An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
Official websites use .gov A
.gov website belongs to an official government
organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A
lock (
) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to
the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official,
secure websites.
Full Title:
WTB and OET Announce the Approval and Registration of Additional and Modified Environmental Sensing Capability Sensors for the 3.5 GHz Band
Full Title:
Telecommunications Relay Services and Speech-to-Speech Services for Individuals with Hearing and Speech Disabilities; Internet-based TRS Certification Application of Nagish Inc.
Doc Type:
Order
Bureau(s):
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Released:
Effective Date:
Comment Date:
Reply Comment:
Adopted Date:
Issue Date:
DA/FCC #:
DA-24-1292
Report #:
File #:
Docket/RM:
03-123
Contact:
Media Contact:
Description:
Order granting Nagish, Inc. a two-year certification as a provider of Internet Protocol Relay service.
Tags:
IP RelayTelecommunications Relay Service (TRS)Accessibility and DisabilityDisabilityTRS-Section 225
Full Title:
In the Matter of Silver Randall and Cynthia DiCarlo, Successor Co-Trustees; Concord, Ohio
Doc Type:
Bureau(s):
Released:
Effective Date:
Comment Date:
Reply Comment:
Adopted Date:
Issue Date:
DA/FCC #:
Report #:
File #:
EB-FIELDNER-21-00032529
Docket/RM:
Contact:
Media Contact:
Description:
The FCC Enforcement Bureau issued a Notice of Illegal Pirate Radio Broadcasting (NIPRB) per its authority from the PIRATE Act to Randall and DiCarlo, Successor Co-Trustees, in Concord, Ohio, for allowing illegal broadcasting from their property.
Full Title:
One-to-One Consent Rule for TCPA Prior Express Written Consent: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Doc Type:
Fact Sheet
Bureau(s):
Consumer and Governmental Affairs
Released:
Effective Date:
Comment Date:
Reply Comment:
Adopted Date:
Issue Date:
DA/FCC #:
Report #:
File #:
Docket/RM:
Contact:
Media Contact:
Description:
Frequently asked questions about the FCC's new one-to-one consent rules for callers, closing a loophole that had allowed certain callers to inundate consumers with unwanted robocalls and robotexts.