Ida. Dept. of Consumer Affairs began accepting names for its no-call list under 2000 state law that will take effect May 2. Ida. charges $10 registration fee for first 3 years on list, plus $5 renewal fee to keep name on list another 3 years. Ida. Attorney Gen. Albert Lance and Gov. Dirk Kempthorne were among first to sign onto list Tues., along with legislative leaders. Those who register by March 31 will be on first list published in April. Those who miss deadline will be on first quarterly update in July. Violators face penalties of $500 per call on first offense and up to $5,000 per call for subsequent offenses. Ida.’s no-call law exempts calls from tax-exempt nonprofit organizations and from businesses calling their established customers.
Four major MSOs swapped or purchased cable systems from one another as new year began, furthering trend toward industry consolidation that has snowballed in last 3 years. Adelphia, AT&T Broadband, Comcast and Mediacom all announced system exchanges or acquisitions that would result in 2.4 million subscribers, or more than 3% of all U.S. cable customers, changing corporate hands overnight. Transactions will create even bigger cable clusters in such large markets as N.Y.C., L.A., Washington, Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia, Atlanta, southeastern Fla. But some industry observers said deals, concluded as FCC continued to weigh final govt. approval of AOL’s pending purchase of Time Warner (TW), would lead to even more as scale became ever more important. “Cable consolidation is not over,” ABN AMRO analyst John Martin said.
Portugal Telecom’s mobile business arm signed letter of intent Wed. to select Alcatel to provide multimedia technology. Alcatel will install infrastructure for 1,000-site UMTS/3G network. Company guaranteed high-speed, high-quality mobile UMTS service would start Dec. 1, 2001.
Cal. Gov. Gray Davis (D) declined to name immediate replacement for PUC Comr. Josiah Neeper, who left agency Jan.1 when his term expired. Political observers in Cal. said Davis might have delayed appointment to ensure bipartisan vote this week on controversial proposal for major emergency increase in retail electric rates. State’s 2 largest electric utilities say boost is necessary to stave off imminent bankruptcy due to soaring wholesale electric prices. Utilities say they need 30% boost, with PUC reportedly prepared to grant up to 20% in vote this week. Departure of Neeper leaves PUC with 2-2 partisan split. Observers said that if Davis had filled Neeper’s seat, his appointees would form PUC majority and his administration would bear all political heat for rate boost.
Arianespace announced twice-delayed launch of Turksat 2A/Eurasiasat 1 on Flight 137 was rescheduled for Jan. 8 in 5:18 p.m.-7:26 p.m. ET window, after authorizing resumption of launch preparations Wed. Arianespace delayed 2nd launch when Alcatel Space, primary contractor for satellite payload, requested verifications Dec. 11 after Arianespace ran its own set for Dec. 11 rescheduling.
Tex. PUC Comr. Judy Walsh resigns to take position with President-elect Bush’s energy policy development team; she will stay on until Tex. Gov. Rick Perry (R) appoints replacement to fill remaining 3 years of her term. Walsh was first appointed to PUC in 1995 by then Gov. Bush… WorldCom names Donna Sorgi, northern region public policy vp, to head its Washington-based federal regulatory group… Rosemary Kimball moves from FCC Office of Media Relations to press liaison at agency’s Consumer Information Bureau… Douglas Hanson, CEO, Internet Commerce & Communications, named CompTel chmn., replacing Global Crossing’s Anthony Cassara, who stepped down… Named partners in Wiley, Rein & Fielding law firm: Mary Borja, John Burgett, Tanja Hens, Scott McCaleb and Suzanne Yelen; named of counsel to firm are Christopher Kelly, ex-U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, and David Southall, ex-Information Management Consultants.
Congress returned Wed. and immediately began wrangling over its rules and makeup for 107th session. Democrats questioned Republican plan to break off financial services oversight from the House Commerce Committee and give it to Banking Committee to resolve battle for Commerce leadership between Reps. Tauzin (R- La.) and Oxley (R-O.) (CD Jan 3 p1). However, it appeared at our deadline proposal would pass. Another unsettled issue in both houses was what percentage of each panel’s seats would belong to Democratic minority. In House, Democrats agitated for ratio closer to current 221-211 party breakdown (51-49%). Last year, Republicans held 29 of 53 Commerce Committee seats (54.7%) and 21 of 37 Judiciary positions (56.8%), and Democrats said they should get 2 more on each panel. GOP leaders offered counterproposal under which each party would get one additional seat on each major committee. Meanwhile, Democrats in Senate continued to push for equal representation on committees since chamber is split 50-50. Last year, Republicans held 11 of 20 Commerce seats (55%) and 10 of 18 on Judiciary (55.6%). GOP in House was expected to begin naming chairmen today (Thurs.), but committee assignments can’t be finalized until agreement is reached on panel ratios.
MPAA filed several major objections to CableLabs’ full final draft of its anticopying technology license for advanced digital cable set-top boxes, signaling that fight over controversial encryption technology wasn’t over (CD Dec 29 p1). In comments submitted to FCC late last month, MPAA said it was “concerned with a number” of provisions in POD Host Interface License Agreement (PHILA) and was “uncertain as to how some of these and other provisions will work in practice.” Group said its concerns included technology’s: (1) “Apparent ineffective protection against unauthorized Internet retransmission of all content, including broadcast.” (2) “Unprotected high-resolution output of most categories of content from those devices.” (3) “Copying and permanent storage in those devices of all content, including high- value content, which individual copyright owners and cable operators may have voluntarily negotiated to treat as ‘copy never.'” To ease such concerns, MPAA said “the only alternative” for cable operators would be to “turn off the OpenCable box” and prevent DTV programming from reaching consumers. It said such result “would have a negative effect on consumer expectations, particularly if they were not given adequate notice from equipment manufacturers.” MPAA said it would continue to work through those and other issues with CableLabs and 5C companies “in a prompt, good-faith and constructive manner.”
VoiceStream is partnering with RealNames to provide keyword wireless Web searching for Web-enabled cellphones. For example, typing in Zagat instead of full URL would take user directly to Web site. New Internet address system uses network of routers and proprietary “in-memory” databases created by RealNames that basically is “layered” over Internet, said Chief Technical Officer Nico Popp. In Nov., RealNames partnered with Phone.com, mobile internet software maker, by putting RealNames Keyword Navigation System on Phone.com’s UP.Link server. RealNames key word system is multilingual -- Japanese Kangi, for instance can be entered into system, Popp said.
Me. PUC opened docket to consider replacing current nonoptional extended local calling plans with optional programs customers can select. Currently, extended local calling surcharges become mandatory if majority of local customers want expansion and PUC approves. PUC said Tues. it was considering replacing current system with either selective extended calling, where customer may add one or more distant exchanges to local area for flat monthly fee per exchange or contiguous extended calling, where customer can add groups of contiguous distant exchanges for flat monthly fees. PUC will hold Jan. 31 workshop with industry to address implementation issues such as intercarrier compensation, specific rates and terms for customers, whether extended calling should be time-unlimited.