Tag Archives: Regulator

Court rules that Cox did not violate Verizon’s VoIP patents.

Cox Communications has won a court victory over Verizon as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that the Atlanta-based cable MSO did not violate the RBOC’s telephone network patents.
The Appeals court upheld an earlier U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia ruling that a number of Verizon’s claims over six patents were invalid. Verizon filed a lawsuit in January 2008 arguing that Cox infringed on six VoIP-related packet technology patents. The court additionally found that Cox did not violate two other patents as Verizon alleged in its suit.
Although Verizon’s Verizon Deputy General Counsel John Thorne said in an email statement that it would continue to promote its “innovations through patent licensing as well as monitor for unlawful infringement,” the service hasn’t announced whether it would appeal the ruling.

Cox Communications has won a court victory over Verizon as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that the Atlanta-based cable MSO did not violate the RBOC’s telephone network patents.
The Appeals court upheld an earlier U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia ruling that a number of Verizon’s claims over six patents were invalid. Verizon filed a lawsuit in January 2008 arguing that Cox infringed on six VoIP-related packet technology patents. The court additionally found that Cox did not violate two other patents as Verizon alleged in its suit.
Although Verizon’s Verizon Deputy General Counsel John Thorne said in an email statement that it would continue to promote its “innovations through patent licensing as well as monitor for unlawful infringement,” the service hasn’t announced whether it would appeal the ruling.

Reuters: 2-Appeals court backs Cox in Verizon patent spat.

Deep Dive into National Broadband Plan.

FCC To Think Over Its Authority
Congress has been able to get an initial look at the FCC’s broadband plan, the House Subcommittee on Communications this week is going to examine how it addresses the “broadband availability gap.”
This Thursday’s “The National Broadband Plan: Deploying Quality Broadband Services to the Last Mile” hearing is one of many the subcommittee will hold to review specific elements of the plan. This week the focus will center on chapters 4, 6 and 8 that relate to the broadband plan’s availability provisions.
The subcommittee will talk with the FCC about how the broadband plan addresses what effect universal service, pole attachments and rights of way, municipal networks, speed and price and competition policy issues have on expanding broadband services to “underserved” and “unserved” communities.

Congress has been able to get an initial look at the FCC’s broadband plan, the House Subcommittee on Communications this week is going to examine how it addresses the “broadband availability gap.”
This Thursday’s “The National Broadband Plan: Deploying Quality Broadband Services to the Last Mile” hearing is one of many the subcommittee will hold to review specific elements of the plan. This week the focus will center on chapters 4, 6 and 8 that relate to the broadband plan’s availability provisions.
The subcommittee will talk with the FCC about how the broadband plan addresses what effect universal service, pole attachments and rights of way, municipal networks, speed and price and competition policy issues have on expanding broadband services to “underserved” and “unserved” communities.

Broadcasting & Cable: House To Drill Down Into Broadband Plan.

Comcast wins. But we could all lose. Comcast over FCC!

Court Says FCC Doesn’t Have the Power to Enforce Net Neutrality!

A federal appeals court just ruled on Comcast’s lawsuit to get the FCC’s p2p blocking ban overturned—that the FCC doesn’t have the power to tell Comcast, or any ISP, to be net neutral.

The National Cable and Telecommunications Association is shitting themselves with glee, meantime:

“The Court correctly ruled that a specific order by the previous FCC was wrong. We cannot state strongly enough that this decision will change nothing about the cable industry’s longstanding commitment to provide consumers the best possible broadband experience. Nor does the ruling alter the government’s current ability to protect consumers. We continue to embrace a free and open Internet as the right policy and will continue to work with the Commission and other policymakers and stakeholders to find a sound way of preserving that goal.”

Case Study

Court rules FCC can’t tell Comcast how to manageWeb traffic

  • 2004

Feb. 8: Then-FCC Chairman Michael Powell introduces a set of consumer protections—dubbed the ‘Four Freedoms’—that Internet providers should follow.

  • 2007

Oct: Reports surface that Comcast is interfering with consumers’ ability to download files from file-sharing services like BitTorrent.

  • 2008

Jan: FCC opens investigation.

March: Comcast says it will change its network-management practices and stop slowing peer-to-peer Internet traffic.

Aug: FCC says Comcast violated its Internet principles. It orders the company to change its policies but doesn’t fine Comcast.

Sept: Comcast appeals, saying the FCC’s net-neutrality principles aren’t enforceable.

  • 2009

Sept: FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski proposes formal net neutrality rules, which would also apply to wireless Internet providers.

  • 2010

April: U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit strikes down FCC’s Comcast order, saying that the agency exceeded its authority.

Source: Wall Street Journal.

Sprint, Clearwire among companies asking for TD-LTE standard in WiMAX spectrum.

Clearwire now appears to be taking a very active role in developing an LTE-based standard that could supplant WiMAX in its 2.6GHz spectrum should the need arise. Along with Motorola, Huawei, ZTE, Cisco, Nokia Siemens, Alcatel-Lucent, and — surprise, surprise — Clearwire partner Sprint, the company is asking the 3GPP to define a standard for running TD-LTE in the 2.6GHz slot. Unlike the more commonly-used FD-LTE — the standard Verizon is using, among others — TD-LTE operates unpaired, meaning it can operate in slimmer chunks of spectrum than its counterpart. Asking for a standard is clearly a far cry from actually building out a network, but it’s interesting to note that Clearwire and Sprint alike both have their eyes firmly fixed on an LTE-based technology if the WiMAX industry packs it in.

Mobile Business Briefing: Report: Industry giants back US TD-LTE move.

Telecom Egypt loses revenue, government helps by banning international VoIP.

State-owned Telecom Egypt hasn’t been doing well lately, last week announcing 2009 voice call revenues dropped 13 percent from the year prior. It’s not hard to see cheap/free VoIP calling as a primary reason, and so what do you do if you’re a state-run commercial enterprise trying to make a profit? Why, you make the competition illegal of course. Egypt has specifically banned mobile international calls made through VoIP, immediately affecting the country’s three mobile carriers (Vodafone, Mobinil, and Etisalat). However, according to the AFP the law states that “all international calls must pass through state-owned Egypt Telecom,” meaning at-home Skypers would also be out of luck. For its part Skype believes that ” it should be up to consumers, not regulatory authorities, to choose the winners and losers in the communications space.” We’re guessing its customers would agree, but we’re still waiting for their response.

Yahoo News: Egypt bans international IP voice calls.

China partially blocks Google search results from Hong Kong. This thing is far from over.

China has now responded by whipping its state computers into a filtering frenzy, blocking and censoring out content it considers objectionable from Google’s HK-based search results. Adding to its show of strength, it’s expected the Chinese government’s influence will also result in China Mobile canceling a deal to have Google as its default search provider on mobile handsets. We suppose it’s Google’s turn to respond now.

National Broadband Plan is here:

The plan details how the FCC will work to bring voice and broadband internet services to as many Americans as possible. The plan includes both wireline and wireless components. On the wireless side, the FCC is formally requesting that 500MHz of spectrum be made available for wireless broadband services within 10 year’s time. It wants 300MHz to be available for mobile use in five years.

The FCC currently only has 50MHz of spectrum available to serve these needs. The FCC is considering incentives to convince current spectrum holders to offer their spectrum up for auction. The FCC wants there to be greater transparency in how spectrum is licensed, and also wants there to be specific allocations for unlicensed spectrum and the development of new wireless technologies. The FCC is also looking at numerous ways to decrease the cost of deploying wireless broadband services. It is looking at how infrastructure can play a role, such as access to rooftops, utility poles and other conduits for cell towers and repeaters. The FCC outlined six main goals for the broadband plan.

The main goal is to provide every American with access to broadband service of 100Mbps downloads and 50Mbps uploads, whether that be via wireline or wireless. The FCC believes the U.S. should lead the world in mobile broadband, and should have the fastest, largest network. The FCC also thinks that communities, government agencies, schools and healthcare facilities should have access to 1Gbps broadband. The FCC believes that its plan is possible to achieve without any new funding from the government. It says that all the necessary funds can be collected through additional auctions of wireless spectrum licenses.

he plan details how the FCC will work to bring voice and broadband internet services to as many Americans as possible. The plan includes both wireline and wireless components. On the wireless side, the FCC is formally requesting that 500MHz of spectrum be made available for wireless broadband services within 10 year’s time. It wants 300MHz to be available for mobile use in five years. The FCC currently only has 50MHz of spectrum available to serve these needs. The FCC is considering incentives to convince current spectrum holders to offer their spectrum up for auction. The FCC wants there to be greater transparency in how spectrum is licensed, and also wants there to be specific allocations for unlicensed spectrum and the development of new wireless technologies. The FCC is also looking at numerous ways to decrease the cost of deploying wireless broadband services. It is looking at how infrastructure can play a role, such as access to rooftops, utility poles and other conduits for cell towers and repeaters. The FCC outlined six main goals for the broadband plan. The main goal is to provide every American with access to broadband service of 100Mbps downloads and 50Mbps uploads, whether that be via wireline or wireless. The FCC believes the U.S. should lead the world in mobile broadband, and should have the fastest, largest network. The FCC also thinks that communities, government agencies, schools and healthcare facilities should have access to 1Gbps broadband. The FCC believes that its plan is possible to achieve without any new funding from the government. It says that all the necessary funds can be collected through additional auctions of wireless spectrum licenses.
FCC: Broadband Plan.

The FCC is trying to turn part of Wireless Spectrum into free internet service.

the FCC wants to dedicate a chunk of the wireless spectrum to providing free internet service.

The FCC plans to make its recommendation under the National Broadband Plan set for release next week, which has the goal of making broadband more affordable for everyone in America.

Of course, they didn’t, you know, say how they were going to do such a thing. And they’re going to have to claw that spectrum out of the cold, dead hands of telecom lobbyists. But you know what? Good for them for actually worrying about what people would benefit from instead of what gigantic telecoms want.

Reuters: U.S. considers some free wireless broadband service.

National Broadband Plan Previewed.

The Federal Communications Commission will seek to bring Internet speeds of 1 gigabit per second by 2020 to community institutions such as schools and government buildings, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said on Thursday.

Genachowski said the blueprint will set “dramatic, bold” goals to bring faster Internet speeds to American homes, including 100 megabits per second (Mbps) for 100 million U.S. households by 2020.

But Karl Bode of Broadband Reports is skeptical, while analyst Dave Burnstein says the plan accomplishes very little for affordability, quality, speed, or availability of broadband in the U.S.

Blair Levin, chief author of the National Broadband Plan yesterday defended it against recent attacks that it is overly broad, ambitious and unfeasible, reports Computer World. The final version is set for release March 17.

While the plan is not finalized, various specific pieces of it have been released by FCC officials in recent days, including one that asks TV broadcasters to voluntarily provide airwaves for wireless broadband. Broadcasters (who never paid the government a dime for their frequencies), would share profits gained from broadband use.

In the real world, money talks. The 90 MHz of AWS frequencies raised close to $14 Billion in 2006, while the 52 Mhz of 700MHz spectrum brought in almost $20 Billion for the Treasury, in 2008.

The FCC’s Broadband Plan also calls on Congress to spend up to $16 billion to create radio interoperability among emergency responders and suggests that another $9 billion be spent to extend fast Internet connections to rural areas.

Levin suggested the plan would make broadband Internet service eligible for the Universal Service Fund program. It now focuses on voice telecommunications. He also said the plan will require that Internet service providers offer specific minimum Internet speeds to be eligible for USF monies.

Net neutrality provisions will not be a part of the Broadband Plan, according to Levin, because of a separate FCC Open Internet Initiative. In turn, any legislative recommendations on net neutrality from the Open Internet Initiative will probably be considered by Congress in the Internet Freedom Preservation legislation and related bills.

“A 100 meg is just a dream,” Qwest Chief Executive Edward Mueller told Reuters. “We don’t think the customer wants that.”

Of course 100 Mbps (mobile) and 1 Gbps (fixed) isthe very definition of “4G” by the ITU.

WiMAX 2.0 (due for commercial implementation next year) and LTE Advanced (arriving sometime later), are defined as delivering 100 Mbps (mobile) and 1 Gbps (fixed).

It sounds like a bold initiative on the part of the FCC. But Clearwire already expects to cover 120 million homes in the United States by the end of this year. They’ll move towards WiMAX 2.0 beginning in 2011. The upgrade can deliver up to 120 Mbps out of the box. Beceem’s new BCS500 4G chip supports WiMAX 16e and 16m as well as LTE, while Samsung has operational 802.16m basestations.

Perhaps WiMAX 2.0, which promises a fixed 1 Gbps service, would deliver an effective 100 Mbps (at home) while 100 Mbps (mobile) might deliver an effective 20 Mbps service. That’s about four times the speed of today’s WiMax system and what WiMAX 2 aims to deliver. They’ve got the bandwidth to do it.

The tricky bit is bringing slow moving (but politically powerful) cellular operators up to speed. It’s all about spectrum. If you need three, 20 MHz sectors, that might require some 60 MHz per tower. That’s a total of 180 MHz for three wireless carriers. The UHF band might supply a lot of that bandwidth, especially if broadcasters were moved to VHF Channel 2-13. Not many cities can support more than 10 over-the-air broadcast stations. Unlicensed use of “white spaces” might utilize unused frequencies.

Currently group owners splatter the airwaves on UHF Channels 14 (470-476 Mhz) through Channel 51 (692-698 Mhz). That’s over 200 MHz. Recall that the 50 MHz auctioned from the upper 700MHz band in 2008 brought in nearly $20 Billion. That seems to indicate that 200 Mhz of UHF spectrum would be worth around $80 Billion.

If cellular operators’ complaints about spectrum shortage are to be believed, then an auction of all UHF spectrum could be a windfall that cannot be ignored…by this or any government. And while were at it, why not provide 1 Mbps to every citizen…at no charge. It should be a right of all citizens in the global village. Like clean air. Like tv.

Reuters: Federal Communications Commission will seek to bring Internet speeds of 1 gigabit per second by 2020
Broadband.gov: National Broadband Plan.
Computer World: FCC broadband czar defends national plan.

No kidding. Bangladesh ISPs Licences to be scrapped if found running VoIP!

The chief telecom regulation authority in Bangladesh will cancel the license of any Internet service provider (ISP) found running an illegal VoIP business in the country.

A “zero tolerance policy” is in effect. After raids last week, the authorities shut down one ISP and seized equipment used for the illegal activities

In February the Bangladesh Telecommunication and Regulatory Commission (BTRC) issued three international gateway (IGW) licenses to companies for the purpose of routing international incoming and outgoing calls through VoIP. However, the three IGW operators can’t handle the VoIP call volume being generated within and routed to the country, resulting in a booming grey market. About 25 percent of IGW calls are being routed successfully, said one source.

About 11 million minutes of calls go to and from Bangladesh every day, with 90 percent made by expatriates living around the world and calling home. With over 200 authorized ISPs in the country, a little illegal VoIP on the side is quite tempting, especially since they can charge 2.5 cents per minute – undercutting 4 cent rates charged by IGW licensees.

Bangladesh regulators have had a long-running battle to control VoIP within the country. Phone minutes are a good source of revenue for the government.

Daily Star: BTRC takes tough line on rogue ISPs.