FCC Releases May Open Meeting Agenda

On May 16, 2024, the FCC released the Agenda for the May Open meeting, scheduled for scheduled for Thursday, May 23, 2024 at 10:30 AM.  The meeting can be viewed in person at the Commission’s headquarters or online at www.fcc.gov/live or on the FCC’s YouTube channel.  The Commission is scheduled to consider the following items:

  1. Promoting the Integrity and Security of Telecommunications Certification Bodies, Measurement Facilities, and the Equipment Authorization Program (ET Docket No. 24-136) – The Commission will consider a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to strengthen requirements and oversight relating to telecommunications certification bodies and measurement facilities to help ensure the integrity of these entities for purposes of our equipment authorization program, to better protect national security, and to advance the Commission’s comprehensive strategy to build a more secure and resilient communications supply chain. (FACT SHEET)
  2. Restricted Adjudicatory Matter – The Commission will consider a restricted adjudicatory matter from the Media Bureau.
  3. Enforcement Bureau Action – The Commission will consider an enforcement action.
  4. Enforcement Bureau Action – The Commission will consider an enforcement action.
  5. Enforcement Bureau Action – The Commission will consider an enforcement action.
  6. Enforcement Bureau Action – The Commission will consider an enforcement action.

Please Contact Us if you have any questions.

The post FCC Releases May Open Meeting Agenda first appeared on Telecommunications Law Professionals, PLLC.

Share:

More Posts

Cyber News Roundup for February 7, 2025

As cyber threats continue to evolve, this week’s roundup highlights several urgent vulnerabilities and incidents making headlines. From CISA’s warning on a critical Linux kernel flaw to growing concerns about

Enhancing, not replacing, human expertise with AI

Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) are driving remarkable transformations across virtually every aspect of our society, including digital forensics. A flood of evidence from computers, mobile devices, and cloud-based platforms