Daily Digest 6/8/2021 (Copyright and the Digital Divide)

Benton Institute for Broadband & Society
Table of Contents

Digital Inclusion

Pew's Home Broadband 2021 Survey  |  Read below  |  Mike Conlow  |  Analysis  |  Mike Conlow
New ways needed for closing digital divides?  |  Read below  |  Bronwyn Howell  |  Op-Ed  |  American Enterprise Institute
If Not Overturned, a Bad Copyright Decision Will Lead Many Americans to Lose Internet Access  |  Read below  |  Mitch Stoltz, Lara Ellenberg  |  Analysis  |  Electronic Frontier Foundation
USAC Unveils EBB Enrollments and Claims Tracker — Over 2.3M Have Enrolled. See Breakdown by State  |  Universal Service Administrative Company
AT&T Wants Emergency Broadband Benefit Subsidies for Its Broadband Public Utilities in 21 States  |  Bruce Kushnick
Op-ed: Don’t Kill Remote Learning. Black and Brown Families Need It.  |  New York Times

Elections & Media

Op-Ed | Former President Trump's Failed Blog Proves He Was Just Howling Into the Void  |  Wired

Policymakers

Sen Schatz Leads Group Of 20 Sens In Calling On Federal Agencies To Share Data, Work Together To Expand Access To High-Speed Internet  |  Read below  |  Sen Brian Schatz (D-HI)  |  Letter  |  US Senate
White House hires broadband expert Lisa Hone  |  Read below  |  Kim Hart  |  Axios
Sen. Jon Tester Walks Blue Line in Solid Red Montana  |  Wall Street Journal

Company News

Google to Pay $270 Million to Settle Antitrust Charges in France  |  New York Times
Apple’s Tim Cook Kicks Off WWDC by Doubling Down on Privacy  |  Wall Street Journal
Apple Isn't Just a Walled Garden, It's a Carrier  |  Vox
Amazon is about to share your Internet connection with neighbors. Here’s how to turn it off.  |  Washington Post
Today's Top Stories

Digital Inclusion

Pew's Home Broadband 2021 Survey

Mike Conlow  |  Analysis  |  Mike Conlow

Pew Research Center released their latest “Mobile Technology and Home Broadband 2021” survey, which is one of the authoritative reports on broadband adoption. What will probably get some attention is the breakdowns of the non-adopters of broadband. The largest group is the 27% who haven’t adopted broadband because the cost of the service or devices is too high. Behind that is “smartphone does everything I need” and “other options for internet access outside of home” with 19% and 9% respectively. In my view, these responses are virtually indistinguishable from “cost is too high”. They aren’t saying they don’t want broadband in the home. They’re saying they would not derive enough utility from it to justify the cost given other options. It is likely that these respondents would be broadband subscribers at a lower price, or if they were more able to derive benefits from the service.

New ways needed for closing digital divides?

Bronwyn Howell  |  Op-Ed  |  American Enterprise Institute

As America gears up for President Joe Biden’s (trimmed down) $65 billion plan to connect every American to affordable high-speed internet, almost inevitably the focus turns to rolling out infrastructure — notably terrestrial fiber — into unserved (or underserved), predominantly rural communities. Yet the focus on building more infrastructure glosses over the reality that the number of urban households without an internet connection — despite some of the world’s best infrastructure passing their doors — exceeds the number of unconnected rural households by a ratio of nearly three to one (13.6 million versus 4.6 million). Addressing this urban access divide will not be achieved by the usual means of subsidizing operators to connect the unconnected — even when the subsidized network is owned by a municipality or other nonprofit entity. 

If the barriers to household connection are economic, then the logical solution is to fund the household, not the network operator. The concept of funding beneficiaries rather than network providers is not new. [With the Emergency Broadband Benefit in effect] what is now offered is the chance to make these sorts of subsidies permanent features of welfare plans, rather than one-off opportunities to make step changes in infrastructure availability. As with access to food and health care funds, broadband access for low-income households must be properly, securely, and sustainably funded over time and not reliant upon one-off ad-hoc interventions to suit other political and fiscal needs.

[Bronwyn Howell is an adjunct scholar at the American Enterprise Institute]

If Not Overturned, a Bad Copyright Decision Will Lead Many Americans to Lose Internet Access

Mitch Stoltz, Lara Ellenberg  |  Analysis  |  Electronic Frontier Foundation

In going after internet service providers (ISPs) for the actions of just a few of their users, Sony Music, other major record labels, and music publishing companies have found a way to cut people off of the internet based on mere accusations of copyright infringement. When these music companies sued Cox Communications, an ISP, the court got the law wrong. It effectively decided that the only way for an ISP to avoid being liable for infringement by its users is to terminate a household or business’s account after a small number of accusations—perhaps only two. The court also allowed a damages formula that can lead to nearly unlimited damages, with no relationship to any actual harm suffered. If not overturned, this decision will lead to an untold number of people losing vital internet access as ISPs start to cut off more and more customers to avoid massive damages.

EFF, together with the Center for Democracy & Technology, the American Library Association, the Association of College and Research Libraries, the Association of Research Libraries, and Public Knowledge filed an amicus brief urging the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit to protect internet subscribers’ access to essential internet services by overturning the district court’s decision.

Policymakers

Sen Schatz Leads Group Of 20 Sens In Calling On Federal Agencies To Share Data, Work Together To Expand Access To High-Speed Internet

Sen Brian Schatz (D-HI)  |  Letter  |  US Senate

Sen Brian Schatz (D-HI) led a group of 20 senators in calling on the leaders of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to share data to identify communities without high-speed internet access and work together to improve broadband connectivity. In a letter to the agency leaders, the senators also called on them to collaborate and find ways to ensure families in need also have information on accessing Lifeline, an existing federal phone and internet service program. “We urge HUD and USDA to use their resources to help promote the Lifeline program through existing outreach to public housing agencies and schools. HUD, USDA and the FCC should also collaborate on what additional information they could share with each other to make enrollment in the Lifeline program easier,” the senators wrote.

White House hires broadband expert Lisa Hone

Kim Hart  |  Axios

Lisa Hone, a longtime Federal Communications Commission attorney with deep expertise in broadband policy, has joined the National Economic Council team to steer the Biden administration's broadband expansion efforts. Hone's primary focus is ensuring that money Congress allocated through the American Rescue Plan Act is spent appropriately. Hone, who officially started her job as senior adviser for broadband and technology policy the week of May 31, is now the White House's point person on broadband deployment efforts happening across the government. She reports to Bharat Ramamurti, the NEC deputy director working on broadband as part of his broader portfolio. She works with Tim Wu and Hannah Garden-Monheit, whose portfolios also include broadband policy.

During her FCC career, Hone led the modernization of the FCC's E-Rate program providing subsidies to connect K-12 schools and libraries to high-speed internet. At the FCC, Hone held many leadership roles in the bureau responsible for wireline broadband, and was a legal adviser to Chairman Tom Wheeler during the Obama administration.

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Benton (www.benton.org) provides the only free, reliable, and non-partisan daily digest that curates and distributes news related to universal broadband, while connecting communications, democracy, and public interest issues. Posted Monday through Friday, this service provides updates on important industry developments, policy issues, and other related news events. While the summaries are factually accurate, their sometimes informal tone may not always represent the tone of the original articles. Headlines are compiled by Kevin Taglang (headlines AT benton DOT org) and Robbie McBeath (rmcbeath AT benton DOT org) — we welcome your comments.


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