Representatives of Encinca Communications spoke with staff for all four FCC commissioners on “the compelling case for updating Part 101 rules to harmonize with Part 15 rules in the 6 GHz band.” The FCC’s 2020 6 GHz order “encouraged the formation of an industry-led multi-stakeholder group (MSG) to address the technical and operational issues associated with the automated frequency coordination system,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 18-295. MSG members have “essentially run into a brick wall” and failed to reach industry consensus, Encinca said: “The practical reality of this result means that, more than two years after the adoption of the [6 GHz order], over 290 million consumers are still being denied the features and benefits of the outdoor use of the 6 GHz band -- Wi-Fi 6E based equipment for mobile fixed wireless access use.”
Latest Harmonized System updates
Lawmakers are proposing a range of telecom and tech-focused amendments to the House Armed Services Committee’s FY 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (HR-7900). They include proposals to require more DOD transparency on its implementation of its 2020 spectrum sharing strategy, bar TikTok use on government devices, and several focusing on the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. The House Rules Committee Thursday afternoon hadn't set a meeting to consider the amendments.
Noting the high use of texting by populations particularly at risk to suicide, such as kids and minorities, the four FCC members on Thursday approved a Further NPRM on a mandate that carriers provide capabilities to text the 988 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (see 2103310030). Also getting unanimous approvals at the commissioners' meeting were an order allocating spectrum for commercial space launches and an NPRM on setting a framework for informing 911 centers of network outages affecting them, as well as an NPRM on wireless mics in the TV and other bands and an order ending the 800 MHz rebranding process (see 2104220056). Commissioners also OK'd a $4.1 million slamming fine.
Proposed European Commission plans to update cybersecurity rules are overbroad and need clarification, ICANN said Friday. The revisions to the network and information security directive (NIS2), part of a package aimed at tightening rules for online platforms, will affect ICANN (see 2101290006). Responding to an EC consultation, ICANN said NIS2 could have "far-reaching impacts" on the domain name system: The directive captures all DNS service providers. It urged the EC to consider distinguishing between providers of authoritative domain name resolution services (the "publication" side of domain name resolution) and providers of recursive domain resolution services (the name resolving side). Entities that operate a resolver service, often now otherwise classified as essential or important, are within the scope of the draft because they host a domain name or operate a recursive resolver, ICANN said. Providers of authoritative domain name resolution services should qualify as essential only if they serve domains of such important entities, it said. NIS2 requires EU governments to ensure that top-level domain registries and registrars collect and maintain accurate and complete domain name registration data in a "dedicated database facility with due diligence" subject to EU data protection law. ICANN said no entity can guarantee the integrity and availability of domain name registration data. The European Internet Services Providers Association noted only two years have passed since the effective date of the directive, meaning EU countries have had little time for assessment. NIS2 will raise costs for affected providers and should be future-proofed, said EuroISPA. The Information Technology Industry Council urged the EC to ensure reporting requirements are harmonized across the EU. The Internet Systems Consortium, which runs an ICANN authoritative root server, recommended NIS2 not include root name servers, saying doing so could destabilize the unitary DNS system. Verisign encouraged the EC to turn to ICANN's multistakeholder community for details on how EU governments can implement NIS2 consistently.
The European Commission isn't trying to bypass ICANN governance of the domain name system (DNS) through its proposed digital services act (DSA) and cybersecurity package, EC officials said at an ICANN virtual stakeholder briefing Friday. The EC supports the multistakeholder approach and contributes to ICANN discussions through the Governmental Advisory Committee, said Gemma Carolillo, DG Connect deputy head-next-generation internet unit. The legislation's intent is to create legal certainty for domain name registries and registrars on things like Whois accuracy and access to personal registrant information, she said. If the proposals are adopted, the EC plans to issue guidelines that draw on ICANN's policy development work on access to personal data, she said. The EC is counting on ICANN to adopt rules for access to Whois data and start the discussion on ensuring such data is accurate, said Olivier Bringer, next-generation internet unit head. The briefing was on the potential impact of the DSA and cybersecurity measures on ICANN. The legislation would update the 2000 e-commerce directive governing the exemption from liability for illegal content of internet intermediaries (see 2101290006). That directive applies to specific services such as ISPs that act as conduits. The DSA proposes to leave the liability exemption intact but to add new rules requiring due diligence and set harmonized enforcement rules, said Irene Roche Laguna, EC deputy head-e-commerce and platforms unit. The EC considers registrars and registries to be within the DSA's scope and wants to clarify legally that they fall within the liability exception as mere conduits but also that they will have some light due diligence obligations for illegal content, Laguna said.
NTIA, working with DOD, is pushing ahead on a spectrum sharing system going beyond what's possible in the nascent citizens broadband radio service, said Charles Cooper, associate administrator of the NTIA Office of Spectrum Management, at the Americas Spectrum Management Conference Friday. NTIA is tentatively calling it “incumbent informing capability,” or ICC, and it’s being developed in coordination with the Defense Information Systems Agency, he said.
The House Armed Services Committee’s current version of the FY 2021 National Defense Authorization Act doesn’t include language to intervene in FCC approval of the Ligado L-band plan. Proposal supporters said they are gearing up for a fight if committee members attempt to attach such amendments to the measure. Ligado opponents believe they have a good chance of prevailing because the Senate is considering its Armed Services Committee-approved FY21 NDAA version (S-4049) with related language intact, and a standalone bill is still in the pipeline.
Changes to the FCC orbital debris order, as expected (see 2004170011), netted 5-0 commissioner adoption Thursday at the agency's April meeting. Some commissioners said they approved after several items were moved from the draft order to the accompanying Further NPRM.
FCC efforts at cutting costs of small-satellite licensing should help reverse the trend of U.S. operators going elsewhere to seek licensing, Alliance of Commercial, Cube Experimental and Small Satellites Director Tony Azzarelli told us Wednesday at Satellite 2020. He and others said on a panel that smallsat regulation is failing to keep up with market changes. Organizers ended the event a day early, on Wednesday and citing COVID-19 (see 2003110036).
The 2019 World Radiocommunication Conference accomplishments include providing additional bands for international mobile telecom and high-altitude platform systems, expanded coverage by global maritime distress and safety systems (GMDSS), and teeing up issues to be looked at in 2023 including high-altitude international mobile telecom (IMT) base stations (HIBS). That's according to WRC-19 and industry officials Friday as WRC-19 in Egypt ended.