Ars Technica
AT&T drops 5G ads after losing appeal but keeps using "5GE" network indicator (Ars Technica)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Thu, 05/21/2020 - 12:14FCC's Ajit Pai doubts Elon Musk’s SpaceX broadband-latency claims
While traditional satellite broadband generally suffers from latency of about 600ms, Elon Musk says that SpaceX's Starlink will offer "latency below 20 milliseconds, so somebody could play a fast-response video game at a competitive level." The Federal Communications Commission is not convinced that Starlink broadband network will be able to deliver the low latencies promised.
Members of Congress can vote from home for now—but not by using tech (Ars Technica)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Mon, 05/18/2020 - 17:13Corkscrew light promises higher optical-communication data rates (Ars Technica)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 05/18/2020 - 11:47Limits on FBI access to search histories fails by one Senate vote
An effort to protect Americans' browsing and search histories from warrantless government surveillance failed by a single vote in the Senate on May 13. The privacy measure, sponsored by Sens Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Steve Daines (R-MT) got 59 votes, one vote fewer than was needed to overcome a filibuster. The vote was over a section of federal surveillance law that was originally part of the USA Patriot Act in 2001. That provision, known as Section 215, gave the FBI the power to obtain "any tangible thing," including "books, records, papers, documents, and other items," without a warrant.
Verizon’s nationwide 5G will only be a “small” upgrade over 4G at first
Verizon Communications CEO Hans Vestberg said that most 5G mobile users will see a "small" upgrade at first, and he stressed the continued relevance of 4G. Vestberg reiterated previous Verizon statements that the biggest improvements will come on millimeter-wave spectrum in the most densely populated and trafficked areas. But millimeter-wave frequencies don't travel as far as low- and mid-band radio waves and are easily blocked by walls and other obstacles, making them unsuitable for nationwide coverage.
Shuttered restaurants, bars, hotels speed up TV cord-cutting even more (Ars Technica)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Mon, 05/11/2020 - 15:14CenturyLink still hasn’t met 2019 FCC deadline, now faces pandemic roadblocks
CenturyLink's slow broadband deployment, already a problem before the pandemic, has gotten even slower as the public health crisis causes cities and towns to halt construction. Since 2015, CenturyLink has received $505.7 million each year from the US government's Connect America Fund to deploy Internet service to nearly 1.2 million homes and businesses in 33 states. CenturyLink was required to complete 80 percent of that deployment by the end of 2019 but recently told the Federal Communications Commission that it did not meet the end-of-2019 deadline in 23 of the 33 states.
Frontier, amid bankruptcy, is suspected of lying about broadband expansion
Small Internet providers have asked for a government investigation into Frontier Communications' claim that it recently deployed broadband to nearly 17,000 census blocks, saying the expansion seems unlikely given Frontier's bankruptcy and its historical failure to upgrade networks in rural areas. NTCA–The Rural Broadband Association, which represents about 850 small ISPs, is skeptical of Frontier's reported deployment.