The Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Cybersecurity and Communications gave CenturyLink a task order to provide Einstein 3 Accelerated intrusion prevention security services to federal civilian agencies, the company said Monday. DHS’s Einstein program measures network traffic patterns to indicate possible malicious cyberactivity, CenturyLink said. DHS gave the company the one-year task order in 2013. The new task order asks the telco to provide additional managed security services beyond those included in the original task order by integrating with CenturyLink systems specifically designed to provide cybersecurity services for federal agencies, the company said.
Frontier Communications said it’s offering a “Threebie” bundle of broadband, cable and voice services through Dec. 31 that includes a three-year guarantee that broadband service for bundle subscribers will cost $19.99 per month with a qualifying voice service. “Through most of this year, Frontier included a two-year price guarantee on Internet and phone,” said Frontier Executive Vice President Cecilia McKenney in a Thursday news release. Frontier said it’s also offering identity protection service to its customers. The $9.99-per-month Frontier Secure service will secure a subscriber’s personal financial information, along with offering credit bureau monitoring and lost wallet services. “High-profile data breaches at major retailers in 2014 prove that protection from financial fraud is more important than ever,” McKenney said.
The FCC Public Safety Bureau asked for comment on whether the agency should drop more than 30 seemingly “dormant” proceedings, launched between 2002 and 2006. The comment deadline will be sent when the notice is published in the Federal Register. The bureau “seeks to determine whether the long-term pending filings listed in the Attachment are candidates for dismissal because the items either have been abandoned, are no longer of interest to the filing party, or for which no further action is required or contemplated,” the Friday notice said.
Some 21 million smart home devices will be sold this year, and ADT and AT&T are the best known among consumers as service providers for such products, said a white paper released Friday from CEA and Parks Associates. The number of total devices will grow to 25 million next year, 30 million in 2016 and 36 million in 2017, the report said. Fueling the growth is the increased penetration of broadband in homes, said the white paper, predicting that by the end of this year, 79 percent of U.S. households will be connected to the Internet, and 80 percent of those will have a working home network. Broadband connectivity has led to a new generation of smart home devices -- born out of networked security systems taking advantage of broadband for surveillance purposes -- and that's changing how systems and devices are managed in the home, it said. No smart home device in a Parks consumer survey of 10,000 broadband households claimed more than 6 percent ownership, it said. Low awareness has been an obstacle to broader acceptance of smart home products, Parks said. Security companies have provided some awareness, and more has come from the “cool factor” of products like Nest’s Thermostat, it said. Among respondents who headed a household, roughly one in 10 was aware of smart home products or services, and fewer knew where to buy them, it said. Brand awareness among those surveyed was low, and not accurate. Respondents were asked to cite three manufacturers of smart home products, and 5 percent of respondents named Apple, which has not yet delivered product to the market. Nest followed Apple with 3 percent. ADT and AT&T ranked first and second with 6-7 percent awareness as smart home product manufacturers. When asked about service providers, 16 percent of respondents named ADT and AT&T, Parks said. For the most part, manufacturers in the product area “haven’t yet made a significant mark,” Parks said.
The global software defined storage (SDS) market will grow from an estimated $1.4 billion this year to $6.2 billion in 2019, the MarketsandMarkets research firm said Thursday in a report. The financial services, healthcare and manufacturing sectors will be the largest adopters of SDS technology, the report said. North America will be the largest market in 2019, but the Asia Pacific region will experience higher growth over time, MarketsandMarkets said.
The Rural Utilities Service sought comment Friday on preparation of a Programmatic Environmental Assessment for the development of a more efficient and effective environmental review process for the RUS Telecommunications Program. The new environmental review process should be “commensurate with the potential environmental impacts of both wired and wireless projects financed by the agency," RUS said in the Federal Register. The revised review process would apply to the Telecommunications Infrastructure Loan Program, Farm Bill Broadband Loan Program, Community Connect Grant Program and the Distance Learning and Telemedicine Program, RUS said. Comments are due Jan. 27, RUS said.
The Enterprise Wireless Alliance (EWA) and Pacific DataVision said Tuesday that they had submitted a joint petition to the FCC Monday that proposes a rulemaking that would realign the Part 90 land mobile radio 900 MHz band. The realignment would introduce “advanced broadband technology” to the private enterprise user community that would result in spectrum allocations “capable of serving the long-expressed needs of utilities, energy companies, transportation providers” and others, EWA and Pacific DataVision said. “When employee safety and property are threatened, our nation's critical infrastructure providers cannot afford to lose communications,” said EWA President Mark Crosby in a news release. “Unfortunately, that happens all too often when a crisis prompts capacity issues on commercial wireless networks.” It has become “increasingly difficult for the FCC to identify 'greenfield' spectrum to meet important new requirements of its enterprise constituents,” said Pacific DataVision Vice Chairman Morgan O’Brien in the news release. “Realignments and repurposing of existing allocations are today's only practical way of addressing these needs.”
NCTA President Michael Powell criticized President Barack Obama for speaking last week in favor of Communications Act Title II reclassification as part of the FCC net neutrality NPRM (see 1411100035). Powell said during a joint NARUC/NASUCA event in San Francisco that he was “stunned” by Obama’s comments, calling it an unprecedented example of “interfering” with FCC independence. Powell said that Obama’s remarks are likely to prolong industry uncertainty and have put the FCC in an “impossible situation.” Other industry observers have called Obama's remarks a reset of FCC work on the NPRM (see 1411140043) Powell has been a vocal critic of Title II reclassification, saying Monday that he believes it’s unnecessary to reclassify broadband as a common carrier given that it’s the “heaviest” form of telecom regulation.
The 17 largest U.S. cable and phone providers added more than 700,000 net additional broadband subscribers in Q3, said a research firm Tuesday. Top cable companies have more than 51.2 million broadband subscribers, and top phone companies have nearly 35.4 million subscribers, Leichtman Research Group said Tuesday in a news release. Over the past year, there were more than 2.9 million net broadband adds, up from 2.54 million the previous year, it said. Comcast added 315,000 subscribers in Q3, and Time Warner Cable, which plans to sell itself to Comcast, added 108,000 subscribers, Leichtman Research said. Verizon added 69,000 subscribers, and CenturyLink added 8,000, it said.
Fujitsu Labs developed a technology for embedding and retrieving identification data in light that’s cast onto an object by LEDs, the company said Monday. By embedding data in light in a way that it is not detectable to the naked eye, an object that has been illuminated can convey data to a smartphone or other smart device, it said. "With previous technologies, data could only be conveyed to a user’s area, but with this technology, data can be conveyed at the level of an individual object," it said. "To capture the data, a user only needs to point a camera at the object. This technology enables products in a store, works of art, people, buildings and a variety of other objects to be the source of data transmission." The company plans to showcase the technology at Fujitsu Forum 2014, which opens Wednesday in Munich for a two-day run, it said.