The FCC Wireline Bureau sought comment Friday on a vCom proposal to sell its operations, including FCC licenses, to AppSmart. Comments are due Jan. 24, replies Jan. 31, in docket 24-657. “vCom’s wholly-owned subsidiaries, QuantumShift and QuantumShift Virginia, provide intrastate and interstate communications services entirely on a resale basis, and they do not own or operate any communications facilities,” the bureau said: “Licensees work with a range of facilities-based and reseller carriers, and resell IP services, mobile voice and data, and both traditional local and long-distance switched voice service as well as interconnected VoIP service.” Applicants state that they will “continue to exist and operate under the same name and will continue to provide services pursuant to then-existing rates, terms, and conditions for the near term and any future changes will be undertaken pursuant to customers’ contracts and applicable law,” the bureau said. AppDirect announced in November plans to buy vCom and QuantumShift.
The Bureau of Industry and Security's upcoming export controls on advanced AI semiconductors will introduce hurdles that could push U.S. allies closer to China, a technology think tank and a semiconductor industry group said this week. Both the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation and the Semiconductor Industry Association urged President Joe Biden's administration to reverse course. ITIF said it should “immediately” rethink the "overdesigned, yet underinformed" restrictions, which are expected to be published as an interim final rule before Biden leaves office. SIA, "deeply concerned by the unprecedented scope and complexity" of the potential regulation, asked the government to instead issue the restrictions as a proposed rule -- which would allow for industry feedback and possible revisions without a set effective date -- or allow the new Trump administration to decide how to move forward.
Umbra Lab is targeting Q4 2025 to launch four additional synthetic aperture radar earth exploration satellite service microsatellites, it told the FCC Space Bureau in an application filed Wednesday. The company said that Umbra-11, -12, -13 and -14 will replace some of the 10 Umbras that the FCC previously authorized and that were launched. Umbra said the four will have largely the same RF and orbital characteristics as the ones approved.
The full FCC approved five notices of apparent liability against pirate broadcasters proposing a total of $260,000 in penalties, according to NALs in Thursday’s Daily Digest. The NALs were approved 4-1, with Commissioner Nathan Simington dissenting. Simington has said he will dissent from all proceedings involving monetary forfeitures until the FCC responds to the U.S. Supreme Court’s SEC v. Jarkesy decision (see 2409060054). The agency proposed penalties of $60,000 for Carlos Alberto Vazquez of Painesville, Ohio; for Wilfredo Ayala of Hartford, Connecticut; and for Sheldon Morgan of Hartford and his company, Morgan Media. The FCC proposed $40,000 penalties each for James Baran of Geneva-on-the-Lake, Ohio, and Efrain Gonzalez of Waterbury, Connecticut. All the targets are connected with addresses where Enforcement Bureau field agents measured unauthorized radio broadcasts, and several of the pirate operators posted to social media platforms of videos themselves operating their stations, the NALs said.
The FCC Space Bureau has rejected Sateliot's application to provide a satellite-based IoT service in the 2 GHz mobile satellite service band (see 2406060057). In an order Wednesday, the bureau dismissed Sateliot's U.S. market access petition, saying the 2 GHz bands aren't available for additional MSS applications. The agency similarly has denied SpaceX use of the band for direct-to-device operations (see 2403270002).
As it reviews SpaceX's requested modification for its second-generation satellites, including the company's authorization request for 22,488 pending satellites (see 2410150002), the FCC Space Bureau is seeking clarification on spectrum and orbital altitude issues. In a letter dated Tuesday, the commission asked SpaceX to elaborate on additional frequency needed for the 7,500 previously-authorized satellites. It also asked whether any of its second-generation satellites would operate at 525-535 km or if they would all be in orbital shells of 475-485 km. Moreover, it asked whether the company could comply with existing ITU equivalent power flux density limits with the proposed upgrades to its system. And it asked that SpaceX provide its calculations of interference levels into geostationary orbit operations for the authorized 7,500 satellites and the 29,988-satellite system. It asked for answers to its questions by Feb. 7.
The FCC tightened filing requirements for the Robocall Mitigation Database “to better ensure widespread compliance and heightened awareness of provider responsibilities to protect consumers,” said a news release and order Wednesday. “We are tightening our rules to ensure voice service providers know their responsibilities and help stop junk robocalls,” said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. The database’s “continued effectiveness relies on information submitted by providers being complete, accurate, and up to date,” the order said. “Yet a review of filings in the Database indicates a lack of thoroughness and diligence by some providers and, in some cases, malfeasance by bad actors.” The new rules include a $100 filing fee, requirements that providers promptly update the database with changes, higher forfeitures for false or inaccurate information, an annual recertification requirement, and a two-factor authentication process for logging into the database. Incompas, NCTA and others had objected to the filing fees and higher penalties for inaccurate submissions (see 2410160037). “Through these actions, we strengthen the Robocall Mitigation Database as a compliance and consumer protection tool,” the order said. In addition, it directs the Wireline Bureau to “establish a dedicated reporting mechanism to facilitate shared oversight of the database among all stakeholders” and issue additional guidance and best practices for companies that use it.
The FCC Wireless Bureau sought comment on Disaster and Tactical Communications' proposal to serve as a commercial operator license examination manager (COLEM). Comments are due Feb. 6, replies Feb. 21, in docket 25-5. Eleven COLEMs are currently certified, said a notice in Wednesday’s Daily Digest.
The FCC Wireless Bureau Wednesday asked for comment to refresh the record on the future of the 1675-1680 MHz band for shared use between federal incumbents and non-federal fixed or mobile operations. The FCC took comment in 2019 on reallocating the band for 5G, as urged by Ligado (see 1905090041). The band must be shared with weather satellites. Comment deadlines will come in a Federal Register notice. The bureau noted that NOAA recently filed a letter at the FCC suggesting the band could be shared with limitations. “In light of the recent filing of the NOAA follow-on report, the Bureau is providing an opportunity for additional comment in order to ensure an up-to-date record,” the notice said. Ligado executives spoke with Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering Technology staff last month about the NOAA report. “The 1675-1680 MHz band was first identified as a candidate for reallocation to shared federal and commercial use a decade ago, given its nationwide scope and minimal utilization,” Ligado said.
The FCC Public Safety Bureau on Wednesday released rules for new multilingual templates for wireless emergency alerts. It sought comment in a public notice last year (see 2405130047). The order adopts templates for the 18 “most commonly issued and most time-sensitive types of alerts, which will be available in English and the next 13 most commonly spoken languages” in the U.S. “We promote the flexibility and effectiveness of these templates by requiring Participating … Providers to support the ability for alert originators to customize the alerts using event-specific information,” the order said. The order also adopts non-fillable American Sign Language (ASL) templates -- video files of the alert messages in ASL that don’t include the same elements required in other templates. “Together, these steps further the Commission’s goal of ensuring that WEA remains an essential and effective public safety tool that allows alert originators to warn their communities of danger and advise them to take protective action,” the bureau said. The alerts cover tornado emergency, tornado warning, flash flood emergency, flash flood warning, severe thunderstorm, snow squall, dust storm, hurricane, storm surge, extreme wind, test alert, fire, tsunami, earthquake, boil water, avalanche, hazardous materials and 911 outage. “We decline to adopt evacuation and shelter-in-place templates and defer consideration of other templates at this time,” the order said. The issue of whether participating providers “should be required to support additional templates, including an ‘all-clear’ template and other templates suggested by commenters in the record, is still under consideration by the Bureau at this time,” the order said in a footnote. The bureau addressed concerns CTIA and others raised about problems with preinstalled alerts (see 2406140051). “We agree that there are certain key technical issues to work through during the standards development process, but disagree insofar as commenters suggest these are barriers to adopting fillable templates that cannot be overcome,” the order said. The bureau agreed with CTIA that “dynamically translating the fillable fields would be technically infeasible at this time.” The order imposes a deadline of compliance within 30 months following publication in the Federal Register. CTIA and ATIS had questioned whether that timeline was workable. The bureau agreed with CTIA “that requiring the English message to appear alongside the multilingual template serves as an important public safety redundancy.” It agreed with ATIS “that displaying the English and multilingual versions together” is “technically feasible.” The bureau also agreed with CTIA that “fillable ASL templates are not technically feasible at this time.”