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Can the FCC Offer Up Some Real Reform?

Source: gigaom.com

Last week, when the FCC published an order aimed at halting the collection of and reporting on the quality of telephone service on a nationwide basis, we were pretty disappointed, as it came off like the agency was just throwing in the towel on real regulation and reform. Since one of the reasons behind the FCC decision is that the data is available at state utility commissions, I surfed and called around to the commissions at the five most populous states to see how difficult it is to compile and compare quality of service data.

My conclusion? It’s no picnic. Beginning with my home state of Texas, it took a phone call to get a basic report faxed over (they can’t email it). The report offers the total complaints registered against telecommunications companies vs. those lodged against electrical companies and lists the top offenders in each category. More details require a Freedom of Information Act request and a wait of up to 10 business days. California required a phone call and some back and forth to get some information, which includes data on the number of repairs and the amount of time a customer waits for refunds. A week later, I’m still waiting to hear back from the commission in New York.

Illinois publishes its quarterly quality reports on its web site, and tracks information ranging from length of time services were out and whether credits were issued for no service to the amount of time it took to get an operator on the line. Florida also published the reports on its web site, but the most recent one for AT&T (the company I was trying to track) is from 2007. Florida tracks a lot of stuff (their reports are about 24 pages compared to one in other states) from the timeliness of repairs and to how long it takes to get a number listed in directory assistance.

So compiling and comparing these reports to get a measure of how network quality and customer service complaints are settled is not all that easy and may not even be doable, since the information might be old and may not match across all states. At the least, it would at least take multiple FOIA requests and weeks rather than days. My research covered five states where about 36 percent of the population lives, but an apples-to-apples comparison on a nationwide basis seems to be impossible.

Another FCC objection to collecting this data is that it only covers access lines, the wireline telephone service rapidly going out of style in many households. I agree with the FCC that this data is bordering on obsolete, but instead of ditching it, the federal government should really expand the regulatory oversight of other voice services, from wireless to cable VoIP.

The difference between regulation of various broadband delivered services from video to voice should be eliminated, and it should be done at the federal level. Cable companies and telecommunications firms should not be held to different standards when it comes to reporting quality data, getting local franchise agreements for deploying television services or even requirements to serve rural areas. There will be plenty of fights over which questions to ask given how different the cable and telco networks are, but at the end of the day both types of companies are offering video, voice and data over broadband. They should play by the same rules.

Published on September 11th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , ,

FCC’s Comcast Ruling Isn’t as Good as it Sounds

Source: www.voip-news.com

The FCC’s recent ruling in the Comcast case (Comcast blocked traffic of BitTorrent’s file sharing service) might not be as great a windfall as some are making it out to be. In fact, the FCC”s treatment of the case — which is arguably a figurative slap on the wrist — could have made things worse.

According to a recent VoIP News article:

But even though the FCC ruled that Comcast was deliberately deceiving users by blocking BitTorrent traffic, it didn’t fine or otherwise penalize the cable ISP. Instead, it merely ordered Comcast to take three steps within 30 days. First, Comcast must disclose what the FCC called its discriminatory network-management practices. Second, the company will submit a plan describing how it will stop such practices by the end of the year. Third, Comcast will disclose to both customers and the FCC the network-management practices that would replace its discriminatory practices. If Comcast doesn’t take all three steps, the FCC warned, “interim injunctive relief” will automatically take place.

Read it here.

Published on August 7th, 2008 under , , , ,

FCC Rules Against a Baby Bell

Source: gigaom.com

FCC Rules Against a Baby Bell

Not only did the FCC decide on Friday to berate Comcast for messing with P2P traffic, but apparently it showed no love to Qwest, either, denying Qwest’s request for forbearance in four cities. Qwest had sought the right to stop charging competitive telecommunications carriers wholesale rates for access to its network in Phoenix, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Denver and Seattle, saying the area was now competitive. Kevin Martin, chairman of the FCC and the carrier’s biggest fan, disagreed. Maybe he’s tired of being the industry’s lapdog.

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Published on July 28th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

FCC Says Comcast Broke Rules

Source: www.voip-news.com

The FCC doesn’t like Comcast’s past behavior. Slowing down their traffic to discourage VoIP? That one was a big — huge — no no. Seriously.

And now, they are talking about it in the open.

According to PC Mag:

Martin announced at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) that the agency would investigate Comcast after an AP article accused the provider of blocking access to file-sharing applications.

That investigation found that Comcast is “broadly and arbitrarily” blocking certain applications like BitTorrent, which in turn, denies “subscriber access to the legal Internet content of their choice,” according to the FCC source.

Published on July 12th, 2008 under , , ,

700MHz Wireless Spectrum Auction Is Over.

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

FCC Chairman over a conference call mentioned that 700MHz Spectrum with open access bids totaling 19.6 Billion Dollars, higher than all all the auctions that it held in last 15 years. Chairman Kevin Martin said the 700MHz auction was the most successful auction the agency has ever conducted, raising more money than all previous auctions put together, excluding the Advanced Wireless Services auction in 2006.
Main focus in this auction was the clause Open Access on the C Block. The open-access requirement is significant because today, U.S. wireless operators like Verizon(most restrictive) have tight control over which devices can be used on their networks and which applications can be used on those handsets. Google and other companies, such as Skype, have complained that this is too restrictive. It is also the reason that Google entered into bidding. The C block have garnered a 4.75 Billion bid (Google said it will bid up to 4.6Billion) but But the D block, set aside to build a nationwide public-safety network, did not meet its reserve price, it only received 472 million offer and never reached the 1.3 Billion Price.
FCC Plans to hold another auction for the D block in the near future.
The identities of the auction bidders are still a secret. To prevent anti-competitive behavior, the FCC kept the bidding anonymous. Martin said the names of the auction winners would not be revealed until the commission voted on separating the D block from the rest of the auction. Since the FCC won’t be able to get this item on its agenda for at least three weeks, the names of the winners won’t likely be revealed until April.
Read a complete report at News.com

Published on March 19th, 2008 under , ,

Comcast and the FCC’s Kevin Martin Aren’t Friends

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

A report based on a talk at Stanford University by FCC Chairman Kevin Martin makes me think that the communications czar is waking up to the antics of Comcast.

In many ways Comcast is a company that moves forward at every turn, yet in others they step on their you know what as they walk down JFK Blvd in Philadelphia where their glistening new office is. They have brains, savvy, and very solid leadership, yet their understanding of "customer relations" is lacking, not because their PR people are incapable. They’re not, I actually think they’re PR folks are very talented, but they forever get in trouble because the campany’s leadership believe that doing things that are only good for Comcast is the only way to do things.

Their inability to come off good through any controversy is rather consistent. Now Chairman Martin is of the same mind when it comes to an issue. Compare them to Cablevision, a company that in my mind is the envy of every cable MSO. Cablevision understands where the Internet is going, what consumers want and you almost never hear about a problem like we constantly do about Comcast.

Published on March 11th, 2008 under , , , , ,

Senate Passess Enhanced E911 VoIP Requirements

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

ARS is covering the e911, real 911 services for VoIP, Voice over IP services. Although FCC has been pushing for VoIP solution providers to provide proper 911 services known as e911, too much political and legal wrangling has lead to uninformed general public meeting with trouble while trying to use 911 services, like when they had PSTN services.
Finally we might be getting somewhere now that the bill submitted by Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) has been approved by senate.

"All VoIP customers are one step closer to having "real" 911 services accessible tothem, thanks to the Senate. The body passed the IP-Enabled Voice Communications and Public Safety Act last night, a bill that had been proposed by Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK). The legislation was approved by the Senate Commerce Committee last year, and will now go on to the House of Representatives for further consideration."
ARSTechnica Article.

Published on February 27th, 2008 under , ,

FCC Wireless Spectrum Auction Nearing The End.

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

Spectrum auction is almost over and according to an article on Forbes, Google might be out of the wireless tangle, after having achieved what it wanted, an "Open" Broadband network.
The bids are kept under seal but the analysts who knows the market and the players have already marked out the winners and players and who ever trail the auctions.
On Google’s side of the auction involvement was viewed as ;
"Analysts speculated that Google likely bid $4.6 billion for the C block. Under FCC rules, a $4.6 billion bid would ensure the creation of a broadband network "open" to any devices or application. Industry watchers speculated that Google, which lobbied the FCC to adopt open access rules for the auction, was participating in the auction out of a sense of duty rather than a desire to win."
Whatever the case, we really need to thank Google for the "Open" wireless spectrum for it’s work on the issue. Verizon took FCC to court over the same issue, trying to prevent an "Open" network.
So all these big players did not dance towards the "open" spectrum but more like dragged towards it.
There are two blocks that still have not come near the target bids are D and E blocks. The FCC wants the D block to be used as a combined commercial and public safety communications network. Experts say the challenges of building out such a network has scared bidders away. If the $1.3 billion reserve price isn’t met, it will probably be auctioned again. But I think they are not interested because there is no money in the public work!
E block is a one way only network according the article (?) and wonders if anyone will be interested in bidding on it!.
In any case I am glad that FCC chose the "open" to be a valuable part in these last bit of unused spectrum.

Published on February 6th, 2008 under , , ,

Wireless Auction Bids Reach $18.55 Billion

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

The FCC’s Wireless Spectrum auction so far has gathered a sum of 18.55 Billion up to yesterday. This is up from $15.64 at the close of Thursday. Following is the Reuters report.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bidding reached $18.55 billion on Friday in the U.S. Federal Communications Commission’s record-setting auction of government-owned wireless airwaves, but there were no new offers for two large, closely watched slices of spectrum.

The total bidding, which covers five separate blocks of spectrum in the auction, was up from $15.64 billion on Thursday.

There were no new bids on a major slice of the airwaves, known as the "C" block, which will have to be made accessible using any device or software application, under FCC rules. A bid of $4.71 billion, made on Thursday morning remained the top offer.

Nor were there any new bids Friday on a nationwide piece of the spectrum, known as the "D" block, which must be shared with public safety agencies under auction rules set by the agency. A bid of $472 million from last week still stood.

Published on February 2nd, 2008 under , , ,

Wireless Auction Bids Reach $3.7 billion At The End Of the Day Friday.

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

snapvoip
Companies qualified to join the 700 MHz airwaves auction include major carriers AT&T Inc and Verizon Wireless, as well as possible new competitors like Internet company Google Inc, EchoStar Communications Corp and Cablevision Systems Corp. They all have been busy since the auction opened but not busy enough to reach the FCC’s goal, a 10 Billion Dollar sale.
Among all these companies, the collective bids for all the blocks now stand at 3.7 Billion.
Continue reading at Reuters news article..

Published on January 26th, 2008 under ,

700MHz Auction, Bids are Coming Low, Too low

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

Copyright © 2005-2008 SnapVoip | All Rights Reserved.
After going through 3 rounds of auctions 700 MHz band, FCC and Congress should be disappointed. They were expecting to raise $10 Billion with these auctions but were only able to raise $3.2 Billion.
The auctions were opened Thursday 24th 2008, but bidding could continue for weeks. In most cases, the high bids don’t even meet the FCC’s reserve price set for minimum winning bids. A fourth round of bidding was scheduled for today.

The highest bid after the third round was $1.49 billion for eight of 12 regional licenses in the C block, a 22MHz block of spectrum covering all 50 states. The FCC’s has a minimum price set for the C block is $4.6 billion. It also comes with additional coditions, the winning bidders of C block spectrum must allow any legal devices to connect to their network, including mobile phones purchased from other carriers.

Published on January 25th, 2008 under ,

FCC ANNOUNCEMENT OF WHITE SPACE PROTOTYPE TESTING SCHEDULE ENCOURAGE WIA

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

January 18, 2008

Contact: Jake Ward
(202) 683 3156
jward@qorvis.com

WIRELESS INNOVATION ALLIANCE ENCOURAGED BY FCC ANNOUNCEMENT OF WHITE SPACE PROTOTYPE TESTING SCHEDULE

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Wireless Innovation Alliance (WIA) today congratulated the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on its commencement of TV ‘white space’ device testing, beginning on January 24, 2008. The testing process will allow for the FCC to gather additional data on prototype devices that will enable the development of clear and effective rules of the road to help guide future technological development within the vacant spaces of the broadcast television spectrum.

“There is no doubt that this unused spectrum can be put to better use for consumers without interfering with TV signals. This testing process will allow the FCC’s engineers to develop policies in this area without undue political interference,” said Rhett Dawson, CEO, Information Technology Industry Coalition. “We encourage the FCC to move forward in an expedient fashion so that consumers can benefit from these exciting innovations as quickly as possible.”

“The prototypes set to undergo testing hold the potential to spur innovation and create new applications for consumers, including greater broadband connectivity, community mesh networks and a host of new wireless devices,” said Michael Calabrese, Vice President of the New America Foundation and Director of its Wireless Future Program. “The alliance and its members are committed to unlocking the potential of this highly valuable and unused public resource, and will fully cooperate with the FCC to enable a timely and accurate completion of the testing process.”

ABOUT WIA: The WIA includes more than 15 organizations, representing the technology industry, consumer and public interest groups, and educational and technical organizations. The Alliance also enjoys strong bipartisan support from a growing number of Congressional Members committed to actively working to create opportunity and enable innovation in the U.S. The goal of the Alliance is to work closely with policymakers to craft rules of the road that will realize the opportunity of TV White spaces, which lie vacant in as much as 75% in some areas of the country.

For more information about the Wireless Innovation Alliance, please visit us at: http://www.wirelessinnovationalliance.com.

Published on January 21st, 2008 under , ,

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