Charter opted to end ads contested by AT&T that mentioned the cable provider's 5G mobile service, the FTC said last week, referring to a National Advertising Division referral. With the marketing discontinued, the FTC said staff won't take further action. Charter emailed Tuesday that its Spectrum Mobile service offers "customers the best speeds at the best value and the letter references a process issue with NAD and is not related to our offerings. ... Charter is proud of our 5G services and our ads and disclosures are consistent with industry standards."
Assertions that integrated receiver/decoder equipment costs should be excluded from the C-band transition lump sum payments to MVPD earth station operators wrongly claim MVPDs that replace earth stations with fiber-based video delivery still have to employ IRDs, MobiTV said in an FCC docket 18-122 posting Monday: MVPDs that use MobiTV as a fiber-centric replacement to their C-band earth stations will still get video content while not using IRDs. The IPTV service said the C-band order seems to offer earth station operators a lump sum that could be used on alternatives such as fiber-based solutions, and the commission should be technology neutral and open to alternatives that don't require IRDs at local earth station sites.
Miracle Attainment's application for certification to operate an open video system (see 2007060029) was granted, said an FCC Media Bureau order Friday.
Broadcast and cable interests disagree whether FCC leased access rules are on constitutionally shaky grounds. Despite NCTA arguments, the Supreme Court's recent National Institute of Family & Life Advocates and Reed decisions clearly don't support cable claims of leased access rules being content based, NAB said in a docket 17-105 posting Thursday. It said MVPDs still have a big market share in many designated market areas, and courts have cited such as a reason for sustaining program access and programming discrimination provisions against First Amendment challenges. NAB was responding to an NCTA posting on a meeting it, Comcast, Charter and Cox had with aides to Chairman Ajit Pai and the regular commissioners and Media Bureau Chief Michelle Carey. The cablers said they had "strong support" for the leased access draft order on July's agenda (see 2006250062) and its finding the constitutional foundation for the leased access rules being "in substantial doubt." They said that finding is not only the FCC's but also court precedent.
If there's any doubt about the meaning of Section 543 of the Cable Act, barring state or federal cable rate regulation, the court should narrowly construe the provision against preemption, because the Supreme Court has historically been quite clear on that point, Maine told U.S. District Court in Bangor Tuesday in a reply in support of its motion to dismiss (in Pacer, docket 20-cv-00168). It said Charter Communications, challenging the state requiring prorated refunds when cable customers end service partway through a billing cycle (see 2005210004), hasn't shown the state law in any way alters the rate structure of cable services being provided. Charter didn't comment Wednesday.
Cable One will get a minority stake in Hargray Communications and Hargray will get Cable One's Alabama assets in a deal announced Tuesday. Hargray said the transaction is expected to close in the fall, pending regulatory OK.
Wall Street's recent bearishness toward cable companies may reflect concerns a Joe Biden presidency would mean Communications Act Title II reclassification of broadband service, legislation on net neutrality or even overt price regulation, MoffettNathanson's Craig Moffett wrote investors Tuesday. He said reclassification by a Democratic FCC would likely be shot down by the Supreme Court long before price regulation could happen. Regulatory attention on Big Tech, and away from cable, seems to point to a regulatory outlook for cable that's "less scary" than it has been for years, even under a Democratic administration, he said.
Cable companies' Wi-Fi-centric mobile virtual network operators continued to have success luring customers from mobile networks operators, with Comcast, Charter and Altice ending Q1 with 3.75 million such subscriptions, GlobalData said Monday. It said much wireless traffic that otherwise would have gone over cellular networks was carried on residential Wi-Fi due to the pandemic, saving those MVNOs cellular usage fees they would have had to pay their network partners. COVID-19 will likely hinder subscriber adds in Q2 for all mobile operators and MVNOs, it said.
The FCC proposal that C-band earth station technology upgrade costs be reviewed and approved after MVPD earth station operators opt for lump sum reimbursement will deter the operators from going that route and "eviscerate the myriad policy benefits of the lump sum mechanism," ACA Connects representatives told Wireless Bureau staffers, per a docket 18-122 posting Monday. Such a review process is unnecessary because the necessity and degree of technology upgrades for MVPDs transitioning earth stations into the upper portion of the C-band is highly predictable, it said. The group urged integrated receiver/decoder replacement costs stay within the lump sum reimbursement.
Few MVPDs, particularly small ones, can shoulder the big risk that comes with the FCC saying some C-band earth station relocation costs will be reviewed after those stations' operators opt for the lump sum, ACA Connects told aides to Commissioners Mike O'Rielly and Brendan Carr as recapped in a docket 18-122 posting Thursday. It repeated its call (see 2006300085) to seek comment on a new proposed lump sum amount and to rework Wireless Bureau proposals.