Public, educational and government (PEG) channels were moved to channels in the 180s and 190s in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina by Charter Communications, said American Community Television (ACT) and Southeast Association of Telecommunications Officers and Advisors Friday in a news release (http://bit.ly/Ug1o2e). Charter also eliminated basic tier service to municipal buildings “claiming the municipal building is a commercial service, requiring local governments and schools pay twice the monthly fee” to be able to receive their own PEG channels, the groups said. Charter is “openly hostile to PEG access television and municipalities,” ACT said. Charter had no immediate comment.
NTIA said an improvement in access to 100 Mbps broadband service is primarily attributable to upgrades in existing cable systems, NCTA said in a blog post Friday (http://bit.ly/1moAWui). The data comes from a recent NTIA report on broadband speeds from wireless and wireline services from June 2010 to December 2013 (http://1.usa.gov/1r9PAf8). It said two-thirds of Americans have access to speeds higher than 100 Mbps, compared with 10 percent having access to that speed in June 2010, NCTA said. The report also said more than 99 percent of Americans have access to at least 6 Mbps through either wired or wireless connections, and 92 percent have 6 Mbps over wired, NCTA said. The upgrades that make speed increases are expected to continue “into 2014 and beyond,” said the association.
Several public interest groups united to oppose the municipal broadband amendment from Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Tuesday before it passed. She successfully hitched the amendment to the Financial Services appropriations bill (HR-5016) in a 223-200 vote, and the bill itself passed Wednesday (CD July 17 p3). The amendment would stop agency funding from going to pre-empt laws in the several states that restrict municipal broadband. “After years of bipartisan (and often nonpartisan) local and federal support of local broadband projects as a critical economic development need, this amendment will cut off discussion of the promotion of broadband through local projects before it even begins,” said the letter (http://bit.ly/1t9RWdq) to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., from such groups as Common Cause, Consumers Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Free Press, Institute for Local Self-Reliance, National Hispanic Media Coalition, New America Foundation’s Open Technology Institute and Public Knowledge.
CableLabs added features to its new home IP networking standard for what it calls a plug and play experience for configuring home networks, and is eyeing enhancements beyond HIPnet to integrate the Internet of Things with home networks. A new feature of service discovery lets users connect devices to home networks without having to locate and configure them, wrote CableLabs Lead Engineer John Berg on the blog of the cable industry research and development consortium (http://bit.ly/1qid2Jd). Integrating IoT with home networks may be possible with the home optimization platform, he wrote Wednesday of HOPnet. It seeks to provide a common platform for IoT functions like home security and automation and media streaming, and in the “very near future” a consumer could connect IPv4 and IPv6 devices to a cable operator’s IPv6 infrastructure and control IoT and IP video services through a common interface, wrote Berg. An “even more forward-looking technology” is the remote access platform, which would take HOPnet “to the next level by providing access to all the video, music, and other data in the home from remote locations, securely” and with high quality, he said.
Comcast is divesting over 3 million subscribers to Charter Communications (CD June 6 p7), but that won’t affect Comcast subscribers in many states with its systems. That’s according to a filing from the two companies and Time Warner Cable, which Comcast agreed to buy, posted Monday in FCC docket 14-57 (http://bit.ly/1r1YJGD). The states where Comcast subs won’t be moving to Charter are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia, as well as Washington, D.C., said the three cable operators. Time Warner Cable subscribers in Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Washington will become Comcast subscribers, the filing said. Charter subscribers in Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, South Carolina, Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming will stay with Charter, the filing said.
AT&T’s U-verse TV service agreed to carry four Epix channels. Authenticated subscribers to the multichannel video programming distributor will be able to watch programs on epix.com, Epix and U-verse apps, on VOD and on Uverse.com, said the companies in a news release Monday (http://bit.ly/1kpp8bk). Epix is a joint venture of Lionsgate, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios and Viacom.
The FCC Media Bureau is seeking comments on the proposed Comcast buy of Time Warner Cable and the associated transactions involving Charter Communications and spin-off company SpinCo, the bureau said in a public notice Thursday (http://bit.ly/1qoHdds). Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse Partnership (TWE-A/N) and Comcast have also submitted applications for the transfer to Comcast of TWE-A/N’s interest in Bright House Networks, the PN said. Comments and petitions to deny are due Aug. 25, while responses to comments and oppositions to petitions are due Sept. 23. Replies to responses and oppositions are due Oct. 8.
CEA hailed an International Energy Agency report on standby power use of network-enabled devices as a “significant undertaking,” even if it didn’t agree with all the report’s conclusions. The 175-page report by the Paris-based IEA warned that the number of network-enabled devices in use may soar to 50 billion by 2020, and that if “left unchecked,” their “corresponding energy demand” would exceed “the current annual electricity consumption of Canada and Germany combined.” IEA said “a vast majority of this energy would be consumed when devices are ‘ready and waiting,’ but not performing any particular function.” However, “contrary to implications of the IEA report, we find that consumer electronics now account for a lower percentage of electricity usage per U.S. household than they did just three years ago -- even as they've seen significantly higher market penetration in U.S. homes,” said Doug Johnson, CEA vice president-technology policy, in a statement Wednesday (http://bit.ly/W0UZKg). As CEA and its members “review the details of the new report, we appreciate the IEA’s recognition of the significant role that industry standards and voluntary agreements play in improving energy efficiency,” Johnson said. As the CE industry has learned from more than 20 years of experience with the Energy Star program, “market-oriented, flexible approaches are superior to regulatory mandates in advancing energy efficiency, while protecting innovation and competition in the fast-moving market for information and communication technology,” Johnson said. The CE and pay-TV industries have started work on “a new initiative focused on efficiency in small network equipment,” building on their recent agreement to curb energy use in set-top boxes, he said. “Given the rapid changes in the energy consumption characteristics of consumer electronics devices and high-tech products, it’s essential to develop and use up-to-date and accurate assessments of energy usage. Clearly, energy efficiency is best achieved when the public and private sectors work together.” CEA and NCTA have recently been refuting reports that cable and CE pay-TV devices use too much power (CD June 24 p16).
Comcast buying Time Warner could lead to better accessibility services for TWC customers with disabilities, said the American Association of People with Disabilities (AAPD) in an ex parte filing posted Wednesday in docket 14-57 (http://bit.ly/1neZ8UK). Time Warner Cable’s “accessibility infrastructure does not demonstrate the highest level of best practices in the field,” said AAPD. Comcast is “the only cable provider to have an office dedicated full-time to accessibility” and has a lab dedicated to developing accessibility best practices, the group said. Comcast and Time Warner Cable are listed as national partners of AAPD on the group’s website, and Comcast Foundation Vice President Fred Maahs is the chairman of AAPD. The transaction would allow Time Warner Cable to benefit from Comcast’s work on accessibility, AAPD said. “The newly formed entity could reach a new level of innovation for customers with disabilities.” Dish Network separately opposed the Comcast/Time Warner Cable deal. (See separate report above in this issue.)
The FCC shouldn’t terminate Adams Cable Equipment’s CableCARD waiver for failing to file a timely status report, ACE said in a motion submitted with the late-filed report Thursday (http://bit.ly/1k2S74D) and posted in docket 97-80 Monday. “It would disserve the public interest to terminate the waiver as a punishment for ACE’s late filing,” said the motion asking the FCC to accept the late report. The waiver, granted in July 2013 (CD July 30 p11), lets ACE offer its inventory of 50,000 set-tops directly to cable subscribers. It required ACE to submit an initial report within six months and 10 days of the first sale of integrated set-top boxes made based upon the waiver. ACE made its first sale in August, so the report should have been filed in February, ACE said. “The public has not been materially harmed by this omission because only a very small number of set-top boxes have been sold to cable operators under the waiver to date.” A report submitted with the motion said ACE has sold 850 integrated set-tops at wholesale to participating cable operators and 202 integrated set-tops to retail customers of those cable operators as of June 30. The retail boxes were sold for an average price of $53.35, the report said. “There is no countervailing harm to the public interest, as the small scale of these sales poses no threat to the cable industry’s common reliance on CableCARDs,” ACE said. “The waiver should not be terminated."