December 2013

No Pacific Rim Accord by End-of-Year Target, Trade Negotiators Say

The United States and 11 other Pacific Rim nations said they would not complete a sweeping deal to reduce trade barriers by their own end-of-year deadline. But participants in the latest talks, held in Singapore, expressed optimism about the prospects for the trade deal, one of the largest ever negotiated.

The 12 ministers working on the Trans-Pacific Partnership said they had found potential “landing zones” for many of the remaining disagreements, which involve intellectual property and agricultural products, among other issues. A strong deal “is critical for creating jobs and promoting growth, providing opportunity for our citizens and contributing to regional integration and the strengthening of the multilateral trading system,” the ministers said. “We have decided to continue our intensive work.”

Worker Deaths Raise Questions at an Apple Contractor in China

Labor rights activists say the Pegatron Corporation, the Taiwanese manufacturer that produces Apple’s new iPhone 5C in Shanghai, has failed to explain at least five deaths of young workers in recent months. They say workers interviewed by China Labor Watch, a nonprofit group that monitors working conditions in China, have complained about long working hours and harsh working conditions at Pegatron, including some of the same pressures that in previous years led to health and safety problems at Foxconn Technology, Apple’s biggest contract supplier in China. “Considering the sudden deaths of five people and the similar reason of the deaths, we believe there should be some relations between the tragedy and the working conditions in the factory,” said Li Qiang, who runs China Labor Watch.

Recap: Crafting a Successful Incentive Auction: Stakeholders' Perspectives

The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing to examine the issues surrounding implementation of the voluntary incentive auction of broadcast television spectrum, which is being conducted by the Federal Communications Commission as required by the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012. The witnesses were Gary Epstein, the chair of the FCC’s Incentive Auction Task Force; Rick Kaplan from the National Association of Broadcasters (a former head of the FCC’s Wireless Bureau); AT&T’s Joan Marsh; Preston Padden, the Executive Director of the Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition; the Competitive Carriers Association’s Steven Barry; Harold Feld of Public Knowledge; and Hal Singer of the Progressive Policy Institute. A fun time was had by all.

Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) stated that there is no doubt that the FCC’s incentive auction proceeding is one of the most important undertakings in the agency’s history. He outlined what he sees as being at stake in the proceeding:

  • A successful incentive auction will set a new model for international spectrum policy, just as we did 20 years ago with the first spectrum auctions. It also will pave the way for future incentive auctions in the United States.
  • A successful incentive auction will mean more robust wireless communications networks both for voice and data in rural and urban areas around the country. It will make sure the United States continues its global leadership in wireless and preserves room for the innovation brought about by unlicensed spectrum use.
  • A successful incentive auction will offer broadcasters an opportunity to relinquish some or all of their current spectrum usage rights for an incentive payment.
  • A successful incentive auction will minimize disruptions and expense to those broadcasters who choose to remain in the business.
  • Finally, a successful incentive auction will raise significant revenue for FirstNet. As I have said before, this auction must be driven by one simple principle -- it must raise the resources needed for the FirstNet network.

Sen John Thune (R-SD), the Committee’s Ranking Member, said he believes the FCC “should let all interested participants freely compete against one another in the open market and should avoid putting its thumb on the scale.” He stressed that the “value of using spectrum auctions is that the free market is more effective at allocating spectrum than relying on the subjective opinions and predictions of government officials. American consumers should pick who wins in the marketplace, not the government.”

Lawmakers could reach no consensus on proposals to limit the bids of AT&T and Verizon, the two largest mobile carriers in the US. Sens Ed Markey (D-MA) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) called on the FCC to impose limits on the amount of spectrum the largest carriers can buy. While some senators and witnesses called on the agency to design an auction that results in the highest bids, there should be other priorities, including consumer benefits, Sen Markey said. Some Republican senators, along with an AT&T’s Marsh and other witnesses, called for unrestricted bidding in the mid-2015 auction of 600MHz spectrum.

The FCC’s Epstein said the Commission plans to offer broadcasters a "very high" starting price for their spectrum in the incentive auction, and one not just based on their value as TV stations. He said that attracting broadcasters was crucial. He said making it attractive would include a very high service price, not simply reflected fair market value of the spectrum as a broadcast channel, but including other factors like what it would be worth in the hands of wireless companies.
The FCC should adopt a "no-piggie rule" that limits any one carrier from buying too much of the available spectrum, said PK’s Feld.

"An open auction is the fairest method to assign licenses because it ensures that all applicants have the same opportunity to obtain spectrum," Marsh said. "An open auction would allow market competition, rather than regulation, to allocate spectrum, ensuring that it is put to its best and highest use." Still, if the FCC decides to cap spectrum purchases, it should do so for all carriers and not just the two largest, Marsh said.

But without some caps on the largest carriers, small regional mobile carriers won't be able to compete in the auction, said Steven Berry, president and CEO of the Competitive Carriers Association. Losing out on this 4G spectrum would be "disastrous" for many small carriers, he said. Verizon and AT&T together control about 80 percent of the low band spectrum best suited for mobile broadband, Berry said. "One or two carriers should not be allowed to walk away with the entire pie," he said.

AT&T's Stephenson: IP transition will start showing cost savings in 3 years

AT&T may have set 2020 as the year when it will transition its traditional telephone network to all IP, but CEO Randall Stephenson says that the carrier will start seeing cost savings by 2016.

"We have a number of initiatives, including Project Agile, which is about streamlining our operations around an IP product set." Stephenson added many of the real savings won't come until they can actually shut down a TDM-based switch that has been primarily used to deliver traditional telephone service and special access services such as DS-1s. "The really big numbers come when you get really close to turning off the switch on the old legacy TDM infrastructure," he said. "There are significant network and IT costs involved in sustaining those products and you don't turn the lion's share of those off till you take that last product out of service." A key element in moving ahead with the IP transition is the Federal Communications Commission. Although AT&T has been one of the leading advocates of the TDM-to-IP transition, the telecommunications company has expressed frustration over the FCC's slow pace in giving it guidance on the next steps to conduct TDM-to-IP trials in two of its 4,500 wire centers. It appears that AT&T is now getting the clarity it needs.

Report: 70% of U.S. Households Have DVRs, Netflix or Use VOD

Americans continue to snap up digital video recorders (DVRs): 47% of US TV households now have DVRs, up from 40% in 2010, according to a new report from Leichtman Research Group (LRG). Moreover, fully half (50%) of those with DVRs have a DVR service on more than one TV set. That’s up from 30% in 2008.

Some 23% have DVR service on more than one TV set as compared to 20% last year and 8% in 2008, according to LRG’s “On-Demand TV 2013: A Nationwide Study on VOD and DVRs, an LRG press release said. In addition, LRG market researchers found that 70% of US households have a DVR, subscribe to Netflix, or use Video On-Demand (VOD) from a cable or telecommunications provider. Twenty-three percent are using two of these services and 11% are using all three.
Other key takeaways from LRG’s report include:

  • 55% of households that subscribe to a multi-channel video service have a DVR — compared to 4% of TV households that do not subscribe to a multi-channel video service
  • 58% of households with annual household incomes above $50,000 have a DVR -- compared to 30% with income levels below $50,000
  • 61% of all cable subscribers have used VOD -- compared to 43% in 2008, and 10% in 2004
  • 62% of digital cable subscribers, and 57% of Telco video subscribers, used on-Demand in the past month. 29% of Netflix subscribers stream video daily, and 70% weekly -- up from 10% daily, and 43% weekly in 2010
  • Netflix subscribers report watching, on average, 19.6 TV shows per month -- up from 12.7 in 2012, and 9.9 in 2011
  • The mean annual income of those who use all three services (DVR, Netflix, and VOD) is $96,900 -- 90% above the mean income of those who use none of the services

Phone Apps Help Government, Others Counter Violence Against Women

Smart and mobile phones have helped authorities solve crimes from beatings that occurred during the London riots to the Boston Marathon bombing. A panel of experts said the devices can also help reduce and combat rapes and other gender-based violence. Smartphone apps and text messaging services proliferated in India following a sharp rise in reported gang rapes, including the brutal 2012 rape and murder of a 23-year-old medical student in Delhi, according to panelists at the Wilson Center event on gender-based violence and innovative technologies.

The apps fall into four main categories, said Alex Dehgan, chief data scientist at the United States Agency for International Development: apps that aid sexual assault and domestic violence victims, apps that empower women to fight back against gender-based violence, apps focused on advocacy and apps that crowdsource and map cases of sexual assault. The final category of apps is largely built on the Ushahidi platform, which was developed to track reports of missing people following the 2010 Haiti earthquake. One of the apps, Safecity, offers real-time alerts about sexual assaults across India to help women identify unsafe areas. Similar apps have been launched in Egypt and Syria, Dehgan said. In lower-tech countries the systems often operate using text messages rather than smartphone apps so they’re more widely accessible.

Mayor Bloomberg Announces Country's Largest Continuous Free Public Wi-Fi Network

New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg announced the launch of a new outdoor public Wi-Fi network in Harlem accessible to all users at no cost. The Harlem Wi-Fi network will extend 95 city blocks, from 110th to 138th Streets between Frederick Douglass Boulevard and Madison Avenue making it the largest continuous free outdoor public wireless network in the nation.

The network, which will be rolled out in three phases in coordination with the city’s Technology Development Corporation and the Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications, will increase digital access for approximately 80,000 Harlem residents, including 13,000 public housing residents, as well as businesses and visitors in the area. The free public network will serve the community for an initial five-year term and is funded through a generous donation from the Fuhrman Family Foundation to the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City. The first phase, extending from 110th to 120th Streets between Madison Avenue and Frederick Douglass Boulevard, is underway and the remaining phases will be complete by May 2014. The Mayor was joined at the announcement by Chief Information and Innovation Officer Rahul Merchant, Glenn and Amanda Fuhrman, Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City President Megan Sheekey, Chief Digital Officer Rachel Haot, New York City Housing Authority Chairman John Rhea and Harlem Children’s Zone President and Chief Executive Officer Geoffrey Canada.

Fox COO Chase Carey: ‘A La Carte Cable is a Farce’

Customers who hope that cable companies will allow them to subscribe on a channel-by-channel basis need a reality check, 21st Century Fox COO Chase Carey said. “A la carte cable is a farce,” Carey told the Wall Street heavy audience. ”People want bundles, they just want different bundles.” Professional allegiances aside, Carey said that the idea of a la carte is being used by cable providers to “drag, in some manner, Washington into the discussion.”

Lawmakers bet on online poker

House lawmakers are doubling down on a push to legalize Internet gambling. A House Commerce Committee panel held a showdown over a legislative effort to license and regulate online poker.

States have tended to take the lead on regulation of online gambling in recent years, but many lawmakers say that federal action is necessary to prevent money laundering and consumer abuse. “While unfettered online gaming here in the US is surely not the ideal, absent a clear mandate from Congress, we risk exposing our constituents to an environment of a ‘race to the bottom’ which could present itself,” Rep Lee Terry (R-NE) said. Rep Joe Barton (R-TX), who has introduced the Internet Poker Freedom Act, said that times have evolved to require the new regulations. “Now we have the Internet and iPhones and iPads and apps and all these things,” he said. “Just about the only thing you can’t do [online] anymore is play poker. And that is changing.”

The Obama appointees who could save net neutrality

[Commentary] When one of the country's most powerful appeals courts heard oral arguments on net neutrality in September, it looked as if the Federal Communications Commission's rule against Web traffic discrimination might be headed for the trash bin. But the successful confirmation of the first of three Obama nominees to the DC Circuit court improves the regulation's chances of survival.

With the Senate's recent rule change on filibusters, Patricia Millett has become the first judicial nominee to benefit from approval by simple majority. By the end of the year, the Senate could approve Obama's two remaining nominees to the court, Nina Pillard and Robert Wilkins. Altogether, the court would then have seven members appointed by Democratic administrations to the four that were appointed by Republican presidents (although the D.C. Circuit also has a handful of semi-retired judges appointed by Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush that can choose to rule from time to time).