SB 108-20: Tinkering With Telecommunications Act (Passed) (user search)
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  SB 108-20: Tinkering With Telecommunications Act (Passed) (search mode)
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Author Topic: SB 108-20: Tinkering With Telecommunications Act (Passed)  (Read 2075 times)
Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
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Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

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« on: April 14, 2022, 02:44:34 PM »

AMENDMENT

Quote
TINKERING WITH TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT

To make the telecommunications industry work better for consumers

SECTION I: NAME
a. This law shall be known as the Tinkering with Telecommunications Act

SECTION II: SPECTRUM AVAILABILITY
a. The National Telecommunication and Information Agency (NTIA) and the Federal Communications Commission shall study and jointly publish a report by January 1, 2023 identifying all excess or underutilized federal electromagnetic spectrum frequencies unrelated to emergency frequencies. Such study shall include an analysis of excess “white space” between existing frequencies. On April 1, 2023, the NTIA shall conduct public auctions for ten (10) year rights to those spectrum frequencies identified in the report.
b. The sales terms of the auction shall include a provision that the spectrum leaseholder must utilize or sell their spectrum frequency within the first eighteen (18) months of acquisition or else the rights to the spectrum frequency revert back to federal management. Upon such reversion, a new auction for the frequency shall be held within six (6) months upon the same terms as the first.
c. Bidders at an auction conducted in accordance with this act shall not be subject to any aggregation limits on their potential purchases.
d. Any auctioned spectrum frequencies in the 14.0-14.5-GHz Band shall be reserved for bidders who certify that such frequency shall be used in the provision of internet services to aircraft.
e. The 70CM Band shall be reserved for public use by amateur radio licensees.
f. Nothing in federal law shall be interpreted as prohibiting persons from using satellites in the dissemination of signals along appropriately leased frequencies, provided such signals do not interfere with other frequencies to which that person does not have an agreement to interfere with
g. The FCC shall be prohibited from blocking or interfering with secondary sales of spectrum frequencies purchased at auction.

h. f. The regulation granting automatic roaming rights to cell phone carriers shall be amended to exclude cell phone carriers who already own spectrum rights in the specific market area.
i. g. The regulation purporting to remove local authority for cell tower siting is hereby eliminated. FCC's Small Cell Siting Declaratory Ruling "Accelerating Broadband deployment" WT Docket No. 17-79 and 17-84 (2018) is hereby rescinded.
j. The FCC shall classify Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) as broadband for the purposes of rulemaking.

SECTION III: TELEVISION CHANNELS
a. Cable and Satellite companies that have purchased the right to air a sporting event across their network shall not be required to may not “black out” or refuse to air that sporting event in specific geographic markets.
b. Cable providers may continued to carry broadcast stations on an interim basis during disputes over retransmission consent fees.
c. Satellite and cable providers shall be prohibited from refusing to offer a la carte packages of available content channels to subscribers provider provided the subscriber selects a minimum of ten (10) two (2) channels.
d. Media companies shall be prohibited from requiring cable and satellite providers to carry specific cable channels in order to obtain broadcast stations.
e. All fees and/or surcharges charged by television providers in addition to the base subscription fee (including but not limited to service fees, applicable federal, state, and local taxes, equipment rental fees, supplementary fees, Regional Sports fees, DVR charges, Broadcast TV fees, capital fees, franchise fees, and FCC administration fees) shall be disclosed at the time of subscription, and must be included in any price advertised to consumers.
f. Any additional fees, increases in existing fees, and increases in subscription costs introduced by television providers must be disclosed to any affected subscribers with twenty-four (24) months' advance notice, and providers must deliver said notice through subscribers' preferred communication method at each of the following intervals:

  • twenty-four (24) months prior to aforementioned changes;
  • twelve (12) months prior to aforementioned changes;
  • six (6) months prior to aforementioned changes;
  • three (3) months prior to aforementioned changes, and;
  • one (1) month prior to aforementioned changes;

g. The advertisement of promotional subscription rates for internet and television services shall be prohibited unless said promotional rates are effective indefinitely throughout the entire duration of a subscriber's relationship with the provider.
h. All internet and television providers must provide subscribers with the ability to, at any time, cancel, suspend with no fee, or modify their subscription through an online portal.
i. Internet and television providers shall be prohibited from charging early contract termination or cancellation fees exceeding $39.



SECTION IV: FCC REFORM
a. All of the separate reports that the FCC is required to make to Congress each year shall be consolidated into one large report due on the harmonized date of the first workday of the new year.
b. Beginning in FY 2023 the following programs shall be eliminated:
   1. Broadband Opportunities Program
   2. Lifeline Program
   3. Public Safety Interoperable System Grant Program
   4. Public Telecommunications Facilities Program
   5. Technology Opportunities Program
c. On January 1, 2023 The NTIA and all of its duties shall be consolidated into the FCC.

d.
a. E-Rate Applicants shall be permitted to file physical copies of their application until January 1, 2023.

SECTION V: TIME
a. Unless otherwise provided herein, this act shall take effect immediately.

I see no real justification here for folding the NTIA into the FCC, nor do I see a reason for elimininating programs which seek to expand broadband access. Not to mention that putting all the reports in a single document seems to only serve to make it HARDER to access them.

Additionally, II.f and g seem like needlessly hasty swooping changes likely to tilt the scales even further in favor of telecomms megacorporations.

Also added further consumer protections to ensure that everyone has the ability to watch local sports games, and provide consumers with more choice in their TV subscriptions.

And DSL is not broadband, stop lowering the bar and give people the good, high-quality modern internet service they deserve.
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #1 on: April 15, 2022, 12:13:49 AM »


Witness the Federalist contempt for the common man! What kind of monster opposes getting rid of sports blackouts and hidden fees? Must be a telecomms shill.
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #2 on: April 15, 2022, 12:49:43 AM »


Witness the Federalist contempt for the common man! What kind of monster opposes getting rid of sports blackouts and hidden fees? Must be a telecomms shill.

What planet do you live on?

What planet do you live on? What do you even find objectionable here?
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #3 on: April 15, 2022, 12:53:59 AM »


Witness the Federalist contempt for the common man! What kind of monster opposes getting rid of sports blackouts and hidden fees? Must be a telecomms shill.

What planet do you live on?

What planet do you live on? What do you even find objectionable here?

You must live on redtape planet Wink

And you live on the island that got saddled with 25 Mbit/s intercrap that took 11 years to finish, no wonder you think DSL is broadband.
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #4 on: April 20, 2022, 11:01:17 AM »
« Edited: April 20, 2022, 11:04:50 AM by Stop Fetishizing Fascists »

Submitting a revised amendment pending the failure of the previous amendment.

Quote
TINKERING WITH TELECOMMUNICATIONS ACT

To make the telecommunications industry work better for consumers

SECTION I: NAME
a. This law shall be known as the Tinkering with Telecommunications Act

SECTION II: SPECTRUM AVAILABILITY
a. The National Telecommunication and Information Agency (NTIA) and the Federal Communications Commission shall study and jointly publish a report by January 1, 2023 identifying all excess or underutilized federal electromagnetic spectrum frequencies unrelated to emergency frequencies. Such study shall include an analysis of excess “white space” between existing frequencies. On April 1, 2023, the NTIA shall conduct public auctions for ten (10) year rights to those spectrum frequencies identified in the report.
b. The sales terms of the auction shall include a provision that the spectrum leaseholder must utilize or sell their spectrum frequency within the first eighteen (18) months of acquisition or else the rights to the spectrum frequency revert back to federal management. Upon such reversion, a new auction for the frequency shall be held within six (6) months upon the same terms as the first.
c. Bidders at an auction conducted in accordance with this act shall not be subject to any aggregation limits on their potential purchases.
d. Any auctioned spectrum frequencies in the 14.0-14.5-GHz Band shall be reserved for bidders who certify that such frequency shall be used in the provision of internet services to aircraft.
e. The 70CM Band shall be reserved for public use by amateur radio licensees.
f. Nothing in federal law shall be interpreted as prohibiting persons from using satellites in the dissemination of signals along appropriately leased frequencies, provided that all: such signals do not interfere with other frequencies to which that person does not have an agreement to interfere with;

  • such satellites do not cause harmful interference to other authorized users of the radio frequency spectrum;
  • satellite operators conduct missions from the lowest possible altitudes, in order to minimize the time satellites are illuminated, in accordance with 6.4.1.1.R12 of the IAU's 2020 Satellite Constellation Report;
  • such satellites reflect sunlight at an intensity fainter than 7.0 Vmag+2.5 × log(SatAltitude / 550 km), or equivalently, 44 ×(550 km / SatAltitude) watts/steradian, as recorded by high etendue (effective area × field of view), large-aperture ground-based telescopes, as suggested in 6.4.1.1.R15 of the IAU's 2020 Satellite Constellation Report;
  • satellite operators provide astronomers with pre-launch predictions and timely post-launch confirmations of the initial deployment orbits for satellites, in accordance with 6.4.1.1.R18 of the IAU's 2020 Satellite Constellation Report;
  • satellite operators maintain and make available to astronomers, satellite ephemeris predictions with a sky location precision of arcseconds and a time precision of a tenth of a second, up to 12 hours in advance, in accordance with 6.4.1.1.R19 of the IAU's 2020 Satellite Constellation Report;

g. The FCC shall be prohibited from blocking or interfering with secondary sales of spectrum frequencies purchased at auction.
h. The regulation granting automatic roaming rights to cell phone carriers shall be amended to exclude cell phone carriers who already own spectrum rights in the specific market area.
i. The regulation purporting to remove local authority for cell tower siting is hereby eliminated. FCC's Small Cell Siting Declaratory Ruling "Accelerating Broadband deployment" WT Docket No. 17-79 and 17-84 (2018) is hereby rescinded.
j. The FCC shall classify Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) as broadband for the purposes of rulemaking.

SECTION III: TELEVISION CHANNELS
a. Cable and Satellite companies that have purchased the right to air a sporting event across their network shall not be required to may not “black out” or refuse to air that sporting event in specific geographic markets.
b. Cable providers may continued to carry broadcast stations on an interim basis during disputes over retransmission consent fees.
c. Satellite and cable providers shall be prohibited from refusing to offer a la carte packages of available content channels to subscribers provider provided the subscriber selects a minimum of ten (10) two (2) channels.
d. Media companies shall be prohibited from requiring cable and satellite providers to carry specific cable channels in order to obtain broadcast stations.
e. All fees and/or surcharges charged by television providers in addition to the base subscription fee (including but not limited to service fees, applicable federal, state, and local taxes, equipment rental fees, supplementary fees, Regional Sports fees, DVR charges, Broadcast TV fees, capital fees, franchise fees, and FCC administration fees) shall be disclosed at the time of subscription, and must be included in any price advertised to consumers.
f. Any additional fees, increases in existing fees, and increases in subscription costs introduced by television providers must be disclosed to any affected subscribers with six (6) months' advance notice, and providers must deliver said notice through subscribers' preferred communication method at each of the following intervals:

  • six (6) months prior to aforementioned changes;
  • three (3) months prior to aforementioned changes, and;
  • one (1) month prior to aforementioned changes;

g. The advertisement of promotional subscription rates for internet and television services shall be prohibited unless said promotional rates are effective indefinitely throughout the entire duration of a subscriber's relationship with the provider.
h. All internet and television providers must provide subscribers with the ability to, at any time, cancel, suspend with no fee, or modify their subscription through an online portal.
i. Internet and television providers shall be prohibited from charging early contract termination or cancellation fees exceeding $39.



SECTION IV: FCC REFORM
a. All of the separate reports that the FCC is required to make to Congress each year shall be consolidated into one large report due on the harmonized date of the first workday of the new year.

b. Beginning in FY 2023 the following programs shall be eliminated:
   1. Broadband Opportunities Program
   2. Lifeline Program
   3. Public Safety Interoperable System Grant Program
   4. Public Telecommunications Facilities Program
   5. Technology Opportunities Program
c. On January 1, 2023 The NTIA and all of its duties shall be consolidated into the FCC.

d.a. E-Rate Applicants shall be permitted to file physical copies of their application until January 1, 2023.

SECTION V: TIME
a. Unless otherwise provided herein, this act shall take effect immediately.

I remain unconvinced of the merit of abolishing the NTIA, and DSL is still not broadband.

The IAU's 2020 Satellite Constellation Report can be found in Section 6 of the following report, for your perusal: https://www.iau.org/static/publications/dqskies-book-29-12-20.pdf
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #5 on: April 20, 2022, 11:05:25 AM »

Nay on the previous amendment, see revised version above.
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Pedocon Theory is not a theory
CalamityBlue
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 836


Political Matrix
E: -7.94, S: -8.61

P

« Reply #6 on: May 06, 2022, 11:45:48 AM »

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