Daily Digest 10/10/2023 (New FCC)

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
Table of Contents

Digital Discrimination

NTIA calls for Strong Digital Discrimination Rules  |  Read below  |  Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information Alan Davidson, Stephanie Weiner, Russell Hanser  |  Analysis  |  National Telecommunications and Information Administration
Biden Administration Blames Private Sector for Failed Government Policies  |  Read below  |  FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr  |  Press Release  |  Federal Communications Commission
Benton Foundation
Benton Institute for Broadband & Society Applauds Biden Administration's Commitment to Ending Digital Discrimination  |  Summary at Benton.org  |  Andrew Jay Schwartzman  |  Press Release  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
FCC's Broadband Label Rules Effective October 10  |  Federal Communications Commission

Net Neutrality

Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet  |  Read below  |  Michael Romano  |  Analysis  |  NTCA - The Rural Broadband Association
Net neutrality’s court fate depends on whether broadband is “telecommunications”  |  Read below  |  Jon Brodkin  |  Ars Technica
Do subscribers of mobile networks care about Data Throttling?  |  Read below  |  Christoph Bauner, Augusto Espin  |  Research  |  Telecommunications Policy
Holman Jenkins Jr | Net neutrality and Amazon show why Congress needs to kill agencies as well as creating new ones  |  Wall Street Journal

Broadband Funding

ACA Connects concerned about BEAD's 'middle class affordability' requirement  |  Read below  |  Grant Spellmeyer  |  Letter  |  ACA Connects

State/Local Initiatives

Public Comment Period Open Now for Idaho's Broadband Initial Proposal  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Idaho Department of Commerce
Michiganders Asked for Feedback on Using $1.6B in Federal Funding to Expand High-Speed Internet Access Across the State  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Michigan High-Speed Internet Office
Cook County Digital Equity Action Plan  |  Read below  |  Research  |  Cook County (IL) Government
Broadband internet impacts Nelson County housing market  |  Read below  |  Gretchen Stenger  |  WCAV

Satellite

Amazon launches first internet satellites in bid to compete with Starlink  |  Read below  |  Christian Davenport  |  Washington Post
How is mobile broadband intensity affecting CO2 emissions?  |  Read below  |  Harold Edquist, Pernilla Bergmark  |  Research  |  Telecommunications Policy

Platforms/Social Media

Social media: a golden goose for scammers  |  Federal Trade Commission
5 questions for Google’s Yasmin Green  |  Politico
As false war information spreads on X, Musk promotes unvetted accounts  |  Washington Post
How a Social Network Fails  |  Atlantic, The
 

Policymakers

Benton Foundation Here's Your New FCC  |  Read below  |  Kevin Taglang  |  Analysis  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
The House has no speaker, but plenty to do. Here are 5 of the most pressing issues  |  National Public Radio

Industry/Company News

The Best Broadband Internet Service Providers for 2023  |  Read below  |  Eric Griffith  |  Research  |  PC Magazine
United Communications CEO Shares Grant-Winning Tips, “Outside-In” Build Strategy  |  Read below  |  Doug Adams  |  telecompetitor

Stories From Abroad

The Repressive Power of Artificial Intelligence  |  Read below  |  Allie Funk, Adrian Shahbaz, Kian Vesteinsson  |  Research  |  Freedom House
Today's Top Stories

Digital Discrimination

NTIA calls for Strong Digital Discrimination Rules

Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information Alan Davidson, Stephanie Weiner, Russell Hanser  |  Analysis  |  National Telecommunications and Information Administration

Having studied barriers to Internet use for the last three decades, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration is intimately familiar with the longstanding disparities that keep far too many Americans from realizing the full benefits of modern communications and information technologies. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act represents a generational opportunity to address these disparities; maximum success in our shared mission requires NTIA, the Federal Communications Commission, and many others to work in concert as we advance the programs and policies that will move our nation toward digital equity. To that end, the NTIA addresses three important questions in this proceeding. Specifically, NTIA recommends that the FCC (1) include in its definition of “digital discrimination of access” policies and practices that disparately impact protected groups; (2) clarify that actions in compliance with a particular program’s requirements (including but not limited to the BEAD Program) are presumptively lawful under the digital discrimination rules; and (3) continue to focus FCC data collection efforts on information obtained from broadband ISPs, while leveraging the resources of other agencies for other data needs.

Biden Administration Blames Private Sector for Failed Government Policies

FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr  |  Press Release  |  Federal Communications Commission

The Biden Administration’s broadband policies are failing. The costs for building out Internet infrastructure in this country have skyrocketed thanks to inflationary policies under their watch. The Federal Communications Commission is sitting on spectrum that could connect millions of Americans to new, high-speed services. The Administration has needlessly blocked and delayed new broadband infrastructure builds. Fiber and cell site components are laying fallow in warehouses across the country due to the government’s failure to remove regulatory red tape. Permitting reform has gone nowhere. They are preparing to waste billions of taxpayer dollars by spending it without a national coordinating strategy. The list goes on. Now, the Biden Administration has announced that it will blame the private sector for the outcomes of these failed government policies. Instead, the Administration should reverse course and unleash America’s private sector to build, connect, and invest.

Net Neutrality

Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet

Michael Romano  |  Analysis  |  NTCA - The Rural Broadband Association

Two areas in the draft Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Safeguarding and Securing the Open Internet: 

  1. If the FCC examines Internet traffic exchange and the broadband marketplace, the NTCA urges the FCC to recognize and seek input on the multi-sided nature of the Internet ecosystem. Given the bilateral or multilateral nature of data transmission and exchange, there is no logical basis to focus solely upon the incentives and ability of [just internet service providers (ISP)] to such arrangements. If the FCC determines to proceed with such inquiries as proposed in the Draft NPRM, NTCA urges a broader exploration with respect to the possession and exercise of dominant market power by participants of all kinds [such as edge providers or an intermediary] in the broadband and Internet ecosystem and the FCC's jurisdictional authority to address such concerns where they arise, rather than focusing arbitrarily on last-mile retail ISPs as a purportedly monolithic class with the singular capability to give rise to such concerns.
  2. If the FCC proceeds with this rule-making, NTCA urged the use of open-ended questions to develop a meaningful and balanced record regarding the potential benefits and costs of proposed forbearance from contribution obligations that would arise under Section 254(d) of the Communications Act, as amended, if broadband Internet access services were to be reclassified as proposed in the Draft NPRM. NTCA observed that the Draft NPRM articulates neither basis nor rationale for its tentative conclusion that such forbearance is warranted beyond the mere fact that such forbearance was temporarily applied previously.

Net neutrality’s court fate depends on whether broadband is “telecommunications”

Jon Brodkin  |  Ars Technica

The Federal Communications Commission currently regulates broadband internet access service (BIAS, if you will) as an "information service" under Title I of the Communications Act. As the FCC contemplates reclassifying BIAS as a telecommunications service under Title II's common-carrier framework, the question is whether the FCC has authority to do so. Federal appeals courts have upheld previous FCC decisions on whether to apply common carrier rules to broadband. But some legal commentators claim the FCC is doomed to fail this time because of the Supreme Court's evolving approach on whether federal agencies can decide "major questions" without explicit instructions from Congress. Pantelis Michalopoulos, a Steptoe & Johnson partner who represented tech companies in the defense of net neutrality rules, said a recent Supreme Court decision "teaches us that the major questions doctrine is not some new chimera, some new animal dreamt up by the court, but rather the crystallization of existing law." Michalopoulos said that one relevant case for the FCC is the 2000 Supreme Court decision in FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, which held that the Food and Drug Administration didn't have authority to regulate tobacco products as drugs or devices. He pointed out that the FCC already survived scrutiny under the FDA precedent in two cases decided at the DC Circuit appeals court—Verizon v. FCC in 2014 and USTelecom et al v. FCC in 2016. The USTelecom v. FCC ruling that upheld Title II regulation of broadband cited the Supreme Court's FDA decision. It also cited the Supreme Court's 2005 ruling in National Cable & Telecommunications Association v. Brand X Internet Services, which upheld the FCC's authority to decide that cable broadband should be regulated as an information service instead of a telecommunications service. One of the biggest unknowns is whether the Supreme Court will take up Title II regulation of broadband at all. Benton Institute for Broadband & Society Senior Counselor Andrew Jay Schwartzman said, "In the parlance of Supreme Court practitioners, it is not a 'good vehicle' for the Court. In the Brand X case, the question was whether the FCC interpreted the statute correctly in deciding whether to put BIAS into Title I, Title II, or Title V. No one on the Court expressed any question that the FCC would have no authority at all over [broadband service]. That would likely require overruling Brand X. While Justice [Clarence] Thomas has now said he regrets his vote in Brand X, that was in the context of Chevron deference, not the major question doctrine." While broadband's regulatory classification is important, Schwartzman added that "overruling a precedent uses a good bit of judicial political capital" and that he suspects most of the justices "want to avoid that in a case that is surely important but doesn't rise to the level of abortion or the Second Amendment. There are plenty of other cases for the Supreme Court to expand on the [major questions doctrine] where the issues have not been before the court and don't carry as much baggage as net neutrality."

Do subscribers of mobile networks care about Data Throttling?

Christoph Bauner, Augusto Espin  |  Research  |  Telecommunications Policy

Network neutrality mandates have been made out either as necessary to ensure a level playing field in online markets or, alternatively, as overly restrictive regulation preventing innovation and investment. However, there is little empirical research on the consequences of data throttling, which becomes legal without network neutrality regulations. We combine throughput levels measured for mobile internet service providers in the United States with usage data to explore how sensitive users are to such practices. We find no evidence that users change their behavior when faced with throttled data rates.

Broadband Funding

ACA Connects concerned about BEAD's 'middle class affordability' requirement

Grant Spellmeyer  |  Letter  |  ACA Connects

The Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program's Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) directs States and Territories to include in their Initial Proposals “a middle-class affordability plan to ensure that all consumers have access to affordable high-speed internet.” ACA Connects believes each State and Territory should provide a rational basis for its plan and justify its methodology.  For instance, States and Territories could produce evidence on middle-class income levels and the amount or percentage of income that existing subscribers are spending on broadband service.  A State or Territory could then confirm whether its proposed affordability plan is reasonable by examining prices, terms, and conditions for broadband service in areas that are competitively served. Another, somewhat related, approach would be for States and Territories to require subgrantees to offer the same pricing and service packages in BEAD-funded areas that they offer in competitive areas in the same State or Territory.

State/Local Initiatives

Public Comment Period Open Now for Idaho's Broadband Initial Proposal

Press Release  |  Idaho Department of Commerce

The Idaho Broadband Advisory Board and Idaho Office of Broadband have opened a public comment period on the state’s Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program Initial Proposal (Volumes I and II) for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). The state has been working to identify Idaho’s internet needs, challenges and opportunities to develop internet expansion plans. The work is reflected in the state’s draft BEAD Initial Proposal. Volume I establishes the groundwork for the state’s strategy to bring internet to all and identify project areas and locations of interest. Volume II details the plans for distributing deployment funding, workforce and economic development initiatives, tribal coordination, and more. The BEAD Initial Proposal is now posted online for review and comment: Volume 1 here and Volume 2 here. The Idaho Office of Broadband will accept comments submitted to BroadbandComments@Commerce.Idaho.gov from September 29 through October 31. You can learn more on how to submit a public comment here.

Michiganders Asked for Feedback on Using $1.6B in Federal Funding to Expand High-Speed Internet Access Across the State

The Michigan High-Speed Internet Office (MIHI) is now accepting public comment on Volume 1 of Michigan’s Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Initial Proposal. Public comments will be used to help draft MIHI’s proposal for how Michigan will use the historic $1.559 billion funding allocation from the BEAD Act to expand access to high-speed internet service to more homes, businesses and community anchor institutions in the state. As of 2023, close to 500,000 Michigan households are unserved or underserved by high-speed internet infrastructure and another 730,000 households face barriers related to a combination of affordability, adoption, device access and digital literacy. This means approximately 30% of Michigan households do not have an affordable, reliable high-speed internet connection that meets their needs. The BEAD funding will be used to close the digital divide. Volume 1 of the Initial Proposal outlines the process that MIHI will implement to identify every home, business and institution in the state that is eligible to be connected to the internet through the BEAD Program. To ensure no locations across the state are missed, the process will allow local units of government, non-profit organizations and internet service providers to supply evidence to MIHI if locations are unserved, underserved or served by high-speed internet. Public comment on Volume 1 of the BEAD Initial Proposal is open now through 11:59 p.m. on October 31, 2023. Comments may be submitted through a webform or MIHI will also accept comments by postal mail.  

Cook County Digital Equity Action Plan

Research  |  Cook County (IL) Government

As government services, social and civic connections, financial services, educational resources, and workforce opportunities increasingly move online, suburban Cook County communities face a range of challenges. Those challenges include finding quality, affordable broadband internet service; obtaining usable, supported devices; and building the skills and confidence needed to navigate the internet safely and meaningfully. This action plan is organized around four digital equity cornerstones:

  1. Access: Ensure that all residents can afford high-quality internet and devices, and can access tools and support to use them.
  2. Confidence: Ensure that residents have the skills and comfort to navigate and use the internet to meet their needs and improve quality of life.
  3. Safety: Ensure residents feel safe and secure in digital environments and can protect themselves online.
  4. Infrastructure: Ensure that Cook County has sufficient physical infrastructure (conduit, cables, towers, and data centers) to support healthy, robust internet service for all.

Broadband internet impacts Nelson County housing market

Gretchen Stenger  |  WCAV

With the expansion of broadband internet in Nelson County, a rural area that once struggled with internet connection is now seeing an influx of out-of-town buyers. “Five to seven years ago, Nelson was a great place to be. Beautiful breweries and vineyards and all that stuff. But since Firefly has done their fiber rollout it’s become a haven for people who are trying to escape Charlottesville, Albemarle, and places all over the country,” said Jim Duncan, associate broker with Nest Realty. More interest, more sales, higher prices.

Satellite

Amazon launches first internet satellites in bid to compete with Starlink

Christian Davenport  |  Washington Post

Amazon stretched its reach to space, sending its first two internet satellites to orbit, a key step toward building out a constellation of more than 3,000 satellites that it hopes will compete with SpaceX’s Starlink system to provide online access to millions without it. The pair of prototype satellites were launched from Cape Canaveral (FL) on October 6. Over the coming days and weeks, Amazon hopes to use the satellites to “add real-world data from space to years of data collected from lab and field testing” as it works to put up the rest of its Kuiper constellation. Amazon, which has said it intends to invest more than $10 billion in the network, hopes to launch its first production satellites during the first half of next year and begin preliminary testing with commercial customers by the end of 2024. Under its license from the Federal Communications Commission, it must launch half of the 3,236 satellites it foresees in the constellation by July 2026.

How is mobile broadband intensity affecting CO2 emissions?

Harold Edquist, Pernilla Bergmark  |  Research  |  Telecommunications Policy

This paper investigates the association between relative mobile broadband penetration (i.e. mobile broadband connections in total mobile connections) and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions globally. The study is based on 181 countries for the period 2002–2020. The results indicate an initial increase in CO2 emissions for a country at an average emission level once mobile broadband is introduced. Possible explanations might be initial investment in network infrastructure and increased consumption of electricity. However, on average for the period 2002–2020 the continuous relationship between mobile broadband (defined as speeds of at least 256 kb/s) and CO2 is significantly negative in a statistical sense, i.e. emissions at a country level significantly reduce as mobile broadband penetration increase. Based on a two-stage model and controlling for additional independent variables (i.e. GDP per capita, population density, the share of electricity consumption that comes from fossil fuel, industry as a share of GDP, a regulation index, fixed broadband penetration, working age population as a share of total population and a human capital index), we conclude that on average a 10 percentage points increase in relative mobile broadband penetration causes a 7 percent reduction of CO2 emissions per capita (given that the instrumental variable strategy, as assumed, identifies causal effects). Thus, the results shows that investments in mobile infrastructure over longer periods of time can contribute to mitigating climate change. However, the relationship is only significant for high-income countries (i.e. countries with a GNI of $4096 or above). The results remain significant when mobile broadband is defined as mobile broadband connections per 100 inhabitants.

Policymakers

Here's Your New FCC

Kevin Taglang  |  Analysis  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

On September 30, the U.S. Senate unanimously voted to confirm Geoffrey Starks and Brendan Carr to serve another term as commissioners on the Federal Communications Commission. Just days before, the Senate confirmed Anna Gomez as FCC commissioner, filling a seat that had been vacant since January 20, 2021. Not only does the FCC now have a full complement of five commissioners, all have terms that will keep them at the agency until at least December 2025. So, the FCC is entering a period of relative stability in its leadership that has not been seen in a few years. Here's a quick look at this new FCC and the broadband priorities of the commissioners.

Industry/Company News

The Best Broadband Internet Service Providers for 2023

Eric Griffith  |  Research  |  PC Magazine

Rather than focusing exclusively on speed, we've expanded our ranking methodology and data sources to include a broader range of qualitative measurements, including the internet service providers' (ISPs) coverage area, prices, and customer satisfaction ratings. By combining all these data points, we're able to objectively pinpoint the Best ISPs in the US—not just the fastest ones. And we've broken down the winners into three separate categories: the Best Major ISPs, the Best All-Around ISPs, and the Best ISPs by Region of the US. For each of these categories, we clearly lay out the best providers and provide helpful context to tell the parts of the story that numbers alone cannot. Starlink, Fios, Spectrum, and MetroNet were leaders in the Major ISPs category. Starlink, Google Fiber, Armstrong, and Sonic won in Overall. 

United Communications CEO Shares Grant-Winning Tips, “Outside-In” Build Strategy

Doug Adams  |  telecompetitor

United Communications CEO William Bradford purchased what was then United Telephone in 2011, a rural phone company founded more than 75 years ago to bring telephone service to unserved rural areas. His first order of business (after changing the name to United Communications) was to upgrade the organization’s infrastructure and start bringing internet services to its footprint of mostly rural customers. Today, United serves 70,000 middle-Tennessee homes with internet service and will reach a total of 80,000 homes by the end of 2023. More than 25,000 locations will be newly connected United broadband customers in 2023, with expansion funded by both revenues and grants. The United network includes more than 3,600 route miles of fiber covering portions of eight middle-Tennessee counties (Bedford, Davidson, Franklin, Marshall, Maury, Rutherford, Williamson, and Wilson). A small portion of United customers (less than 10%) in hard-to-reach areas are served by United’s fixed wireless assets. The conviction to serve the unserved has become the driver to expansion and growth for United. Bradford calls it the organization’s “outside-in strategy.” United identifies unserved areas, as well as neighboring communities that it can serve, to help make a business case for the overall deployment. Bradford explains that these connecting communities often are competitive, with multiple gigabit speed internet providers. United uses customer service, not price, as a differentiator. United looks for enthusiasm from communities in which it plans to build, served or unserved. Community outreach meetings are held to gauge support before expansion.

Stories From Abroad

The Repressive Power of Artificial Intelligence

Allie Funk, Adrian Shahbaz, Kian Vesteinsson  |  Research  |  Freedom House

Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are amplifying a crisis for human rights online. While AI technology offers exciting and beneficial uses for science, education, and society at large, its uptake has also increased the scale, speed, and efficiency of digital repression. Automated systems have enabled governments to conduct more precise and subtle forms of online censorship. Purveyors of disinformation are employing AI-generated images, audio, and text, making the truth easier to distort and harder to discern. Sophisticated surveillance systems rapidly trawl social media for signs of dissent, and massive datasets are paired with facial scans to identify and track prodemocracy protesters. These innovations are reshaping an internet that was already under serious threat. Global internet freedom declined for the 13th consecutive year in 2023. Of the 70 countries covered by Freedom on the Net, conditions for human rights online deteriorated in 29, while only 20 countries registered overall gains. For the ninth consecutive year, China was found to have the worst conditions for internet freedom, though Myanmar came close to surpassing it. The year’s largest decline occurred in Iran, followed first by the Philippines and then by Belarus, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. In more than three-fourths of the countries covered by the project, people faced arrest for simply expressing themselves online. And governments in a record 41 countries resorted to censoring political, social, or religious content. Key findings:

  • Global internet freedom declined for the 13th consecutive year.
  • Attacks on free expression grew more common around the world.
  • Generative artificial intelligence (AI) threatens to supercharge online disinformation campaigns.
  • AI has allowed governments to enhance and refine their online censorship.
  • To protect internet freedom, democracy’s supporters must adapt the lessons learned from past internet governance challenges and apply them to AI.

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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 David L. Clay II (dclay AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.


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Kevin Taglang

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Executive Editor, Communications-related Headlines
Benton Institute
for Broadband & Society
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