Wireless Infrastructure Association hires Sasha Galbreath, ex-Clyde Group, and Marshall Miller, ex-DDC Public Affairs, as public affairs managers ... Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden promotes Judith Conklin to chief information officer and John Rutledge to deputy chief information officer; Conklin becomes "primary adviser" to Hayden on "all technology matters" and an executive committee voting member ... Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency adds Kiersten Todt, ex-Cyber Readiness Institute, as CISA chief of staff.
USForward asks the FCC to address the rising USF factor by spreading costs among consumers, assessing the fee based on broadband access service revenue. Monday's report said that's a better option than basing fees on numbers or connections. On a call with reporters, officials from NTCA, Incompas, Public Knowledge and the Schools, Health & Libraries Broadband (SHLB) Coalition disagreed whether action may have to await a permanent chair and full commission.
The Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry took a hard line on a letter that 13 House Commerce Committee Republicans sent Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg Thursday seeking DOT information on reports that U.S. officials approved licensing applications for Huawei to buy U.S. semiconductors for China’s next-generation autonomous vehicles. The GOP members asked Buttigieg to respond by Sept. 23 to a dozen questions about the reports, including whether he’s concerned that Huawei is looking for a U.S. “foothold” to steal information on Americans and gather intelligence on the U.S. “transportation infrastructure.” The 13 “thieving” U.S. politicians “have the nerve to call others thieves,” responded the ministry spokesperson Friday. “When it comes to stealing and gathering information, the U.S. is the true world champion.” Huawei has “openly announced” to the world “its readiness to sign no-backdoor agreements and to launch cybersecurity assessment centers in any country to receive external testing,” he said. “I wonder if U.S. companies dare to do the same.” DOT didn’t respond to questions.
House Commerce Committee Republicans are unlikely to make the $4 billion in broadband money included in committee Democrats’ portion of the Build Back Better Act budget reconciliation package a centerpiece of their opposition to the measure but are expected to file at least some amendments to it, Capitol Hill aides and lobbyists told us. The legislation includes $10 billion for next-generation 911 tech upgrades, $1 billion to fund a new FTC privacy bureau and authorizes an FCC auction of at least 200 MHz of spectrum on the 3.1-3.45 GHz band, as expected (see 2109090067). House Commerce said it will begin marking up the measure at 11 a.m. EDT Monday in 2123 Rayburn.
No single company or country can “effectively produce semiconductors,” said Semiconductor Industry Association CEO John Neuffer on a Center for Strategic and International Studies webinar Wednesday about opportunities for U.S.-South Korea collaboration to bolster global supply chain resilience. “For better or for worse, and by far for better,” semiconductors are a “global business with global supply chains, and the last thing we should be doing is putting up barriers to innovation in our policies,” he said. East Asia produces “the most sophisticated, the most advanced semiconductors” in nodes below 10 nanometers, said Neuffer. Taiwan produces 92% of those devices, South Korea the rest, he said: “Do we want to put up barriers to that kind of innovation as we’re going forward with our manufacturing incentives or our other policies? No, I don’t think we do.” It’s not the goal of the U.S. semiconductor industry to “onshore everything,” said Neuffer. “We’re trying to diversify our supply chains and spread out our risk.” The industry doesn’t want to “create an environment” that encourages “important players like Samsung” -- a “massive’ U.S. investor -- to stay “offshore,” he said. “We want to bring the innovation onshore. That creates more competition here and helps us ensure that U.S.-headquartered companies again take the lead when it comes to the most advanced chips.” Samsung didn’t respond Thursday to requests for comment.
The House Commerce Committee seeks $4 billion more for the FCC Emergency Connectivity Fund as part of its portion of the Build Back Better Act budget reconciliation package, the panel said in a summary we obtained Thursday. Commerce intended to have released the full bill text Thursday night, lobbyists told us. The House Science and Education committees were in the process early Thursday evening of marking up their parts of the reconciliation measure, which touch on other tech and telecom matters.
Qualcomm representatives told staff from the FCC Wireless and International bureaus and Office of Engineering and Technology that the company’s C-band chipsets aren't a risk to aviation spectrum, said a filing posted Wednesday in docket 18-122. “The level of emissions into the 4.2 to 4.4 GHz band from mobile equipment using its chipsets comply with [3rd Generation Partnership Project] specifications and that the actual levels of emissions … can be significantly lower depending on the specific deployment configuration, transmitter operating parameters, and antenna configuration.”.
Broadcom CEO Hock Tan stood somewhat apart from other chipmakers when he expressed guarded optimism on a call Thursday for fiscal Q3 ended Aug. 1 that his company’s supply will meet demand into 2022. Broadcom has “a pretty good supply availability lineup for 2022, and we feel pretty OK about that,” said Tan. “I won't say great, but in this environment, all things considered, we're feeling quite good.” Tan wouldn’t bite when asked about industry speculation that Broadcom’s top wafer supplier, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., would soon impose substantial price increases. TSMC didn't comment Friday. Q3 Broadcom revenue of $910 million in fiscal Q3 grew 23% year on year, fueled mainly by the “2X growth” in Wi-Fi 6E deployments, plus double-digit increases in “next-generation fiber,” said Tan. “We see service providers like AT&T, British Telecom, and even Deutsche Telekom, deploying in increasing volumes next-generation last-mile fiber connectivity to homes in the U.S. and globally.”
EchoStar's yearslong planning and investment in S-band services could start bearing fruit late this year or early next when it expects the first devices using the LoRa protocol to be available, Chief Strategy Officer Anders Johnson told us. That opens the door to the satellite operator selling a geostationary orbit-based IoT overlay to terrestrial IoT networks in the EU. He said the company has been talking with satellite manufacturers about possible design of a 5G non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) constellation that could provide S-band services across much the rest of the globe, with launches starting as early as 2024.
The House should pass legislation funding bills for addressing the semiconductor shortage “as soon as possible,” Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said Thursday. He responded to reports that General Motors “plans to halt production temporarily at nearly all North American plants due to the shortage” of chips. He urged passage of S-1260, the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (see 2106080074), which would fund Warner’s Chips for America Act.