September 2014

The State of Broadband 2014: Broadband For All

Over 50% of the global population will have Internet access within three years’ time, with mobile broadband over smartphones and tablets now the fastest growing technology in human history.

More than 40% of the world’s people are already online, with the number of Internet users rising from 2.3 billion in 2013 to 2.9 billion by the end of this year. Over 2.3 billion people will access mobile broadband by end 2014, climbing steeply to a predicted 7.6 billion within the next five years. There are now over three times as many mobile broadband connections as there are conventional fixed broadband subscriptions. The popularity of broadband-enabled social media applications continues to soar, with 1.9 billion people now active on social networks.

The Republic of Korea continues to have the world’s highest household broadband penetration at over 98%, up from 97% last year. Monaco now surpasses last year’s champion, Switzerland, as the world leader in fixed broadband penetration, at over 44% of the population. There are now four economies (Monaco, Switzerland, Denmark, Netherlands) where penetration exceeds 40%, up from just one (Switzerland) in 2013. The US ranks 19th globally in terms of number of people online, ahead of other OECD countries like Germany (20th) and Australia (21st), but behind the United Kingdom (12th), Japan (15th) and Canada (16th).

The US has slid from 20th to 24th place for fixed broadband subscriptions per capita, just behind Japan but ahead of Macao (China) and Estonia. In total, there are now 77 countries where over 50% of the population is online, up from 70 in 2013. The top ten countries for Internet use are all located in Europe, with Iceland ranked first in the world with 96.5% of people online.

The lowest levels of Internet access are mostly found in sub-Saharan Africa, with Internet available to less than 2% of the population in Ethiopia (1.9%), Niger (1.7%), Sierra Leone (1.7%), Guinea (1.6%), Somalia (1.5%), Burundi (1.3%), Eritrea (0.9%) and South Sudan (no data available). The list of the ten least-connected nations also includes Myanmar (1.2%) and Timor Leste (1.1%).

Food and Drug Administration
October 21 and 22, 2014
9 a.m. to 5 p.m
https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2014/09/23/2014-22515/collabora...

The FDA, in collaboration with other stakeholders within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), seeks broad input from the Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) Sector on medical device and healthcare cybersecurity.



September 23, 2014 (FCC "Exploring New Ideas")

“The bottom line is that the FCC may impose new wireless rules or demand ISP’s increase broadband speeds but, for the purposes of net neutrality, none of that matters without Title II.”
- Jeff John Roberts, GigaOm

BENTON'S COMMUNICATIONS-RELATED HEADLINES for TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2014


Hey, Headlines is hiring! For more info see: http://benton.org/about/job-openings

Today’s Events: http://benton.org/calendar/2014-09-23/

NETWORK NEUTRALITY
   Exploring New Ideas for Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet - FCC press release
   What’s next for network neutrality? 5 things we learned from the debate ahead of the FCC’s decision - analysis
   How airlines explain network neutrality - Brian Fung analysis
   Mobile industry makes the pro-goodies case for non-neutral networks

UNIVERSAL SERVICE
   Telcos on Universal Service Reform: Contribution Base Must Be Addressed
   CAF Speed Target Could Create New Winners and Losers

OWNERSHIP
   Comcast to FCC: We already face enough competition, so let us buy TWC
   DOJ, FTC OK With Sinclair Purchase of WTSG [links to web]

PRIVACY/SECURITY
   We know the password system is broken. So what’s next?
   New Level of Smartphone Encryption Alarms Law Enforcement [links to web]

WIRELESS/SPECTRUM
   Apple Sells More Than 10 Million New iPhones on First Weekend [links to web]
   Cable Keeps Eye Fixed On ‘Carrier-Grade’ Wi-Fi [links to web]
   Lawmakers warn in-flight calls could lead to fights [links to web]

TELEVISION
   All-digital TV: An excuse to soak cable customers with a new fee? - analysis [links to web]

CONTENT
   Schooling the Supreme Court on Rap Music - analysis [links to web]

ELECTIONS AND MEDIA
   Sen Rand Paul opens Bay Area office to reach Silicon Valley [links to web]

GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE
   Intelligence Community ‘All In’ on New Technology Plan [links to web]

LOBBYING
   Google, Yahoo fighting on both sides of municipal broadband debate (updated) - op-ed
   Tech’s surveillance hopes stopped in their tracks [links to web]

STORIES FROM ABROAD
   Google Must Improve Search Settlement or Face Charges, EU's Almunia Says
   Champion European innovation to challenge Google - op-ed
   Shadows creep across face of European newspapers [links to web]
   Amazon Workers Walk Off the Job in Germany Over Wage Dispute [links to web]

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NETWORK NEUTRALITY

OPEN INTERNET IDEAS
[SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission, AUTHOR: Julie Veach]
It is worth noting some of the ideas in the record that the Federal Communications Commission’s staff has identified as adding to the potential ways that an Open Internet can be preserved. Commenters have suggested how Section 706 could be used. For example, AOL supports reclassification under Title II with substantive rules promulgated under Section 706. And AT&T has suggested paid prioritization could be banned under Section 706. At the same time, the FCC has been presented with a number of variants on the use of Title II. Tim Wu and Tejas Narechania have made an important proposal of this kind, as has the Mozilla Foundation, which suggested in its reply comments that Title II be used to create a presumption that all paid prioritization arrangements are unlawful. Some parties also have spoken positively of the benefits of both Section 706 and Title II. For example, a coalition of library and higher-education institutions has made proposals that build on these sources of legal authority -- suggesting, among other ideas, a finding that paid prioritization arrangements presumptively violate the law under a standard of “Internet reasonableness.”
benton.org/headlines/exploring-new-ideas-protecting-and-promoting-open-internet | Federal Communications Commission
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5 THINGS ABOUT NET NEUTRALITY
[SOURCE: GigaOm, AUTHOR: Jeff John Roberts]
[Commentary] Here are five important things we learned during the first phase of the Federal Communications Commission’s network neutrality process, and that will shape the endgame:
The American public does not want fast lanes – but may end up with them anyways
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler is the wild card
The tech giants are sitting it out
Bet on new wireless rules
Title II is all that matters: The bottom line is that the FCC may impose new wireless rules or demand ISP’s increase broadband speeds but, for the purposes of net neutrality, none of that matters without Title II.
benton.org/headlines/whats-next-network-neutrality-5-things-we-learned-debate-ahead-fccs-decision | GigaOm
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AIRLINES AND NET NEUTRALITY
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Brian Fung]
How are Internet fast lanes any different from paying more to "sit up front in the big seats on an airline"? If you want better service, maybe you should pay for it. The fact that folks are naturally turning to airlines to understand net neutrality suggests the air travel industry may have something to teach us. So let's unpack this analogy a bit. I'll tackle this in two parts: One will address how describing it as "paying for the big seats" doesn't adequately capture the net neutrality problem, and the second will tweak that analogy to try to help put the net neutrality issue in more concrete terms. Paying Internet service providers for the right to serve consumers faster and more smoothly — a concept known as "paid prioritization" — is not like being a customer on an airline. For starters, while you can pay for better treatment on an airplane, everyone on the plane gets to their destination at the same time, whether they're flying in coach or business class. Paid prioritization is different in that it would actually speed up some types of Internet traffic. So for the airline analogy to hold, the first-class section would have to detach from the rest of the plane in mid-flight and go supersonic. Planes don't tend to do that.
benton.org/headlines/how-airlines-explain-network-neutrality | Washington Post
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NON-NEUTRAL WIRELESS
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Nancy Scola]
Speaking at the GSMA Mobile 360 event in Atlanta, CTIA CEO Meredith Attwell Baker declared that mobile Internet service providers aren't backing away from the idea that key to surviving in the wireless marketplace is, increasingly, the digital bonuses they offer -- goodies that could be prohibited under strong network neutrality rules. "Given the clear, competitive import of network management to retain and attract subscribers," she said, "I will never understand why the government would intervene now, and even contemplate hamstringing disruptive competitors or reducing the competitive energy around delivering the best network experience." In the mobile realm, such goodies are known in the developing world as zero-rated apps. In the United States, they are offered under the banner of "sponsored data" and under names like T-Mobile's Music Freedom. Those apps raise questions about whether they favor some providers of digital at the expense of others, but Baker is hinting here at the idea that they'll only become more prevalent as cell phone service companies compete.
benton.org/headlines/mobile-industry-makes-pro-goodies-case-non-neutral-networks | Washington Post | Multichannel News
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UNIVERSAL SERVICE

USF REFORM
[SOURCE: telecompetitor, AUTHOR: Joan Engebretson]
Reforming how the universal service program is funded is critical at a time when a wide range of reforms have been made to how universal service funding is spent, said several telephone companies and telecommunications associations in comments filed with the House Commerce Committee. The comments were made in response to a white paper issued by the committee asking a range of questions about the Universal Service Fund that is governed by the Federal Communications Commission and funded by the telecommunications industry. Traditionally the USF was voice-focused but the FCC is in the process of transitioning the program into the broadband-focused Connect America Fund. Several commenters suggested expanding the services upon which USF fees are based. Those advocating expanding the universal service contribution base will face opposition, although the extent of that opposition may not be apparent from comments filed with Congress.
benton.org/headlines/telcos-universal-service-reform-contribution-base-must-be-addressed | telecompetitor
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CAF SPEED TARGET
[SOURCE: telecompetitor, AUTHOR: Gary Kim]
If the Federal Communications Commission gets its way, high speed Internet access might be defined as a minimum of between 10 Mbps to 25 Mbps. The definition matters for any number of reasons, not least of all that universal access funding, which now has shifted from voice services to Internet access services as part of the Connect America Fund, will use the FCC’s definition. Recipients of CAF funding would have to build access networks operating at the higher minimum speeds. The biggest impact arguably would be felt in rural areas, since most urban and suburban networks already offer standard speeds of 10 Mbps or faster.
benton.org/headlines/caf-speed-target-could-create-new-winners-and-losers | telecompetitor
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OWNERSHIP

COMCAST HAS COMPETITION
[SOURCE: ars technica, AUTHOR: Jon Brodkin]
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler has made it clear he thinks there isn’t enough broadband competition in America, but Comcast is trying to convince the FCC that it faces enough competition right now. Already the largest pay-TV and broadband company in the US, Comcast is seeking permission to buy Time Warner Cable. Comcast and Time Warner Cable don’t compete for customers in any city or town, despite being the nation’s two largest cable companies, which helps explain why US residents have so few viable options for cable and high-speed Internet service. But in response to merger-related questions from the FCC, a Comcast filing points to a broad range of competitors and says it’s easy to switch to a different provider (though a horde of angry customers might disagree). Comcast said it faces competition from municipal broadband networks, though the telecom industry has pushed state governments to pass laws that restrict municipal broadband growth. Comcast also described a competitive threat from phone companies, which are upgrading DSL to fiber and “appear well-positioned to offer highly competitive broadband speeds well into the future.” Additionally, “[c]able overbuilders, new entrants like Google fiber, municipal providers, fixed wireless providers, and satellite broadband providers also are competing vigorously,” Comcast wrote. “And well-capitalized and aggressive nationwide mobile broadband providers now offer services that provide speeds comparable to many of the fixed broadband services that consumers purchase.”
benton.org/headlines/comcast-fcc-we-already-face-enough-competition-so-let-us-buy-twc | Ars Technica
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PRIVACY/SECURITY

PASSWORD SYSTEM IS BROKEN
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Hayley Tsukayama]
The password system itself is broken. The system places too much demand on the memories and patience of people who aren't trained to think about computer security all day. Even when companies offer advanced options -- such as two-factor authentication, which sends people a second, onetime-use code to add to their log-in information -- many don't use it because it makes an already annoying process even more complicated. The point is not lost on technology companies, who are chipping away at methods to make it easier for users to sign into accounts by using their fingerprints, voices or faces, so that they won't have to memorize a million different passwords. Most of these options are centered on the smartphone, since that's increasingly the most common device people use. But as promising as some of these solutions are, they also carry their own problems.
benton.org/headlines/we-know-password-system-broken-so-whats-next | Washington Post
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LOBBYING

MUNICIPAL BROADBAND
[SOURCE: NetworkWorld, AUTHOR: Colin Neagle]
[Commentary] The Internet Association urged the Federal Communications Commission to intervene in state-level laws that seek to prohibit municipalities from deploying and maintaining their own broadband networks. The Internet Association is essentially a lobbying organization that says it is “dedicated to advancing public policy solutions to strengthen and protect internet freedom, foster innovation and economic growth and empower users.” It supports net neutrality, patent reforms that could eradicate patent trolls, and the protection of privacy of internet users, among many other causes in the technology industry. The group boasts a long list of very high-profile technology companies, including Google, Amazon, Yahoo, Reddit, and PayPal. But a Daily Beast report from August 2013 outed Google as a member of ALEC’s Communications and Technology Task Force, alongside several other tech companies, including Yahoo and Yelp. All three are also members of the Internet Association, whose stances on net neutrality and broadband are the polar opposite of ALEC's. After the Daily Beast article unveiled Google’s affiliation with ALEC, dozens of activist groups pointed out the paradox in a public letter calling for the company to leave the organization. Google's only response came in a reply to Ars Technica’s request for comment: "we aren't going to be commenting on this letter."
[Neagle manages NetworkWorld’s blogs]
benton.org/headlines/google-yahoo-fighting-both-sides-municipal-broadband-debate | NetworkWorld | The Hill
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STORIES FROM ABROAD

GOOGLE MUST IMPROVE SEARCH SETTLEMENT
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Tom Fairless]
Google must improve its proposal to settle European Union concerns over its search practices or face formal antitrust charges, the EU's competition chief Joaquin Almunia said. In a sometimes heated debate with European lawmakers, Almunia defended his agency's handling of its four-year-old investigation of Google, and insisted he hasn't been swayed by mounting political pressure. The commission asked Google at the beginning of September to improve its settlement proposal for an unprecedented fourth time after deciding that the previous offer, announced in February, didn't satisfy its concerns, Almunia said. If Google fails to deliver the necessary changes, "the logical next step is to move to a statement of objections," or formal charges against the company, Almunia said.
benton.org/headlines/google-must-improve-search-settlement-or-face-charges-eus-almunia-says | Wall Street Journal
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CHALLENGE GOOGLE
[SOURCE: Financial Times, AUTHOR: Evgeny Morozov]
[Commentary] The European Commission’s antitrust investigation of Google is a test of the continent’s ability to reverse the invisible conquest of its sovereignty. Much of the fault lies with the commission’s own unimaginative technology policy, for which an episode of Google-bashing is no substitute. If there is a problem with Google’s ambitions, the commission has yet to put its finger on it. That is because Europe has come under the spell of American neoliberalism, with its unashamed celebration of monopolies in the name of consumer welfare and market efficiency. It is time to recover the almost-forgotten language of politics, and treat users as citizens first and consumers second. The dangers are real. By coupling advertising with the pre-emptive possibilities of its serendipity engine, Google could turn citizens into automata, who entertain an illusion of free will while living in a world of options, nudges and suggestions that have all been generated by autonomous algorithms optimized for profit alone. Unless it rethinks its reliance on Silicon Valley, Europe risks being left behind – politically, technologically and economically. For the incoming European Commission this is an existential challenge. Punching Google might be fun and it probably has to be done. But that should be the beginning of the story, not the end.
[Morozov is the author of ‘To Save Everything, Click Here’]
benton.org/headlines/champion-european-innovation-challenge-google | Financial Times
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New Level of Smartphone Encryption Alarms Law Enforcement

Moves by Apple and Google to put some smartphone data out of the reach of police and the courts are raising alarms inside US law-enforcement agencies, current and former officials say.

Several officials in Washington said they were bracing for a confrontation with Silicon Valley on the issue, the latest fallout from the revelations by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden about government surveillance. The moves highlight the continuing challenge for law enforcement in responding to new technologies. Other innovations, such as texting, instant messaging and videogame chats, created hurdles to monitoring communication, though law-enforcement agencies in almost every instance eventually found ways to overcome them. But this time, two of the best-known US companies are advertising that their phone systems may be able to beat a court order, and putting the technology in the hands of tens of millions of people.

Tech’s surveillance hopes stopped in their tracks

Silicon Valley had high hopes for surveillance reform -- but that was before Congress headed for the midterm exits amid talk of increased global terrorist threats.

The Senate fled Washington without taking action on a bill to rein in the National Security Agency’s bulk data collection, a measure that topped the industry’s agenda after Edward Snowden’s leaks about the NSA’s expansive snooping programs. Tech giants like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft have pushed the Senate to act on the legislation, which they regard as far tougher on the spy agency than what previously passed the House.

Congress will have just a narrow window to tackle NSA reform when it returns after the midterm elections, and lawmakers like Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) have suggested hitting the brakes given new threats from the terrorist group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. And with immigration reform dead in Congress, tech has been pushing President Barack Obama to boost high-skilled labor programs through a series of promised executive orders, but it’s unclear what the White House can -- or will -- do on that front. Some industry players remain hopeful, but the bruised, battle-weary tech sector easily could end up 0-for-2.

Lawmakers warn in-flight calls could lead to fights

Dozens of lawmakers are warning that allowing people to talk on their cellphones on airplanes could lead to fights at 30,000 feet.

77 lawmakers warned the heads of the Departments of Transportation, Homeland Security, AND Justice and the Federal Communications Commission that the potential move to allow people to have in-flight phone conversations could lead to heated arguments among passengers that distract officials’ attention and make planes less safe. “Passengers making voice calls during flight could impact the ability of crewmembers -- flight attendants and pilots -- to perform their jobs, keep passengers safe and the cabin environment calm,” lawmakers wrote in a letter coordinated by Reps David McKinley (R-WV) and Dan Lipinski (D-IL). “Arguments in an aircraft cabin already start over mundane issues, like seat selection, reclining seats and overhead bin space, and the volume and pervasiveness of voice communications would only serve to exacerbate and escalate these disputes,” they added.

Google Must Improve Search Settlement or Face Charges, EU's Almunia Says

Google must improve its proposal to settle European Union concerns over its search practices or face formal antitrust charges, the EU's competition chief Joaquin Almunia said.

In a sometimes heated debate with European lawmakers, Almunia defended his agency's handling of its four-year-old investigation of Google, and insisted he hasn't been swayed by mounting political pressure. The commission asked Google at the beginning of September to improve its settlement proposal for an unprecedented fourth time after deciding that the previous offer, announced in February, didn't satisfy its concerns, Almunia said. If Google fails to deliver the necessary changes, "the logical next step is to move to a statement of objections," or formal charges against the company, Almunia said.

Champion European innovation to challenge Google

[Commentary] The European Commission’s antitrust investigation of Google is a test of the continent’s ability to reverse the invisible conquest of its sovereignty.

Much of the fault lies with the commission’s own unimaginative technology policy, for which an episode of Google-bashing is no substitute. If there is a problem with Google’s ambitions, the commission has yet to put its finger on it. That is because Europe has come under the spell of American neoliberalism, with its unashamed celebration of monopolies in the name of consumer welfare and market efficiency. It is time to recover the almost-forgotten language of politics, and treat users as citizens first and consumers second. The dangers are real. By coupling advertising with the pre-emptive possibilities of its serendipity engine, Google could turn citizens into automata, who entertain an illusion of free will while living in a world of options, nudges and suggestions that have all been generated by autonomous algorithms optimized for profit alone.

Unless it rethinks its reliance on Silicon Valley, Europe risks being left behind – politically, technologically and economically. For the incoming European Commission this is an existential challenge. Punching Google might be fun and it probably has to be done. But that should be the beginning of the story, not the end.

[Morozov is the author of ‘To Save Everything, Click Here’]

Brookings
September 23, 2014
1:30 PM - 3:30 PM EDT
http://www.brookings.edu/events/2014/09/23-new-directions-for-public-sec...

On September 23, Economic Studies at Brookings will host an event to release three papers suggesting ways to foster more efficient federal spectrum use. The event will begin with keynote addresses by White House Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Jason Furman, and White House Deputy Chief Technology Officer for Telecommunications at the Office of Science and Technology Policy, Tom Power. Presenters and panelists will take questions from the audience.



Today's Quote 09.22.2014

“The bottom line is that the FCC may impose new wireless rules or demand ISP’s increase broadband speeds but, for the purposes of net neutrality, none of that matters without Title II.”

- Jeff John Roberts, GigaOm