Net neutrality advocates pointed to a class-action lawsuit settlement in Sabrina Chin v. RCN Corp. announced this week in which the cable operator agreed to stop manipulating its broadband subscribers’ peer-to-peer file transfers and be more transparent about network management practices. “This is yet another example showing why the Federal Communications Commission needs to be given the authority over Internet access service,” said President Gigi Sohn of Public Knowledge. RCN denies it violated any laws and said it settled to avoid the cost of litigation. The episode will probably find its way into reply comments that net neutrality advocates plan to file with the FCC before Monday’s deadline.
It’s “somewhat optimistic” to say 95 percent of the U.S. is served by broadband, said House Communications Subcommittee Chairman Rick Boucher, D-Va. Boucher said at a hearing Wednesday he had “serious concerns about the accuracy of that number” in the National Broadband Plan “and the methodology that was employed in order to derive it.” Ranking Member Cliff Stearns, R-Fla., said the figure may show the U.S. can get ubiquitous broadband without government intervention. FCC Wireline Bureau Chief Sharon Gillett cautioned that availability estimates in the plan may paint a rosier-than-reality portrait of broadband access.
Rising subscription-video rates accompanied by declining interest in linear channels and coming advancements in set-top box technology augur increased viewer interest in online video viewed on TV sets, said outgoing FCC broadband plan initiative head Blair Levin. “Over-the-top video will eventually emerge” as a competitor to multichannel video programming distributors and “everyone is both excited and scared” by that prospect, he said. Since the technology is “a big bandwidth hog,” those with more capacity will do better, Levin told an American Cable Association conference.
Social media tools are a critical vehicle for connecting with constituents and in all aspects of political campaigns, elected officials said during a panel Tuesday at the Politics Online Conference in Washington. They use the tools to connect their constituents to one another, generate public forums and raise funds. “I don’t think that we would be as productive as we are were it not for Facebook and Twitter and Linked In because so many of our constituencies use it,” said Sandi Jackson, Chicago’s 7th Ward alderman: It “makes me more effective in my effort to be a great public servant."
Several universities, including Princeton and George Washington, have reported network issues caused by use of the iPad on school networks since the Wi-Fi version of the device went on sale in early April, the schools said. Apple, the device’s manufacturer, couldn’t be reached immediately for comment.
A small Ohio cable operator challenged two recent Media Bureau orders that require it to delete out-of-market network programming that comes from nearby TV stations, two applications for review show. Buckeye Cablevision, which operates in Toledo, asked the commission to overturn orders removing two Detroit stations from the significantly viewed list at the separate requests of LIN’s Toledo Fox affiliate WUPW and Disney’s own Toledo ABC station WTVG. The appeals tie the question to the current issue du jour of retransmission consent policy.
The FCC has put an unrealistic amount of work on its agenda to complete in too short of a time frame following release of the National Broadband Plan, said Larry Darby, former Common Carrier Bureau chief and FCC chief economist, during a New York Law School panel discussion late Monday. Some of the issues the FCC plans to tackle will likely elude easy resolution and Congress may have to step in, Darby warned.
CTIA President Steve Largent said Tuesday he sees reason for hope that the FCC will not make wireless subject to net neutrality rules. Largent also said in an interview that FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski will be the key member of the commission in deciding whether broadband will be classified as a Title II service, subject to traditional common carrier regulation, with his vote needed to resolve an apparent 2-2 split among commissioners. Net neutrality replies are due at the FCC Monday.
Hypercube Telecom was dealt a setback and set itself back in separate actions in California and Texas. Hypercube, a competitive local exchange carrier, is in a long-running dispute with interexchange carrier Level 3 Communications. In California, a utility commission administrative law judge dismissed a Hypercube claim against Level 3. And Hypercube withdrew a complaint against Level 3 in Texas, where utility commission staff had prepared a recommendation that commissioners there dismiss Hypercube’s complaint.
Cisco closed its acquisition of video company Tandberg for $3.3 billion, executives said during a conference call Monday, saying the deal marks the launch of Cisco’s open source effort. The company is also looking at 3D opportunities, they said.