DWT ADVISORY: FCC Launches NOI on Voluntary Cybersecurity Certification Program

By Ronnie London and Brian Nixon

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) released a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) on April 21, 2010, seeking public comment on the proposed creation of a voluntary cybersecurity certification program by which participating communications service providers would be certified—by the FCC or a third party, as determined by the FCC—as adhering to a set of cybersecurity objectives and/or practices.

The program begins the process of effectuating a recommendation in the National Broadband Plan, issued by the FCC last month, by seeking to increase the security of the nation’s broadband infrastructure, promote a culture of more vigilant cybersecurity, and offer end-users more complete information about their communication service providers’ cybersecurity practices.

Comments on the NOI will be due 60 days from the date of its publication in the Federal Register, which generally occurs several days or weeks after FCC release of an action such as this.

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DWT ADVISORY: FCC Launches Proceedings on CableCARD and "Gateway" Set-Top Box Issues

By Paul Glist and Paul B. Hudson

The FCC launched two related proceedings on set-top box issues at its April 21, 2010, open meeting.

One is a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) posing extensive long-term questions about the possibility of requiring all multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs) to provide adaptors by Dec. 31, 2012, that translate their programming into standard video feeds that may be consumed by a variety of retail devices.

The other is a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to address perceived short-term CableCARD issues. This NPRM could affect the availability of high-definition (HD) digital terminal adaptors (DTAs), the use of switched digital tuning adaptors used to expand the tuning range of “one-way” retail devices, digital outputs from HD set-top boxes, the installation process and pricing for CableCARDs, and the certification of “one-way” retail devices. 

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The NOI and the NPRM, as well as the Commissioners' statements (Genachowski, Copps, McDowell, Clyburn, Baker), are now available.

DWT ADVISORY: DC Circuit Reverses FCC Regulation of Broadband Network Management Practices

By Christopher W. Savage and Robert G. Scott, Jr.

On April 6, 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) exceeded its authority when it sought to regulate Comcast’s network management practices for its high-speed Internet access service. The court vacated the FCC’s Aug. 1, 2008, ruling that Comcast’s former practice of using various techniques to moderate the amount of bandwidth used by peer-to-peer services such as BitTorrent violated the FCC’s 2005 “Internet Policy Statement.” (Continue reading.)

Immediately following the court's decision, the FCC extended its reply comment deadline in its Open Internet Proceeding (i.e., Net Neutrality) to April 26, 2010. The original date for reply comments was April 8.
The DC Circuit's opinion (Comcast Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission, No. 08-1291 (D.C. Cir. April 6, 2010)) is available here.

 

 

DWT ADVISORY: Analysis of the FCC's National Broadband Plan

By Robert G. Scott, Jr. and James M. Smith

On March 16, 2010, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) presented to Congress its long-anticipated National Broadband Plan, as mandated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (the “Recovery Act”). Thirteen months in the making and weighing in at nearly 400 pages, “Connecting America: The National Broadband Plan” (the “Plan”) has occupied a disproportionate share of the FCC’s time and energy for the last year and, given the breadth and sheer quantity of its analysis and proposals, it will continue to be the single greatest focus of the agency for years to come.

Section 6001 of the Recovery Act, signed into law by President Obama on Feb. 17, 2009, less than a month after his inauguration, mandated the dispersal of $7.2 billion through grant and loan programs to expand broadband deployment to, and adoption by, unserved and underserved areas and vulnerable populations. Those programs—the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) administered by the Department of Commerce and the Broadband Initiatives Program (BIP) administered by the Department of Agriculture—are underway, and by law, all of these grants must be awarded by September 30, and the projects completed within three years thereafter.

But Subsection 6001(k) of the Recovery Act also directed the FCC to submit to Congress a National Broadband Plan for the longer term, to pick up where these broadband deployment and other short-term projects leave off “to ensure that all people of the United States have access to broadband capability and [to] establish benchmarks for meeting that goal.”

Congress ordered the FCC to include (1) “analysis of the most effective and efficient mechanisms for ensuring broadband access” by all Americans, (2) “a detailed strategy for achieving affordability of such service and maximum utilization of broadband infrastructure” by the public, (3) “an evaluation of the status of deployment of broadband service, including progress of projects supported by the [BTOP and BIP] grants,” and (4) “a plan for use of broadband infrastructure and services in advancing consumer welfare, civic participation, public safety and homeland security, community development, health care delivery, energy independence and efficiency, education, worker training, private sector investment, entrepreneurial activity, job creation and economic growth, and other national purposes.”

Continue reading DWT"s Analysis of the National Broadband Plan.

Download the National Broadband Plan. 

You can also directly access DWT's analysis of specific topics under the National Broadband Plan here: