received $24 million to build a 645-mile fiber network across Nevada and 23 access points that will "enable ready access to local [ISPs]," NTIA said (see 2405220050). The start of construction "means the people of Nevada are one step closer to more affordable, more reliable high-speed internet service," NTIA Administrator Alan Davidson said.
NTIA accepted digital equity plans from American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, the federal agency said Tuesday. That means NTIA has accepted plans from all states, territories and the District of Columbia to use grants from NTIA’s $1.44 billion digital equity program.