Daily Digest 8/01/2023 (Vision)

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
Table of Contents

Digital Equity

Benton Foundation
Visions of Digital Equity Principles  |  Read below  |  Adrianne Furniss  |  Editorial  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

Broadband Funding

Coalition forms against BEAD letter of credit requirement  |  Read below  |  Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading
House Infrastructure Committee Approves E-BRIDGE Act  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  House Transportation Committee
TIA is helping states navigate BEAD cybersecurity requirements  |  Read below  |  Masha Abarinova  |  Fierce
WTA Expresses Opposition to Supplementing RDOF Support Amounts  |  Read below  |  Derrick Owens, Gerard Duffy  |  Letter  |  WTA–Advocates for Rural Broadban
Reconsidering the E-Rate Program  |  Read below  |  Daniel Lyons  |  Analysis  |  American Enterprise Institute

State Initiatives

North Dakota Providers Break Ground on Government-Funded Fiber Broadband Builds  |  Read below  |  Joan Engebretson  |  telecompetitor

Wireless

Tecore Pioneers First FCC Certified Cellular Interdiction System  |  Summary at Benton.org  |  Press Release  |  Tecore Networks

Platforms/Social Media/AI

Senate Panel Piles On Potential Social Media Regulations  |  Read below  |  John Eggerton  |  Next TV
The AI rules that US policymakers are considering, explained  |  Vox
Gov DeSantis Says He Will Weigh U.S. Ban of TikTok if Elected President  |  Wall Street Journal
Self-Proclaimed “Free Speech Absolutist” Elon Musk Tries to Silence Independent Researchers Center for Countering Digital Hate  |  Read below  |  Press Release  |  Center for Countering Digital Hate
This Is the Era of Zombie Twitter  |  Wired
Hollywood’s Fight: How Much AI Is Too Much?  |  Wall Street Journal
The Internet Didn’t Destroy Local Languages; It’s Helping Preserve Them  |  Read below  |  David Moschella  |  Analysis  |  Information Technology & Innovation Foundation

Antitrust

Op-ed: Antitrust law fails to account for how companies exploit user information to dominate markets  |  Wall Street Journal

Environment

Toxic lead telephone lines: Searching for solutions  |  Read below  |  Tom Wheeler, Blair Levin  |  Analysis  |  Brookings

Advertising

 
T-Mobile Gets Mostly Bad News in Advertising Watchdog Decision  |  Read below  |  Carl Weinschenk, Joan Engebretson  |  telecompetitor

Labor

National Cyber Workforce and Education Strategy  |  Read below  |  Public Notice  |  White House

Privacy

California privacy regulator’s first case: Probing connected cars  |  Washington Post
Limit FBI’s access to powerful spy tool, White House panel says  |  Washington Post

International

Restoring US Leadership on Digital Policy  |  Summary at Benton.org  |  Ashley Johnson  |  Analysis  |  Information Technology & Innovation Foundation
Today's Top Stories

Digital Equity

Visions of Digital Equity Principles

Adrianne Furniss  |  Editorial  |  Benton Institute for Broadband & Society

Digital equity—or, digital opportunity, if you prefer—is having a moment. The US is making an unprecedented investment to ensure that individuals and communities have the capacity to fully participate in our society and economy. This is a huge undertaking with momentous implications on the future of the Nation. Each state has been asked to envision how life there can be transformed by achieving digital equity. As part of their digital equity plans, states have the opportunity to illustrate how ubiquitous, affordable connectivity to reliable, high-speed broadband will benefit communities through increased access to health care, education and job training, economic growth, and civic participation. With this extraordinary opportunity before state policymakers and local communities in mind, the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society launched the Visions of Digital Equity project to aid both in ensuring that more community voices are heard in crafting visions that increase opportunity for all. Through surveys, community meetings, interviews, conversations, and a collaborative writing process with community contributors, we have arrived at a set of principles to help guide both the process and the resulting visions of digital equity. We hope these principles help the residents in each state evaluate their digital equity plans.

Broadband Funding

Coalition forms against BEAD letter of credit requirement

Nicole Ferraro  |  Light Reading

A small coalition of internet service providers (ISP), broadband associations, and digital equity advocates is emerging to warn that a requirement for service providers to provide a letter of credit in order to participate in the federal government's Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) program will "shut out a huge number of ISPs." The $42 billion BEAD program requires grant recipients to provide a letter of credit for 25% of the award, in addition to a 25% match requirement. One member of the coalition, Connect Humanity – a nonprofit working with communities to advance digital equity – argued that this requirement creates "enormous barriers to all but the best funded providers" and will shut out the types of ISPs that the Biden administration has prioritized as participants in the program. The issue, according to Connect Humanity, is the collateral required to receive a letter of credit. Providing an example, the group said that an ISP aiming to build a $10 million broadband network would need to raise over $2 million in collateral (with interest and fees), in addition to supplying matching funds, to be eligible for a $7.5 million BEAD grant. "Many simply won't apply," wrote Connect Humanity. Other members of the coalition pushing back against the letter of credit mandate include small ISPs like Arkansas-based Aristotle Unified Communications; organizations like Broadband.Money; the Schools, Health, and Libraries Broadband Coalition (SHLB); and the American Association for Public Broadband, led by Gigi Sohn.

House Infrastructure Committee Approves E-BRIDGE Act

Press Release  |  House Transportation Committee

The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee approved a number of measures, including H.R. 1752, the Eliminating Barriers to Rural Internet Development Grant Eligibility (E-BRIDGE) Act, legislation to remove hurdles for broadband projects under Economic Development Administration (EDA) grants. Introduced by Committee Chairman Sam Graves (R-MO), the legislation would remove hurdles for broadband projects under Economic Development Administration (EDA) grants, ensuring that local communities can partner with the private sector and giving communities more flexibility in complying with their funding match requirements.

TIA is helping states navigate BEAD cybersecurity requirements

Masha Abarinova  |  Fierce

As states draft their initial proposals for the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) program, the Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) is striving to help broadband offices tackle the cybersecurity aspect of the BEAD guidelines. Essentially, states must verify the vendors and suppliers to whom they award contracts have “adequate” cybersecurity and supply chain risk management (C/SCRM) plans. As for what exactly those requirements are, TIA CEO Dave Stehlin said it’s a “very long” and complicated answer. Stehlin explained the BEAD Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) refers to four federal government documents on the subject of C/SCRM, including the NIST Cybersecurity Framework and Biden’s executive order from September 2022 on enhancing the supply chain. Each document is referred to “as being baseline requirements in BEAD.” TIA created a checklist state broadband offices can use to “operationalize these guidelines – something that you can touch and feel and measure.” States can then map those requirements to TIA’s Supply Chain Security Standard (or SCS 9001). Some of the questions on the checklist include:

  • Does the organization identify cybersecurity roles and responsibilities of its workforce, including third party partners like suppliers and consultants?
  • Does the organization have a Business Continuity Plan that enables the rapid recovery of normal business operations after a cyberattack or other disaster?
  • Does the organization understand all legal and regulatory requirements under which it is expected to operate?

While Stehlin couldn’t say how many states have adopted the checklist, he noted TIA is dealing with “probably half of the states or more right now, at different speeds and different levels.”

WTA Expresses Opposition to Supplementing RDOF Support Amounts

Derrick Owens, Gerard Duffy  |  Letter  |  WTA–Advocates for Rural Broadban

WTA—Advocates for Rural Broadband filed a letter in opposition to a proposal by the Coalition of RDOF Winners which seeks substantial post-auction supplemental additions to the support amounts, as well as significant changes to the distribution schedules and other terms and conditions, for which the Coalition’s members made winning low bids and agreed to accept during the Federal Communications Commission’s Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF) reverse auction. WTA urges the FCC to deny the Coalition’s proposals, reiterate the certified due diligence responsibilities of all RDOF applicants, and declare that the integrity of the RDOF auction and any future USF reverse auctions requires that support amounts, public interest obligations and other terms and conditions will not be waived or changed from those that constituted material elements of winning bids.

Reconsidering the E-Rate Program

Daniel Lyons  |  Analysis  |  American Enterprise Institute

E-Rate is the forgotten child of the universal service family. While commentators and Congress have spilled significant ink examining the government’s broadband build-out and affordability initiatives, E-Rate has been quietly subsidizing broadband service to schools and libraries for a quarter century. Promoting community connectivity and education is a worthwhile policy goal. But with program costs exceeding $2 billion annually, paid from an increasingly unstable Universal Service Fund (USF), it’s important to measure whether these expenditures actually improve student learning—something the Federal Communications Commission has not yet measured and which private studies doubt. At first glance, data suggest the program was a success. But as the Government Accountability Office (GAO) noted, “A key unanswered question. . .is the extent to which increases in connectivity can be attributed to E-rate.” Despite prompting from the Office of Management and Budget, the FCC never isolated the effect of E-Rate subsidies from other funding sources, such as state and local budget outlays. It even admitted to the GAO, “there was no way to tell whether the program has resulted in the cost-effective deployment and use of advanced telecommunications services for schools and libraries.” A comprehensive program evaluation would also seek to determine to what extent E-Rate spending merely displaces state and local spending that would occur with or without the program. Admittedly, assessing E-Rate can be a politically sensitive topic. Like Lifeline, E-Rate is a noble program with an important mandate. But that should not exempt the program from careful examination and scrutiny.

State Initiatives

North Dakota Providers Break Ground on Government-Funded Fiber Broadband Builds

Joan Engebretson  |  telecompetitor

Five providers that offer service in eastern North Dakota broke ground simultaneously on fiber projects funded, in part, through state and federal broadband programs. The providers celebrated with a groundbreaking ceremony near Casselton (ND). The providers are BEK Communications CooperativeHalstad Telephone CompanyMLGCPolar Communications and Red River Communications. All five companies have provided service in North Dakota for decades. The total investment in the projects will be $119 million, of which the providers will be investing $48.7 million. The state and local funding came through the US Department of Agriculture's (USDA) ReConnect program and North Dakota American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) programs. Small rural providers cover a large portion of North Dakota and already have invested heavily in fiber broadband. The state has the distinction of having gigabit service available to a higher percentage of the population than for any other state. Nevertheless, unserved and underserved locations remain in areas of the state where buildout costs are uneconomical. The government funding can help close the gap for those locations.

Platforms

Senate Panel Piles On Potential Social Media Regulations

John Eggerton  |  Next TV

Big Tech could be fighting a losing battle with a bipartisan movement in Congress for new regulations on social media use by children, including getting kids off such platforms entirely. The Senate Commerce Committee approved two bills, the Kids Online Safety Act and the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act (CTOPPA), sending them along to the full Senate for a vote. While the industry group Computer and Communications Industry Association said the bills “raise serious First Amendment concerns, would lead to broad restrictions of online speech, contain vague knowledge standards and would create confusing compliance problems for businesses’ efforts to protect young people online,” the vote to favorably report the bills to the full Senate was unanimous. Big Tech has plenty of lobbying muscle, though. The Kids Online Safety Act passed unanimously out of the committee in 2022, but failed to make it into law. 


Self-Proclaimed “Free Speech Absolutist” Elon Musk Tries to Silence Independent Researchers Center for Countering Digital Hate

Press Release  |  Center for Countering Digital Hate

The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) has been a leading voice exposing how Musk’s leadership and the changes he is making to “X” have led to a proliferation of hate speech on the platform. While Musk proclaims himself to be an advocate for free speech, his latest tactics involve making brazen verbal and legal threats against CCDH, all while allowing racist, antisemitic content to proliferate on his platform. Research by CCDH shows hate speech on the platform has proliferated under Musk, and the company is doing nothing to stop it. Musk has disclosed ad revenue is down 50% since his takeover and blamed CCDH, among others, for advertisers fleeing the platform. While Elon Musk proclaims to be a “free speech absolutist,” his actions against CCDH show the lengths he will go to silence those who seek to hold him to account.

The Internet Didn’t Destroy Local Languages; It’s Helping Preserve Them

David Moschella  |  Analysis  |  Information Technology & Innovation Foundation

If you Google the question “Is the Internet killing local languages and cultures,” you will receive a lot of results that suggest the answer is yes. But if you look at them a bit more closely, you will see that the most dire warnings tend to be from 2010 to 2017. More recent results often take the opposite stance—that technology actually helps preserve local languages. Advances in machine translation are clearly part of this shift in opinion. But there are also important economic, geopolitical, and cultural forces at work. Languages have always evolved as if in a marketplace. They compete against one another, with shifting winners and losers over time. Having a common cross-country language (Latin, French, English) is useful in that it can facilitate understanding and lower transaction costs, especially as the world becomes more globally integrated. But the roles of local and shared languages are always shifting, and right now they’re tilting back toward the local. Viewed more abstractly, the world’s 7,000 languages can be grouped into three main categories. The 300 most widely spoken ones are used by 90 percent of the world’s population. The remaining 10 percent speak some 6,700 languages, many having little or no written form at all. A third group consists of the languages that dominate online. It’s estimated that just 20 languages account for some 95 percent of all Internet content, with nearly 60 percent of this content being in English. Machine translation will be a decisive factor in determining how these three groups relate to one another going forward.

Environment

Toxic lead telephone lines: Searching for solutions

Tom Wheeler, Blair Levin  |  Analysis  |  Brookings

Millions of Americans could be affected by thousands of miles of toxic telephone cables. These old cables, legacies from the pre-internet, dial-up telephone era, are sheathed in lead, an element found to be toxic in humans. The report tumbled telephone company stocks to record lows and started a debate about both the science and what to do about these cables, some of which date back over half a century. We are both former officials of the Federal Communications Commission. In our time at the FCC and other telecommunications-related activities, neither of us ever heard concerns about lead sheathing, other than as a workplace safety issue. As former regulators, however, we recognize the challenges created by this development, the need for timely guidance to consumers and companies, and the potentially overlapping jurisdiction of federal agencies. Cost estimates to remediate the problem for the entire industry are settling in at between $4 and $20 billion. To put that number in perspective, the total capital expenditures of Verizon and AT&T were each around $20 billion in 2022. Ultimately, the federal government will have to resolve the complex scientific and legal issues of toxic telephone cables, the prioritization of remediation, and how it is paid for. To do this, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), FCC, and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) should form a joint task force to investigate the issue and prioritize sites for lead cable removal.

[Tome Wheeler is a former chairman of the FCC. Blair Levin serves as a policy analyst with New Street Research—an equity research firm focused on telecommunications and technology—and is a former FCC chief of staff.]

Advertising

T-Mobile Gets Mostly Bad News in Advertising Watchdog Decision

Carl Weinschenk, Joan Engebretson  |  telecompetitor

T-Mobile will appeal several decisions made by the National Advertising Division (NAD) of BBB National Programs to challenges brought by AT&T. The decisions involved “Phone Freedom” ads that appeared in television commercials, radio advertisements, and on T-Mobile’s website. The good news for T-Mobile is that NAD found at least one claim made in the “Phone Freedom” campaign to be supported. The bad news for T-Mobile is that some claims were not found to be supported. The campaign is focused on T-Mobile’s offer to pay off a customer’s phone contract and give a free 5G phone to customers who switch to T-Mobile’s Go5G Plan. NAD found the T-Mobile claim — “AT&T and Verizon require three-year device financing to get their best offers & you lose your promo credits if you upgrade after two years” to be supported. NAD found that several other claims were not supported. These include: “AT&T and Verizon rope you in with phone offers then bind you to a three-year device contract” and “You’re upgrade ready a year earlier.” The advertising watchdog said the claims overstate the limitations on AT&T customers’ ability to upgrade. NAD also recommended T-Mobile discontinue or modify the claim “Introducing Go5G Plus, the first plan that always gives new and existing customers the same great device deals.”

Labor

National Cyber Workforce and Education Strategy

Public Notice  |  White House

This first-of-its-kind comprehensive approach is aimed at addressing both immediate and long-term cyber workforce needs. Filling the hundreds of thousands of cyber job vacancies across our nation is a national security imperative and the Administration is making generational investments to prepare our country to lead in the digital economy. The approach is positioned to empower every American seeking to participate in our digital ecosystem and underscores the critical need to fill a vast number of vacant cyber jobs. The approach seeks to build and enhance collaboration around four pillars: 

  1. Equip Every American with Foundational Cyber Skills: Enable everyone to enjoy the full benefits of our interconnected society.
  2.  Transform Cyber Education: Address the immediate demand for a skilled cyber workforce while also preparing learners to meet the future needs of a dynamic technological environment. 
  3. Expand and Enhance the National Cyber Workforce: Collaborate with a wide range of stakeholders, adopt a skills-based approach to recruitment and development, and increase access to cyber jobs for all Americans, including underserved and underrepresented groups.
  4. Strengthen the Federal Cyber Workforce: Communicate the benefits of careers in public service amongst both job seekers and current employees and lower the barriers associated with hiring and onboarding.

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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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