January 2012

Reeling MPAA declares DNS filtering "off the table"

Reeling from a broad Internet backlash, the Motion Picture Association of America has conceded that DNS filtering will not be included in the anti-piracy bills now making their way through Congress.

"DNS filtering is really off the table," said Paul Brigner, the MPAA's tech policy chief, on Jan 17. His remarks came during a debate on SOPA at the State of the Net conference in Washington DC. The event was sponsored by the Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee. "The future of our industry relies on the Internet," Brigner said, noting that movie studios were increasingly selling their products to consumers via the Internet. Brigner's comments were echoed by Steve Tepp of the US Chamber of Congress, another major SOPA supporter. He said the DNS provisions of SOPA and PIPA have "essentially been taken off the table," as the sponsors of both bills -- Rep Lamar Smith (R-TX) and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), respectively -- have pledged to remove those provisions from the bill. But Tepp and Brigner pledged to press on with the remaining provisions of the legislation. "We need to move forward as soon as possible," Tepp said. And while the MPAA appears to be abandoning the DNS-filtering provisions for this Congress, Brigner hinted that his organization may resurrect the proposal in the future.

Sprint, HTC Hatch Plan To Remove Carrier IQ Software From Handsets

Sprint will no longer require the companies who make phones for its network to install Carrier IQ’s software, which prompted an uproar after the software was thought to be logging keystrokes.

Although the software itself appears legit, Sprint’s desire for that much information about its users raised further questions. The Carrier IQ tempest rose quickly and died quickly after the software company responded to allegations from a security researcher that it was logging the keystrokes of certain handset users. Sprint was the most ubiquitous user of the diagnostic software among U.S. carriers, and HTC has confirmed to The Verge that the companies are actually working on a way to remove Carrier IQ from existing handsets with a software update.

Visa Talks With Apple As Part Of Plan To Push Wireless Payments

Wireless payments, perhaps powered by NFC technology or something like it, are definitely inbound--for a bunch of reasons that start with consumer convenience and end with dynamic personalized advertising and shopper analytics. Odds are it'll be a billion-dollar industry soon enough--which explains why there's such a complex, layered, and consumer-hostile battle for the tech going on behind the scenes. Fascinating then that Visa, a master of the current plastic card payment paradigm, is so active in its wireless innovations. To wit: Last week Visa chose the very public CES show as a great time to flex a little muscle, and announced that it had certified a bunch of Android-powered phones to be compatible with its PayWave systems. Android is the most ubiquitous smartphone operating system, so this move can only be a good thing. Visa also licenses PayWave royalty free to Google and ISIS, and, says Bill Gajda, the Global Head of Mobile Product, "is in discussions with a number of other mobile operators, handset manufacturers, OS providers on how we can license PayWave as broadly as possible to give our issuers as broad and flexible an opportunity to participate in NFC payments as possible." That got us thinking: What about Apple?

State's Streufert moving to DHS

The Homeland Security named John Streufert as the new director of the National Cybersecurity Division. Streufert comes to DHS from the State Department where he was the chief information security officer and deputy chief information officer for the past five-plus years. Streufert replaces Nicole Dean, who will leave government Jan. 22 to work for Raytheon. He will start at DHS Jan. 17 and have one week of overlap with Dean.

Big, Bigger, Biggest

ESPN is a network as big as the leagues it covers. As a business, ESPN thrives because it is playing a different game than the big public-airwaves networks. NBC and CBS make money from advertising. ESPN does, too, but it takes in even more from cable-subscriber fees—an average of $4.69 per household per month, according to research firm SNL Kagan. Last February, ESPN entered its 100 millionth American home. By comparison, the next costliest national network, TNT, takes in just $1.16 from about as many homes. If this were Pop Warner, the refs would have called the mercy rule by now.

In 2012 ESPN finds itself the object of criticism on a variety of fronts. Uniting them all is a sense that “The Worldwide Leader,” as its slogan goes, has gotten too big for its own good. By driving up the price of sports-rights packages and passing along the cost to consumers, ESPN helps send monthly cable bills through the roof. And in order to maintain favorable access to athletes, teams, and entire leagues, it is widely accused of downplaying stories that cast sports in a negative light. Live games may lead fans to watch ESPN more and more, but they’re seeing less and less of the network they fell in love with.

Full steam ahead for gigabit wireless, report says

The uptake of wireless networks based on 802.11ac is expected to be high when the first products arrive later this year, according to a report from IMS Research.

Over 3 million products with 802.11ac, including access points and notebooks, will be shipped in the first year of availability alone, IMS expects. "That is a very positive start," said Filomena Berardi, senior market analyst at IMS. The first products are expected to arrive in stores by the end of the year. Chip sets and routers were demonstrated at last week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. It won't be long before more laptops are shipped with 802.11ac than without, according to Berardi. The technology will then become more widespread, and in 2016 more than 400 million devices will be shipped. It's now full steam ahead for the standard, according to IMS.

Rural Telco Groups Call on USDA’s Vilsack to Intervene in USF Reform

The National Telecommunications Cooperative Association, Organization for the Promotion and Advancement of Small Telecommunications Companies and the Western Telecommunications Alliance have joined forces once again, jointly sending a letter last week to Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack asking him to escalate rural telco concerns about certain elements of the Connect America Fund order adopted by the Federal Communications Commission late last year.

In addition the groups asked Vilsack to help prevent the FCC from undertaking several additional reform measures. “Through a combination of changes to existing USF and ICC programs, the FCC effectively reduced funding available to RLECs, implementing retroactively applicable limitations that ‘pull the rug’ from beneath RLECs that invested on the basis of then-existing federally administered programs, and imposed new requirements on rural carriers,” the letter says. The letter also notes that “we are already hearing from members whose business plans for 2012 consist primarily of cutting back on operations and/or reducing staff to accommodate the constraints already ordered by the FCC.” It also notes that “few, if any, RLECs plan significant investment in 2012 as uncertainty gathers and lingers.” This “regulatory overhang” is undermining job creation and “the sustainable quality of broadband services in wide swaths of rural America,” the letter argues.

Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino
Gila River Indian Community
February 2-3, 2012
www.tribaltelecom2012.com

From Digital Divide to Tribal Opportunity

The global economy, even as it struggles to find footing from the long recession, is being transformed by a technology revolution. The world is moving from connected to hyperconnected, and many geographic barriers to social and economic opportunity are being eliminated along the way.

How is this Digital Revolution playing out in Indian Country? A recent study found that when Native Americans have access to broadband services, they are savvy users, utilizing digital multi-media and communications technologies at rates much higher than national averages.

Yet, for telecommunications generally, and broadband in particular, Native American communities are the most unserved and underserved in the nation. As many as one-third or more of households on tribal lands lack basic telephone service (compared to only about 2% nationally), and more than 90% of residents on tribal lands lack access to broadband technology.

Tribal-centric models for bridging this Digital Divide are increasingly being recognized as both viable and critical. Tribes are exploring opportunties to develop infrastructure, exercise regulatory oversight, and deliver communications services, in ways that promote tribal sovereignty and culture, provide affordable access,.and produce a more sustainable digital platform for economic opportunity.

brings together tribal leaders, administrators, enterprise executives, government agencies, and professionals to share information, explore options, and pursue solutions to bring Digital Opportunity to Indian Country.

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Center for Social Media
Katzen Arts Center, American University
February 10-11, 2012
http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/making-your-media-matter/events/medi...




Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee
January 17-18, 2012

Attracting over 600 attendees annually, the State of the Net Conference provides unparalleled opportunities to network and engage on key policy issues. The State of the Net Conference is the largest information technology policy conference in the U.S. and the only one with over 50 percent Congressional staff and government policymakers in attendance. The State of the Net Conference is the only tech policy conference routinely recognized for its balanced blend of academics, consumer groups, industry and government.