The FCC approved its ATSC 3.0 order 3-2 Thursday over the objections of Democrats, as expected (see 1711140053). Commissioners Jessica Rosenworcel and Mignon Clyburn were highly critical of 3.0's transition plan order, which was little changed from what circulated last month. The plan is “cavalier” about possible consequences for consumers and MVPDs, Rosenworcel said. “Not ready for prime time,” said Clyburn. The order intentionally doesn't address every aspect of the new standard, Commissioner Mike O’Rielly said. “Many questions remain,” he conceded. “This won’t be the last time we address ATSC 3.0,” he said.
Citing AT&T and Verizon's acknowledgement implementation of device-based geotargeting of wireless emergency alerts could be faster, the National Weather Service, Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency are pushing for that sped-up time frame. The agencies in an FCC docket 15-91 filing posted Wednesday said talks with state and local public safety agencies indicated a wide belief such geotargeting can be achieved in less than the 42-month minimum implementation recommended by the wireless operators. The companies in September said that in meetings with agency staff, they backed the recommendations of a Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council working group that a minimum 42-month timetable is needed for implementation, but said an expedited process is doable. Verizon said that expedited process would first require working group consensus on an appropriate accuracy threshold and if there were sufficient willingness to incorporate geo-fencing capabilities by device manufacturers and operating system providers. AT&T said the coordinate data being sent in the same WEA message would help in expediting implementation. Representatives of CTIA and members are complaining about a recent order upholding a Nov. 1 deadline for the nation’s five largest carriers to be able to provide “clickable” embedded references in WEAs (see 1711020054). The representatives met with Public Safety Bureau Chief Lisa Fowlkes, an aide to Chairman Ajit Pai and a staffer from the Office of General Counsel. AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular had reps there. “The net effect of the Commission’s new interpretation will cause many mobile devices capable of receiving WEA messages to alternate between being considered ‘WEA capable’ depending on the deadline of the Commission’s required WEA enhancements, a device’s ability to be updated through software, and whether consumers choose to exercise the software update,” CTIA said in a document in docket 15-91. “The Commission’s new interpretation risks extensive consumer and public safety community confusion, and unnecessarily complicates … providers’ efforts to inform consumers about WEA capable devices in a nearly continuous fashion.” Carriers “have limited visibility into whether mobile devices are or could be ‘WEA capable’ under this interpretation,” the association said.
Citing AT&T and Verizon's acknowledgement implementation of device-based geotargeting of wireless emergency alerts could be faster, the National Weather Service, Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency are pushing for that sped-up time frame. The agencies in an FCC docket 15-91 filing posted Wednesday said talks with state and local public safety agencies indicated a wide belief such geotargeting can be achieved in less than the 42-month minimum implementation recommended by the wireless operators. The companies in September said that in meetings with agency staff, they backed the recommendations of a Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council working group that a minimum 42-month timetable is needed for implementation, but said an expedited process is doable. Verizon said that expedited process would first require working group consensus on an appropriate accuracy threshold and if there were sufficient willingness to incorporate geo-fencing capabilities by device manufacturers and operating system providers. AT&T said the coordinate data being sent in the same WEA message would help in expediting implementation. Representatives of CTIA and members are complaining about a recent order upholding a Nov. 1 deadline for the nation’s five largest carriers to be able to provide “clickable” embedded references in WEAs (see 1711020054). The representatives met with Public Safety Bureau Chief Lisa Fowlkes, an aide to Chairman Ajit Pai and a staffer from the Office of General Counsel. AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular had reps there. “The net effect of the Commission’s new interpretation will cause many mobile devices capable of receiving WEA messages to alternate between being considered ‘WEA capable’ depending on the deadline of the Commission’s required WEA enhancements, a device’s ability to be updated through software, and whether consumers choose to exercise the software update,” CTIA said in a document in docket 15-91. “The Commission’s new interpretation risks extensive consumer and public safety community confusion, and unnecessarily complicates … providers’ efforts to inform consumers about WEA capable devices in a nearly continuous fashion.” Carriers “have limited visibility into whether mobile devices are or could be ‘WEA capable’ under this interpretation,” the association said.
Citing AT&T and Verizon's acknowledgement implementation of device-based geotargeting of wireless emergency alerts could be faster, the National Weather Service, Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency are pushing for that sped-up time frame. The agencies in an FCC docket 15-91 filing posted Wednesday said talks with state and local public safety agencies indicated a wide belief such geotargeting can be achieved in less than the 42-month minimum implementation recommended by the wireless operators. The companies in September said that in meetings with agency staff, they backed the recommendations of a Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council working group that a minimum 42-month timetable is needed for implementation, but said an expedited process is doable. Verizon said that expedited process would first require working group consensus on an appropriate accuracy threshold and if there were sufficient willingness to incorporate geo-fencing capabilities by device manufacturers and operating system providers. AT&T said the coordinate data being sent in the same WEA message would help in expediting implementation. Representatives of CTIA and members are complaining about a recent order upholding a Nov. 1 deadline for the nation’s five largest carriers to be able to provide “clickable” embedded references in WEAs (see 1711020054). The representatives met with Public Safety Bureau Chief Lisa Fowlkes, an aide to Chairman Ajit Pai and a staffer from the Office of General Counsel. AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile and U.S. Cellular had reps there. “The net effect of the Commission’s new interpretation will cause many mobile devices capable of receiving WEA messages to alternate between being considered ‘WEA capable’ depending on the deadline of the Commission’s required WEA enhancements, a device’s ability to be updated through software, and whether consumers choose to exercise the software update,” CTIA said in a document in docket 15-91. “The Commission’s new interpretation risks extensive consumer and public safety community confusion, and unnecessarily complicates … providers’ efforts to inform consumers about WEA capable devices in a nearly continuous fashion.” Carriers “have limited visibility into whether mobile devices are or could be ‘WEA capable’ under this interpretation,” the association said.
The FCC approved the National Emergency Address Database Privacy and Security Plan, on circulation for a vote (see 1710260036). The main components: “(1) the NEAD, a database of verified wireless access point street address information ... and (2) the National Emergency Address Manager (NEAM),” the order said. “When a caller dials 911 from his or her wireless handset equipped with Wi-Fi and/or Bluetooth radios, the participating wireless carrier network will automatically collect information from the wireless handset about wireless access points within the vicinity of the wireless handset.” AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon submitted the plan Feb. 3. It's "consistent with the requirements outlined in the Indoor Location Fourth Report and Order and addresses the need to protect the privacy, security, and resiliency of the NEAD,” the agency said.
The FCC approved the National Emergency Address Database Privacy and Security Plan, on circulation for a vote (see 1710260036). The main components: “(1) the NEAD, a database of verified wireless access point street address information ... and (2) the National Emergency Address Manager (NEAM),” the order said. “When a caller dials 911 from his or her wireless handset equipped with Wi-Fi and/or Bluetooth radios, the participating wireless carrier network will automatically collect information from the wireless handset about wireless access points within the vicinity of the wireless handset.” AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon submitted the plan Feb. 3. It's "consistent with the requirements outlined in the Indoor Location Fourth Report and Order and addresses the need to protect the privacy, security, and resiliency of the NEAD,” the agency said.
The FCC approved the National Emergency Address Database Privacy and Security Plan, on circulation for a vote (see 1710260036). The main components: “(1) the NEAD, a database of verified wireless access point street address information ... and (2) the National Emergency Address Manager (NEAM),” the order said. “When a caller dials 911 from his or her wireless handset equipped with Wi-Fi and/or Bluetooth radios, the participating wireless carrier network will automatically collect information from the wireless handset about wireless access points within the vicinity of the wireless handset.” AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon submitted the plan Feb. 3. It's "consistent with the requirements outlined in the Indoor Location Fourth Report and Order and addresses the need to protect the privacy, security, and resiliency of the NEAD,” the agency said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control is removing the Ivory Coast Sanctions Regulations from the Code of Federal Regulations after former President Barack Obama terminated the national emergency designation for the country on Sept. 14, 2016 (see 1609140023), OFAC said.
The 911 grant program should target funds to proofs of concept in urban, suburban and rural areas, while requiring interoperability, APCO commented this week on revised implementation rules proposed by NTIA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (see 1709200043). Also in docket NTIA-2017-0002, some state and local agencies urged the agencies not to exclude certain areas from grants. The 2012 Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act made $115 million available from the Public Safety Trust Fund for the 911 grant program, which funds improvements to 911, E-911 and next-generation 911 services and applications. NTIA and NHTSA plan to award NG-911 grants in FY 2018, which started Oct. 1 (see 1701200026).
FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel, back since Aug. 11, has emerged as a sometimes harsh critic of actions by Chairman Ajit Pai and the Republican majority. Commissioner Mignon Clyburn has also taken a tough stance on some issues, but on others has been more conciliatory. Former FCC officials said they're in very different positions. Senate Democrats championed Rosenworcel with expectation she would be a counterweight to the Pai commission's deregulatory disposition.