Friday, January 26, 2024
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The Impact and Importance of the Affordable Connectivity Program
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N.S.A. Buys Americans’ Internet Data Without Warrants
Apple Overhauls App Store in Europe, in Response to New Digital Law
Los Angeles Cracks Down On 'Digital Discrimination' By Internet Service Providers
Digital Equity/Digital Discrimination
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Florida lawmakers move to bar kids from social media in latest statehouse push | Washington Post
Introducing Stricter Message Settings for Teens on Instagram and Facebook | Meta
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Digital Equity
The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is helping close the digital divide in America by supporting internet access for over 22 million households. Based on a national survey of ACP Participants conducted by Benenson Strategy Group in collaboration with Comcast, the program is helping people realize the full benefits of the internet—telehealth access, educational resources, increased economic mobility, and improved social connections. The survey found that people are also concerned about what will happen if the program no longer exists. Across demographics—including military families, seniors, rural Americans, and parents—there is widespread concern that loss of the ACP would mean job losses and losing access to health care. If they lose ACP eligibility:
- 65% of ACP Participants fear losing their job or their household’s primary source of income.
- 75% of ACP Participants fear losing access to important healthcare services, like online appointments or prescription medicine refills.
- 81% of ACP parents worry about their children falling behind in school.
Our world increasingly operates online, and the Internet has forever changed our way of life. Today, everything—from working remotely and doing homework, to earning a degree or certificate, learning digital skills, applying for jobs, and communicating with your doctor—happens on the Internet. The impact is tremendous, and today more than 22 million Americans are online with the support of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP). Unfortunately, funding for the ACP may run out as soon as April—putting so much progress at risk. We agree with the bipartisan group of 174 mayors—representing cities from Scranton (PA) and Jackson (MS) to Beaverton (OR) and Oakland (CA)—who wrote to Congress highlighting the impact of the ACP and the urgent need to renew funding for the program. A new study by the Benenson Strategy Group illustrates how impactful the ACP has been for participating individuals and families. The study found that the program benefitted millions of households and may be the greatest advance in connecting lower-income families since our own Internet Essentials program was launched more than ten years ago. There’s a lot more work to do to enroll others, but as the Benenson research establishes, it’s well worth the investment.
The federal government has spent $12.82 billion in the last two years helping low-income households pay for internet service. Almost a quarter of it has gone to one company. Charter Communications received $3.01 billion through the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), a larger slice than any of its competitors. Charter’s use of the program has come to the attention of regulators, who are examining some of its practices. At least two aspects of Charter’s approach to the ACP set it apart from its competitors. Charter pushed to sign up not only new customers for the government-subsidized plans, but also many of its existing subscribers. Existing subscribers who meet the qualifications are eligible for the program, and by law providers must promote it in their service area and tell customers about it when they renew a subscription, although some critics question if this is consistent with the stated goals of the ACP. Another distinctive piece of Charter’s strategy is the way it verifies customers’ eligibility. Many companies use the government-provided “National Verifier,” but they can also use their own process. Charter has primarily used an in-house method. In May 2023, the Federal Communications Commission sent a public letter to Charter asking the company to to double-check customers’ eligibility using the National Verifier.
The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is in grave danger. According to estimates from the Federal Communications Commission, the program will run out of money in April. A wave of sudden disconnects associated with the program’s end could hit ISPs hard. But just how much exposure do they have? And do they have any plans in place to keep vulnerable customers connected? We took the subscriber question straight to the big guns and asked what plans they have for keeping subscribers connected in a post-ACP world. Here’s what they told us (and what we could dig up).
- Altice USA: “We are closely monitoring for updates and guidance on the future of the program and will keep our customers informed on how they can stay connected to their Optimum services as we continue to provide low-cost options to meet the needs of all our customers.”
- AT&T: CEO John Stankey said, "It's unfortunate we're at this moment" and advocated for regulatory reform of the various subsidy programs. A spokesperson declined to provide further detail about its ACP subscriber count.
- Brightspeed: Like its peers, Brightspeed kept mum about its subscriber figures but a representative confirmed it does indeed "have customers who depend on the Affordable Connectivity Program subsidy to afford internet connectivity." It advocated for an extension of the program.
- Charter Communications: Charter has not disclosed its exact number of ACP subscribers but is one of the largest beneficiaries of the program. New Street Research estimated the operator has between 4.1 million and 4.8 million subscribers participating in the ACP.
- Consolidated Communications: Consolidated declined to disclose its ACP subscriber count but a representative told said, "The impact of ACP being discontinued will be limited on our business."
- Cox Communications: A Cox representative said the company has less than 1 million ACP subscribers. In terms of what happens if the ACP ends, most of those currently receiving the subsidy “are eligible for our other digital equity programs that have existed for years.”
- Lumen: Lumen declined to provide an exact subscriber figure but stated ACP subscribers account for less than 1% of its consumer broadband business.
- Mediacom: Mediacom has less than 73,000 households enrolled in the ACP.
- Verizon: Verizon CFO Tony Skiadas said the operator’s ACP exposure is primarily in its prepaid mobile business, where it has approximately 1.2 million subscribers receiving the benefit. It’s exposure to subsidy participants in its post-paid mobile and Fios fiber internet businesses is “minimal,” he said.
Charter understands better than most the struggles people face in getting and staying connected: it’s our job and these customers are our family, friends, and neighbors. When a global pandemic pushed so much of everyday life online, the gap between those with and without connectivity was exposed, and many realized for the first time the impossible situation faced by families who either didn’t have internet service available or could not afford service. We knew Charter had a unique and outsized opportunity to be part of the solution, including through participation in some government support programs:
- Increasing Internet Availability: Charter is investing more than $4 billion in private funding alongside government support in our rural construction initiative, which is bringing gigabit-speed broadband to more than a million currently unserved or underserved mostly rural locations.
- Increasing Internet Affordability: harter actively promoted the Emergency Broadband Benefit and Affordable Connectivity Programs (ACP), including in our stores, through news and social media, on our website, and through direct mail to ensure we reach unconnected families in need. Charter’s significant participation in these programs has helped millions of families in need gain and keep access to reliable, high-speed in-home internet service.
When a bipartisan congress created the ACP, they made it available to all low-income families. In other words, the law doesn’t restrict the ACP benefit to “new users” of the internet, in fact, it requires the opposite. The same bipartisan Congress chose to make the ACP available to households that qualify “for a participating provider’s existing low-income program” (called an “alternative verification process”) – so long as they had been in place when the providers’ own funds were at stake. Lawmakers should be proud of the programs they have supported and the difference they’ve already helped make – individual lives changed, rural towns given new opportunities to compete, and entire communities reaping the rewards. Few things matter more than continuing this progress connecting the millions of Americans who still aren’t online and ensuring that high-speed internet remains within reach for every family in America, regardless of income.
Prince George’s County Memorial Library System received a $500,000 Affordable Connectivity Outreach Grant from the Federal Communications Commission in March 2023 to find and connect those living in eligible households with the $30 monthly discount available to home broadband. Libraries in New Jersey, Nashville, and New York City likewise received the outreach grant. After months of hiring, developing their outreach program, and identifying eligible individuals, outreach grantees are hitting their stride. But instead of continuing that momentum into the new year, PGCMLS and other outreach grant recipients are being asked, “Why enroll in a program that may only last a few more months?” The problem, of course, is that funding for the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) itself will run out in a matter of months – May at the latest. Congress knows this. The media know this. The entities receiving Outreach Grant funding know this. And the people who could benefit from the ACP know this. If Congress lets this program expire, it’s deliberately deciding to imperil the best shot we have at closing the digital divide and truly connecting everyone to broadband. Now is the time for Congress to demonstrate a commitment to equal access and extend funding for the ACP. Let’s keep Americans connected to digital and economic opportunity.
[Emily Drabinski is the President of the American Library Association]
In June 2023, President Joe Biden announced how $42 billion in Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment funding will be allocated across the US and its territories to bring 100% broadband access to nearly 60 million unserved or underserved Americans within five years. That goal, and the billions of dollars and new tools available, will give policymakers, communities, and industry stakeholders a “once-in-a-generation” opportunity to bridge the digital divide. However, finances are finite and currently trending in a budget-busting “fiber-first” direction. Fiber is great where attainable, but this approach overlooks the important realities of providing reliable broadband to underserved areas at scale, and fiber alone would require far more funding than what is currently available. Thanks to recent technological advancements, there are new tools available that efficiently and cost-effectively reach those forgotten by “fiber-first” thinking. Next-generation fixed wireless access is a unique technology category that overcomes long-battled challenges of the wireless broadband industry. For the first time ever, we have what it takes to achieve 100% coverage with readily available funds, and in timelines measured in weeks and months rather than multiple years. With billions of dollars at stake, and all of the technological means to get this right, the time is now to bridge the digital divide for every American family.
[Carl Guardino serves as the vice president of government affairs and public policy at Tarana]
The availability of high-speed internet has become one of the driving factors in attracting new residents to settle in the Monadnock region, giving some towns a competitive advantage for people who work or attend school remotely. Rebecca Morse, broker for RE/MAX Town Square in New Ipswich, said towns with lower internet services are generally less desirable, though not entirely off the table to most buyers, unless they have specific work-from-home needs. In particular, it was a bigger issue pre-COVID, whereas in the past few years, towns such as Mason, Rindge and Jaffrey have all rolled out town-wide broadband projects, bringing fiber internet capability to every home in the area. Brenna Cove, who specializes in southern New Hampshire and the Monadnock region, said she has used broadband as a marketing tool with clients. Cove said broadband is particularly important in smaller Monadnock region towns, which lose power frequently due to weather events and heavy tree cover. “The towns that have broadband, it really helps to be able to tell people, ‘Don’t worry, it’s not an issue,’” Cove said. “It might not necessarily be a deal-breaker, ... but it definitely helps people to know they don’t have to worry about communications."
The US Chamber of Commerce is asking a federal appeals court to vacate the Federal Communications Commission’s recent digital discrimination order. As mandated by the Infrastructure, Investment and Jobs Act, the commission adopted rules in November 2023 to prevent gaps in broadband access based on race, income level, and other demographic characteristics – known as digital discrimination. The rules take up a “disparate impact” standard for identifying that discrimination, meaning broadband providers could be in violation even if they are not intentionally withholding adequate internet from a protected group. The Chamber of Commerce, along with two Texas business associations, filed a short petition for review with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on January 19, asking judges to vacate the digital discrimination rules on the grounds they are “arbitrary, capricious,” and “in excess of the Commission’s statutory authority” under the infrastructure law. While its filing last week was brief, the Chamber of Commerce and other industry groups have expanded on their position in comments throughout the FCC’s rulemaking process. In June 2022 the group pushed for a “disparate intent” standard for discrimination, which would only prevent willfully discriminatory conduct, arguing a disparate impact standard would be broader than Congress intended.
There will soon be a new way for Los Angeles residents to submit a complaint if they feel they've been discriminated against by internet companies. The Los Angeles City Council unanimously approved an ordinance to hold internet providers accountable for offering slower, costlier broadband in low-income communities. While there’s no “specific timeline,” Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson said the Civil, Human Rights and Equity Department will look at the city’s existing anti-discrimination laws and create a new policy for investigating complaints. It will also develop a public information program so that people know where to go for help, and create a process for forwarding claims to the Federal Communications Commission. The city will also be tasked with analyzing complaints, including demographic information, and will report annually on any potential trends. Advocates are celebrating the “historic action” and say it makes L.A. the first city in the nation to directly address digital discrimination.
Since Apple introduced the App Store in 2008, it has tightly controlled the apps and services allowed on iPhones and iPads, giving the company an iron grip on one of the digital economy’s most valuable storefronts. Now Apple is weakening its hold on the store, in one of the most consequential signs to date of how new European regulations are changing consumer technology. To comply with a European Union competition law taking effect on March 7, Apple announced major changes to the App Store and other services for consumers in Europe. Users of iPhones and iPads in the 27-nation bloc will, for the first time, be able to use alternative app stores to download games, productivity tools, and other apps. Banks and shopping services can offer competing payment methods inside their apps. People who buy new iPhones in the future will also see a new menu for downloading alternative browsers to Apple’s Safari, such as Chrome and Firefox. Apple said it would maintain some oversight of new marketplaces and apps working outside its App Store, but warned that the new E.U. policies would give hackers and criminals a new path to distribute malware and defraud customers. The company said it had created a system to monitor all iOS apps, approve alternative app stores and track alternative payment systems. Apple said developers would also be charged a fee of 50 euro cents for every download of their app after it has been downloaded one million times or more within a 12-month period, regardless of whether it was through the App Store or an alternative. This will also apply to free apps, but not apps distributed by government, education and nonprofit organizations. The new rules could dent Apple’s finances.
The Arizona Commerce Authority's draft Digital Equity Plan, released in January 2024, represents the culmination of a year-long, statewide collaborative effort, marked by attentive listening to the voices and feedback of communities across the state. The plan is rooted in robust data collection and crafted to be responsive to the distinct needs of each region and covered population, ensuring that every individual and community is not only represented, but centered. Arizona's draft Digital Equity Plan is open for public comment until February 1, 2024.
Illinois is home to over 12.7 million individuals in approximately 4.9 million families who speak over 20 languages. These families live in 102 counties that range from the dense urban areas found in Cook, DuPage, and Lake counties to the rural areas in Pope and Stark counties; from Illinois’ manufacturing centers like the Quad Cities, Rockford, and Greater Peoria regions to the farmlands of Gallatin, White, and Sangamon counties. Common to all of these communities and geographies is the way they stay connected to each other and to the broader global community; how they access healthcare, education, and other essential services; and, increasingly, how they sustain their livelihoods within the digital economy: by using high-speed internet in our homes and community anchor institutions. The Illinois Office of Broadband now seeks public comment on the draft Illinois State Digital Equity Plan. The goal of the draft Illinois State Digital Equity Plan is to enable populations with the education and tools necessary to fully leverage digital assets that are powered by reliable, high-speed internet, so that all Illinoisians can fully participate in the digital economy and the digital ecosystem. The Office of Broadband is accepting feedback on the draft plan through COB on January 31, 2024.
In Fiscal Year 2023, the Idaho Office of Broadband and Idaho Broadband Advisory Board (IBAB) continued its mission of improving Broadband access across Idaho. The Office of Broadband, the department hired a new State Broadband Program Manager to oversee the office — Ramón S. Hobdey-Sánchez. The Office of Broadband also co-hosted a national conference with the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), awarded broadband funds through IBAB and continued work on educating stakeholders and the general public on upcoming broadband funding opportunities. In advance of the 2023 Legislative Session, the office worked with stakeholders and internet service providers to identify broadband infrastructure needs in Idaho communities statewide, which played a key role in the office’s ability to secure legislative spending authority for the Capital Projects Fund (CPF) of $125 million. To end the fiscal year on a high note, NTIA announced Idaho will receive $583 million in BEAD funding to bring affordable, reliable, high-speed internet to Idahoans across the State.
A program that helped millions of households across the country — and 2.8 million in California — afford internet access is ending, without additional funding from Congress. The Affordable Connectivity Program began in 2021 under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. California received about $1.3 billion in funding through the program that helped about 1-in-5 households in the state. The Federal Communications Commission said that current funding is projected to run out in April and households will receive benefits through the end of the month. The program needs a $6 billion infusion to extend the program through 2024. When funds run out, households won’t get the discounts. A bipartisan group of six lawmakers — including Sens Peter Welch (D-VT) and JD Vance (R-OH) — called for additional funding through the Affordable Connectivity Program Extension Act, which could extend the program through the end of the year.
The Sanborn Map Company is one of a number of companies offering tools for states to help them prepare for the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) program. Launched in 2023, Sanborn’s Broadband Navigator is a tool that aims to simplify the BEAD challenge process. Eligible entities can use the portal to look up an address, view broadband coverage details, take a speed test and submit evidence to challenge the broadband coverage determination. Sanborn has had experience working with broadband data and developing web-based broadband mapping applications for over a decade: from 2009 to 2014, Sanborn worked with states to help them collect and map broadband data as part of the NTIA’s $293 million State Broadband Initiative. It’s also assisted states in submitting challenges for the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC’s) national broadband map. Now, Sanborn’s working with more than a dozen states “to support their National Telecommunications and Information Administration program compliance and broadband infrastructure build.”
The US has gained an additional 47 municipal broadband networks since January 2021, bringing the total to nearly 450. But as municipal and public networks gain in popularity, efforts to squash them are growing as well. Among the latest moves against public broadband includes proposed legislation circulating in the state of Kentucky that could see one municipality forced to sell its fiber network. The legislation reportedly being proposed by State Senator Gex Williams, a Republican, would require the Frankfort Plant Board (FPB) to sell or transfer its telecommunications business to a private entity. The issue caught the attention of the American Association for Public Broadband (AAPB), led by Gigi Sohn, who called the proposed legislation "a solution in search of a problem." AAPB has also been leading the charge against other emerging efforts to challenge municipal projects. In 2023, an organization called the Domestic Policy Caucus (DPC) launched a new campaign against public broadband efforts: NoGovInternet.com, which primarily takes aim at Utah's Utopia Fiber. DPC is also supporting a campaign called Mass Priorities, which is rallying against municipal projects in Massachusetts.
Over the past year America’s spectrum policy faced an unprecedented set of challenges that jeopardize America’s 5G leadership and Americans’ ability to reap all of the economic and geopolitical benefits of a dynamic mobile broadband network and the ecosystems it supports. To overcome those challenges, 2024 must be a year of action for US policymakers if we are to maintain our global competitiveness, meet rapidly increasing consumer demand, and drive the innovation and growth we all want in the United States. Specifically, America’s wireless future hinges on:
- Congress restoring FCC auction authority with a forward-looking and comprehensive pipeline of future auctions for 5G and beyond.
- NTIA publishing a robust National Spectrum Strategy Implementation Plan detailing clear targets for future full-power auctions, an expedited two-year study schedule, and clarification that NTIA will lead and manage the new studies.
- The US resolving the current spectrum imbalance and quickly providing licensed commercial access to the lower 3 GHz band, correcting the faulty assumptions and incomplete scope of the prior government study.
- The US reasserting its lead on the global stage in driving 5G-friendly access to the 7/8 GHz band to help close our nation’s widening deficit of licensed spectrum compared to other countries, create economies of scale with upper 6 GHz licensed wireless deployments around the world, and ensure that the US leads in wireless technologies.
The United States’ leadership in spectrum policy, 5G and reaping the economic benefits of the most advanced mobile networks are in jeopardy and have to get back on track, CTIA’s president and CEO says in a strongly worded new blog post. The biggest symptom of the problem? The fact that the Federal Communications Commission’s auction authority has still not yet been renewed by Congress, which has meant that no new auctions can be held and which also impacted previous auctions, including T-Mobile US’ ability to access the slew of 2.5 GHz licenses that it won in 2022. CEO Meredith Attwell Baker said that “America’s wireless future hinges on” four things:
- Reestablishing the FCC’s auction authority along with a “forward-looking and comprehensive pipeline of future auctions.”
- An implementation plan for the previously established National Spectrum Strategy with “clear targets for future full-power auctions, an expedited two-year study schedule, and clarification that NTIA will lead and manage the new studies.”
- The federal government quickly providing licensed commercial access to the lower 3 GHz band.
- Focusing efforts on the upper midband at 7-8 GHz.
The National Security Agency buys certain logs related to Americans’ domestic internet activities from commercial data brokers, according to an unclassified letter by the agency. The letter offered few details about the nature of the data other than to stress that it did not include the content of internet communications. Still, the revelation is the latest disclosure to bring to the fore a legal gray zone: Intelligence and law enforcement agencies sometimes purchase potentially sensitive and revealing domestic data from brokers that would require a court order to acquire directly. In a letter to the director of national intelligence, Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) argued that “internet metadata” — logs showing when two computers have communicated, but not the content of any message — “can be equally sensitive” as the location data the Federal Trade Commission is targeting. He urged intelligence agencies to stop buying internet data about Americans if it was not collected under the standard the FTC has laid out for location records.
The Federal Communications Commission updated its rules, and proposed additional updates, to improve communications network reliability, resiliency, and transparency during disasters and outages. The rule changes will increase participation in, and enhance the use of, the FCC’s Disaster Information Reporting System (DIRS), in which service providers report on their operational status during emergencies. Certain types of communications providers are required to report network outages to the FCC’s Network Outage Reporting System (NORS) on an ongoing basis. To address gaps in NORS, the FCC adopted rules that:
- Require cable communications, wireline, wireless, and interconnected Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) providers to report daily infrastructure status information when DIRS is activated for geographic areas in which they provide service.
- Suspend NORS reporting obligations when providers are required to report in DIRS during a disaster, so they are not obligated to report twice.
- Require DIRS filers to provide a single, final summary DIRS report to the Commission within 24 hours of the deactivation of DIRS
The Federal Communications Commission adopted rules to more precisely route wireless 911 calls and Real-Time Texts (RTT) to 911 call centers, which can result in faster response times during emergencies and ultimately save lives. Wireless 911 calls have historically been routed to 911 call centers based on the location of the cell tower that handles the call. But in some cases, the nearest cell tower may be in a neighboring jurisdiction. In these cases, the call may be routed to a 911 call center in that neighboring jurisdiction, not the call center that serves the caller’s location. These wireless 911 calls must then be re-routed to the proper 911 call center, which can waste valuable time and resources during emergencies. The new rules will require wireless carriers to implement location based routing nationwide for wireless calls and RTT communications to 911 call centers. Using this precise location information to route 911 calls will result in millions more wireless 911 callers reaching emergency responders without the need for transfer or delay.
The Federal Trade Commission announced that it issued orders to five companies requiring them to provide information regarding recent investments and partnerships involving generative AI companies and major cloud service providers. The agency’s 6(b) inquiry will scrutinize corporate partnerships and investments with AI providers to build a better internal understanding of these relationships and their impact on the competitive landscape. The compulsory orders were sent to Alphabet, Inc., Amazon.com, Inc., Anthropic PBC, Microsoft Corp., and OpenAI, Inc. The FTC is seeking information specifically related to:
- Information regarding a specific investment or partnership, including agreements and the strategic rationale of an investment/partnership.
- The practical implications of a specific partnership or investment, including decisions around new product releases, governance or oversight rights, and the topic of regular meetings.
- Analysis of the transactions’ competitive impact, including information related to market share, competition, competitors, markets, potential for sales growth, or expansion into product or geographic markets.
- Competition for AI inputs and resources, including the competitive dynamics regarding key products and services needed for generative AI.
- Information provided to any other government entity, including foreign government entities, in connection with any investigation, request for information, or other inquiry related to these topics.
The Federal Communications Commission adopted an Order on Reconsideration addressing petitions regarding the Commission’s orbital debris mitigation rules. One of the biggest threats to new space-based innovation and services is abandoned space junk that can collide with the satellites we rely on. The Order on Reconsideration provides clarity and guidance to satellite operators on compliance with orbital debris mitigation policies adopted in 2020. Among the clarifications provided by the Commission, the Order addresses questions related to satellite maneuverability disclosure requirements and the use of “free-flying” deployment devices. Additionally, the Order provides guidance for satellite operators on methods for conducting a re-contact risk analysis, and clarifies the applicability of the 0.99 disposal reliability goal for large satellite systems. This action is a further step in the Commission’s efforts to preserve the space environment for continued investment, deployment and innovation in space-based services.
On January 25, the Commission will convene its first open meeting of the new year. We already have plans to build on this forward momentum for 2024. Here’s what’s on the agenda for our February open meeting.
- We’re making emergency alerts more accessible. The Commission will consider of proposal to facilitate multilingual alerting so more viewers and listeners will receive public safety alerts in the language that corresponds with the content they are consuming. We will also seek comment on making alerts accessible for users of American Sign Language.
- We’re empowering consumers to block robocalls and robotexts. In three weeks, we will consider new rules to strengthen the ability of consumers to decide which robocalls and robotexts they wish to receive. We will also be voting on a proposal to close loopholes that allow wireless providers to make robocalls and robotexts without the ability for the subscriber to opt out.
- We’re unleashing space-based innovation. More than 100 companies have already undertaken projects or research to pursue new space-based activities like satellite refueling, inspecting and repairing in-orbit spacecraft, and capturing and removing debris. The Commission will vote on a proposal to create a new framework for licensing space stations engaged in these types of in-space servicing, assembly, and manufacturing—or “ISAM.”
- We’re expanding opportunities for wireless microphone users. New wireless microphone technologies use spectrum more efficiently, meaning more microphones can used without allocating more airwaves. The Commission will vote to allow this new wireless microphone system to operate on a licensed or unlicensed basis, while preserving the existing spectrum rights of others that share those frequencies.
- We will consider an adjudicatory matter from our Media Bureau.
- We will also consider an item from our Enforcement Bureau.
Federal Communications Commissioner Anna Gomez announced the permanent appointment of several individuals who will serve her office.
- Deena Shetler will serve as Chief of Staff and advise Commissioner Gomez on media and international matters. Deena joined Commissioner Gomez’s staff from the Office of Chairwoman Rosenworcel, where she served as Deputy Chief of Staff for Administration.
- Edyael Casaperalta will serve as Legal Advisor for Wireless, Public Safety and Consumer Protection. Edyael joined Commissioner Gomez’s staff from the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, where she served as Chief of Staff.
- Hayley Steffen will serve as Legal Advisor for Wireline and Space. Hayley joined Commissioner Gomez’s office from the Wireline Competition Bureau, where she served as Legal Advisor to the Bureau Chief.
- Harsha Mudaliar will serve as Policy Advisor, focusing on media and technology issues. She joined Commissioner Gomez’s office from the Senate Commerce Committee where she served as a Research Assistant.
- Anna Holland will serve as Executive Assistant in Commissioner Gomez’s office. She began her career at the FCC as Staff Assistant in the Office of Chairman Wheeler before moving to her most recent role as Staff Assistant to two successive Bureau Chiefs of the Wireline Competition Bureau.
Benton (www.benton.org) provides the only free, reliable, and non-partisan daily digest that curates and distributes news related to universal broadband, while connecting communications, democracy, and public interest issues. Posted Monday through Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments, policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are factually accurate, their sometimes informal tone may not always represent the tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang (headlines AT benton DOT org), Grace Tepper (grace AT benton DOT org), and Zoe Walker (zwalker AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.
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