DOJ, the Commerce Department, the State Department and other agencies must improve “security and diversity of chip supply chains” to protect U.S. AI leadership, the White House said Thursday in a national security-related memorandum. President Joe Biden addressed the memo to DOJ, Commerce, State, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the CIA, the Director of National Intelligence and several other agencies. “Our competitors want to upend U.S. AI leadership and have employed economic and technological espionage in efforts to steal U.S. technology,” a White House fact sheet said. The memo “makes collection on our competitors’ operations against our AI sector a top-tier intelligence priority” and directs U.S. agencies to give AI developers “the timely cybersecurity and counterintelligence information necessary to keep their inventions secure." A senior administration official told reporters Wednesday that the memo addresses “the importance of protecting advanced AI technologies so that they’re not used against us by adversary militaries or intelligence services.” The memo warns about the risks of not taking enough steps to protect and harness AI. If the U.S. government doesn’t “act with responsible speed and in partnership with industry, civil society, and academia to make use of AI capabilities in service of the national security mission -- and to ensure the safety, security, and trustworthiness of American AI innovation writ large -- it risks losing ground to strategic competitors,” it said. “Ceding the United States’ technological edge would not only greatly harm American national security, but it would also undermine United States foreign policy objectives and erode safety, human rights, and democratic norms worldwide.”
Carriers can't rely on technology vendors or other companies to find a path forward on AI, Danielle Rios, acting CEO of software company Totogi, said Tuesday during a TelecomTV forum on the AI-native telco. Vendors themselves are still figuring out AI, Rios said. Other speakers agreed that companies must collaborate to make AI in telecom a success.
CTIA announces board changes, including Laurent Therivel, UScellular, as chairman, and Kyle Malady, Verizon Business, as vice chairman, both effective Jan. 1; Mike Finley, Boingo Wireless, as secretary, effective immediately; and Stephen Bye, Ookla, as member ... Kansas telecom provider Twin Valley appoints John Sullivan, previously Charter, as vice president-operations ... Semiconductor provider Lattice announces Corporate Vice President-Controller Tonya Stevens as interim CFO, succeeding Sherri Luther, who resigns and joins Coherent as CFO-treasurer.
Sens. Ed Markey, D-Mass., Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., asked that the Commerce Department Friday “provide more transparency on key issues” involved in contracts on Chips and Science Act funding. With more than $50 billion in funding for the measure, “the public deserves to know that semiconductor manufacturers have committed to upholding high standards in developing new plants,” including on “health, safety, labor, and environmental provisions subject to transparent company-specific public progress reporting,” the lawmakers said in a letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. Commerce “should use its role in the grant-making process to ensure that the U.S. semiconductor industry is safe and sustainable, creates high-quality jobs, and does not simply enrich shareholders and executives through stock buybacks.” The lawmakers scolded the department for withholding “important terms” of its first chip manufacturing plant agreement, worth $123 million, when it announced the deal last month. Commerce has also “not articulated how it will hold grant recipients accountable if they fail to meet their contractual terms,” the senators said: “Communities near manufacturing facilities and American chip manufacturing workers deserve -- and need -- more transparency around these federal contracts to ensure manufacturers are held accountable to meaningful commitments.”
House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., urged the FCC Wednesday night to close its Further NPRM eyeing dynamic sharing in the 12.2-12.7 GHz band and “adopt final rules authorizing high-powered two-way fixed broadband service” on the frequency. “The FCC updating its rules to authorize” fixed broadband service on the lower 12 GHz band “will allow for more continuous spectrum, especially in tribal and rural communities,” said Cole, whose congressional district includes a significant tribal population, in a letter to Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. “Ensuring that tribal communities are connected is a key priority for me. This expanded broadband service will help close the longstanding digital divide for underserved and hard to reach areas and foster economic development.” Incompas CEO Chip Pickering praised Cole for backing fixed wireless use of the lower 12 GHz band. “Our nation is at a pivotal moment in its work to connect every community, and [Cole] sees a clear opportunity to use this mid-band spectrum to bridge the digital divide, including in tribal areas in Oklahoma,” Pickering said: “We encourage the FCC to build on this momentum and act soon so we can continue delivering on the promise of Internet for all.” Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, a member of the Senate Armed Services and Commerce committees, urged the FCC in July to adopt dynamic sharing on the lower 12 GHz band if it finds that use won’t cause harmful interference for incumbent users (see 2407160066). SpaceX is urging the FCC against dynamic sharing, while EchoStar supports it (see 2409050040).
FCC Commissioners Nathan Simington and Geoffrey Starks warned the Mobile World Congress in Las Vegas that the FCC’s loss of general spectrum auction authority last year is hampering U.S. competitive efforts against major rivals in the 6G race. CTIA President Meredith Baker sounded a similar theme at the beginning of the conference, which CTIA sponsors with GSMA (see 2410080044).
DC BLOX sees a business model for building regional data centers in places like Greenville, South Carolina, Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Birmingham, Alabama, Alan Poole, general counsel of the Atlanta-based company, said during an Incompas webinar Thursday. As connected devices became more powerful, tech companies realized they needed to move data centers and computing power closer to users, Poole said in a conversation with Incompas CEO Chip Pickering during the session. COVID-19 spurred tech growth, Poole said: “The investment in digital infrastructure around that time to help meet the pace of demand was wild, awe-inspiring, and we’re still going through that,” he said. A key element DC BLOX considers is how welcoming a city will be to investment, as data centers require access to land and electricity. The company also examines potential tax incentives to build. Policymakers must ask what they’ll do if one developer takes all the available power, which is “happening all over the country,” Poole said. One center can require up to one gigawatt of power, which is "eye-popping.” Accordingly, the ability of data centers to generate power onsite, including “green” energy, will become increasingly important, he said. Communities should decide whether they want to compete “because there are many [competing] markets” and they are offering tax and other incentives. “At least at DC BLOX we’re doing everything we reasonably can to head off community concerns as soon as possible, because it makes more sense financially.” The availability of large enough fiber pipelines to handle growing demands is also a concern. “Is there enough fiber on all these routes?” Poole asked. “It was assumed, until very recently, that we were never going to need materially bigger conduits and that has proven absolutely untrue.” Some markets getting high-speed internet for the first time don’t have a nearby internet exchange point yet, allowing ISPs to exchange data with other networks: “That’s where the true internet compute happens and if you’re not close to one of those exchanges, you have problems with things like latency that might make real-time videoconferencing … unworkable.” Pickering said he loves the focus on “Tier 2” markets. “Those are great emerging hubs” and data centers “are a critical component and a critical piece of the infrastructure to make those hubs grow, succeed, prosper.” As communications technology rapidly evolves, “electricity is still kind of in the old world,” Pickering said. As the U.S. competes with China, “electricity and energy really is the supply-chain critical component.”
The FCC released its order approving 3-2 radio broadcaster Audacy’s request for a temporary waiver of its foreign-ownership requirements. The dissents from both FCC Republicans condemn the order as a deviation from normal FCC procedure, but neither mentions by name the involvement of the Soros family in the deal, though that has been the main focus of Republican lawmakers and conservative media critical of the restructuring. Commissioner Brendan Carr previously called the waiver a “Soros shortcut.” To suggest that Audacy is receiving special treatment is “cynical and wrong,” said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, pointing to numerous similar grants from the FCC going back to 2018. “Our practice here and in these prior cases is designed to facilitate the prompt and orderly emergence from bankruptcy of a company that is a licensee under the Communications Act.”
The House voted 257-125 Monday night to approve the Senate-cleared Building Chips in America Act (S-2228), sending it to President Joe Biden's desk. S-2228 would streamline federal permitting rules for projects that the 2021 Chips for America Act funded. It would in part make the Commerce Department the lead federal agency for conducting National Environmental Policy Act reviews for Chips for America Act projects and narrow the number of projects that would require those evaluations. The Senate approved the measure in December by unanimous consent. S-2228 lead sponsors Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., and Commerce Committee ranking member Ted Cruz, R-Texas, hailed the legislation's passage in the House. “This is a major step forward for our economy and national security,” Kelly said. “By preventing unnecessary delays in the construction of microchip manufacturing facilities, this bill will help maximize our efforts to bring this industry back to America, creating thousands of good-paying jobs and strengthening our supply chains.” Cruz called it “a crucial step in onshoring jobs and making our country less dependent on China for semiconductors critical to national defense.”
The successful deployment of open radio access networks will require international cooperation, speakers said Wednesday during NTIA’s first International ORAN Symposium in Golden, Colorado. On day one, conference attendees heard U.S. officials highlight the Biden administration’s commitment to open networks (see 2409170061).