Child development network BabyFirst launched on Time Warner Cable’s digital basic tier, TWC said in a news release Monday. BabyFirst will be available in more than 20 markets, including Dallas, Los Angeles, New York and San Diego, the release said. The network is carried in more than 50 million households in the U.S., the release said.
The content companies challenging FCC release of video programming contract information in filings on Comcast's planned buy of Time Warner Cable want something “that has never happened, and it cannot lawfully happen,” said Dish Network and the American Cable Association in a joint intervenor brief Friday. “Under applicable law, interested parties must be provided reasonable access to decisionally significant material in the FCC’s party-based proceedings.” The brief in support of the FCC was filed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. “Failure to provide such access would be grounds to overturn any FCC decision approving either merger,” it said also of AT&T's planned buy of DirecTV. The programmers, which include CBS, Disney and Viacom, can’t show that the FCC hasn’t tried to accommodate them, Dish and ACA said: “The FCC has bent over backwards to accommodate Petitioners’ own interests, and imposed additional burdens on Intervenors in the process.” The content companies’ petition for review should be denied, Dish and ACA said.
The FCC asked DirecTV to turn over information about its VOD and TV Everywhere services and how they interact with other ISPs, as part of the commission’s review of the Comcast/Time Warner Cable transaction, said a letter to DirecTV from Wireline Bureau Chief Julie Veach. “In order for the Commission to complete its review of the applications and make the necessary public interest findings under section 310(d) of the Communications Act, we require information and data from other commercial wireline carriers against which the applicants compete,” said the letter. The 19-page information request asks DirecTV to turn over by Jan. 30 information including its interconnects with numerous ISPS, the effect of cord-cutters on the business, its negotiations for video programming, and the download speed needed to view its content. DirecTV’s response will be treated as confidential under the protective orders already issued in docket 14-57, the letter said.
Advocating for Midcontinent Communications' request to waive rural call completion reporting rules, lawyers for the cable operator with a "significant number of rural customers" said it's taking many steps to monitor whether calls are going through and to fix any problems. "Where Midcontinent identifies an issue, it changes its routing tables to send calls to the identified location to [alternative] carriers," said an ex parte filing Tuesday in FCC docket 13-39. The operator made such changes 55 times in 2013 and 115 times this year, though not always because of rural call completion problems, its lawyers told Wireline Bureau Competition Policy Division staffers. The filing said the company has been "successful in limiting and reducing rural call completion issues affecting calls" made by its customers.
If the FCC doesn't heed their and others' advice and fails to reclassify broadband as a Title II Communications Act service, it should forbear from enforcing all the title's restrictions, said 20-plus page filings by NCTA and its largest member, Comcast. Their individual filings, posted Tuesday and Wednesday in docket 14-28, said alternative net neutrality rules under Section 706 would be much less risky. If the commission goes the Title II route, "at a bare minimum," it "should be coupled with immediate, nationwide forbearance from all of Title II’s obligations and restrictions," said NCTA. Comcast said "proceeding down a reclassification path would be even more precarious in the absence of a grant of broad, nationwide forbearance from enforcement of all Title II obligations and restrictions, including those in Sections 201 and 202." The cable operator said the commission "has clear authority to grant such relief to broadband providers in a streamlined manner."
The Walt Disney Company and the National Cable Television Cooperative signed a long-term retransmission consent agreement for eight ABC-owned local stations. NCTC members in ABC-owned markets "will continue to have the ability to provide the authenticated WATCH ABC live streaming service to their customers," Walt Disney said Monday in a news release. The agreement follows a comprehensive long-term distribution agreement to deliver Disney's lineup of sports, news and entertainment to participating NCTC members' customers, it said. The agreement pertains to WABC-TV New York, KABC-TV Los Angeles, KTRK-TV Houston and other markets, it said.
NV Energy’s requirement for a complete loading analysis for Cox Communications Las Vegas to use the overlashing technique for its poles “is unjust and unreasonable,” Cox said in a petition to the FCC filed Thursday. Cox is asking the agency to order the NV Energy to allow work to continue without the analysis due to “discriminatory denial of access” and for imposing “unreasonable terms and conditions,” the petition said. NV Energy didn't comment.
CEO Brian Roberts and other Comcast executives made the case for the company's planned buy of Time Warner Cable to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, saying the approximately $66 billion deal won't hurt broadband competition and the cable operator backs "robust, enforceable, industry-wide net neutrality rules." So said an ex parte filing posted Thursday in docket 14-57 on a meeting that also included Comcast Executive Vice President David Cohen, FCC General Counsel Jonathan Sallet and others. On President Barack Obama's recent support for Title II Communications Act reclassification of broadband, "Comcast is on record as agreeing with every substantive point the President outlined -- a free and open Internet, no blocking, no throttling, increased transparency, non-discrimination rules, and no paid prioritization," the company said. With "much agreement on what the new rules should address" on net neutrality, Comcast said, "there is no upside to be gained from heavy-handed regulation associated with Title II reclassification, only substantial risk of harm. Such harm would be exacerbated to the extent the FCC’s going forward plan includes a Title II approach without broad-based forbearance."
Six tech companies completed the first successful interoperability test of the latest super-fast broadband specification, said CableLabs, developer of the DOCSIS 3.1 spec. Such products can deliver up to 10 Gbps on hybrid fiber-coax networks, CableLabs said in a Tuesday news release. The interop event included providers of cable modems, it said. "To keep up with the rate of development and accelerate product maturity, CableLabs will be facilitating a series of interop events building up to the certification program that will be open for submissions in 2015." Names of participating companies weren't disclosed. "Since this was CableLabs first interop for DOCSIS 3.1," emailed a spokesman Tuesday, "we wanted to respect vendor neutrality and so have not named the companies which participated."
Programmers’ bundling of content is driving up the cost of cable packages beyond the most basic services, said Mediacom Group Vice President-Legal and Public Affairs Tom Larsen in meetings last week with FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, Media Bureau Chief Bill Lake, aides to Chairman Tom Wheeler, aides to Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, and Media Bureau and Office of General Counsel staff, said an ex-parte filing posted in RM 11728 Monday. Larsen discussed the arguments for limiting a content company’s ability to require bundles laid out in a Mediacom rulemaking petition (see 1410020048), and said the issue also makes it harder for cable operators to increase broadband capacity. “The cost demands associated with the programmers’ practices impeded expansion of broadband service into new areas,” Larsen said. Adopting rules preventing such practices is within FCC authority under the Communications Act, he said.