83_FR_1575 83 FR 1566 - Advanced Methods To Target and Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls

83 FR 1566 - Advanced Methods To Target and Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 9 (January 12, 2018)

Page Range1566-1577
FR Document2018-00457

In this document, Commission issues new rules that protect consumers from unwanted robocalls by permitting voice service providers to proactively block telephone calls when the subscriber of a phone number requests that calls purporting to originate from that number be blocked, and when calls purport to originate from three categories of unassigned phone numbers: Invalid numbers, valid numbers that are not allocated to a voice service provider, and valid numbers that are allocated but not assigned to a subscriber. While such calls may appear to be legitimate to those who receive them, they can result in fraud or identity theft. To combat these scams, the new rules expressly authorize voice service providers to block these robocalls without running afoul of the FCC's call completion rules. To minimize blocking of lawful calls, the Commission encourages voice service providers that elect to block calls to establish a simple way to identify and fix blocking errors. The rules also prohibit providers from blocking 911 emergency calls.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 9 (Friday, January 12, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 9 (Friday, January 12, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1566-1577]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-00457]


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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

47 CFR Part 64

[CG Docket No. 17-59; FCC 17-151]


Advanced Methods To Target and Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: In this document, Commission issues new rules that protect 
consumers from unwanted robocalls by permitting voice service providers 
to proactively block telephone calls when the subscriber of a phone 
number requests that calls purporting to originate from that number be 
blocked, and when calls purport to originate from three categories of 
unassigned phone numbers: Invalid numbers, valid numbers that are not 
allocated to a voice service provider, and valid numbers that are 
allocated but not assigned to a subscriber. While such calls may appear 
to be legitimate to those who receive them, they can result in fraud or 
identity theft. To combat these scams, the new rules expressly 
authorize voice service providers to block these robocalls without 
running afoul of the FCC's call completion rules. To minimize blocking 
of lawful calls, the Commission encourages voice service providers that 
elect to block calls to establish a simple way to identify and fix 
blocking errors. The rules also prohibit providers from blocking 911 
emergency calls.

DATES: Effective February 12, 2018.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen A Schroeder, Consumer Policy 
Division, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau (CGB), at (202) 418-
0654, email: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Report 
and Order, in CG Docket No. 17-59; FCC 17-151, adopted on November 16, 
2017 and released on November 17, 2017. The full text of this document 
will be available for public inspection and copying via ECFS, and 
during regular business hours at the FCC Reference Information Center, 
Portals II, 445 12th Street SW, Room CY-A257, Washington, DC 20554. The 
full text of this document and any subsequently filed documents in this 
matter may also be found by searching ECFS at: http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/ (insert CG Docket No. 17-59 into the Proceeding block). The 
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (FNPRM) that was adopted 
concurrently with the Report and Order is published elsewhere in the 
Federal Register.

Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis

    The Report and Order does not contain any new or modified 
information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction 
Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. In addition, therefore, it does not 
contain any new or modified information collection burden for small 
business concerns with fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small 
Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 
U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).

[[Page 1567]]

Congressional Review Act

    The Commission sent a copy of the Report and Order to Congress and 
the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional 
Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).

Synopsis

    1. In the Report and Order, the Commission takes another important 
step in combatting illegal robocalls by enabling voice service 
providers to block certain calls before they reach consumers' phones. 
Specifically, the Commission adopts rules allowing providers to block 
calls from phone numbers on a Do-Not-Originate (DNO) list and those 
that purport to be from invalid, unallocated, or unused numbers. 
Providers have been active in identifying these calls and there is 
broad support for these rules. At the same time, the Commission 
establishes safeguards to mitigate the possibility of blocking desired 
calls.
    2. Caller ID spoofing is often the key to making robocall scams 
work. Generally, Caller ID services permit the recipient of an incoming 
call to know the telephone number of the calling party, and in some 
cases a name associated with the number, before the recipient answers 
the call. But Caller ID information can be altered or manipulated, 
i.e., spoofed, so that the name or number displayed to the called party 
does not match that of the actual subscriber or the actual originating 
number. Though callers can use spoofing to mislead or even defraud the 
called party, there are legitimate uses for spoofing.
    3. Congress passed the 2009 Truth in Caller ID Act to ``address the 
growing problem of Caller ID spoofing done for fraudulent or harmful 
purposes.'' Congress limited the spoofing prohibition to the knowing 
transmission of misleading or inaccurate Caller ID information ``with 
the intent to defraud, cause harm, or wrongfully obtain anything of 
value,'' except where such transmission is determined to be exempt by 
the Commission.
    4. Despite these protections, consumers still receive an 
unacceptably high volume of illegal robocalls. To combat the robocall 
problem in a coordinated way, industry established the Robocall Strike 
Force (Strike Force) in 2016. The Strike Force includes representatives 
from providers of traditional landline, mobile, and Voice over internet 
Protocol (VoIP) services, handset manufacturers, operating system 
developers, and VoIP gateway providers. The Strike Force has said that 
``robocalls are best addressed in a holistic manner through deployment 
of a wide variety of tools by a broad range of stakeholders'' that 
includes industry blocking of calls. On October 26, 2016, it published 
the Robocall Strike Force Report (Strike Force Report). The Strike 
Force specifically asked the Commission to provide guidance on when 
providers may block a call that the provider believes is illegal.
    5. The Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau (Bureau) addressed 
one of the Strike Force's requests in 2016 by clarifying that voice 
service providers may block calls using a spoofed Caller ID number if 
the number's subscriber requests that they do so. Following that 
initial guidance, the Strike Force Report sought additional 
clarification regarding the legality of certain provider-initiated call 
blocking. Specifically, it sought clarification that: (1) Providers may 
block calls where the Caller ID shows an unassigned number; and (2) 
providers may block calls that the provider has determined to be 
illegal robocalls, so long as the provider takes reasonable steps to 
confirm that the calls are illegal.
    6. In the March 2017 Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI, document FCC 
17-24, published at 82 FR 22625, May 17, 2017, the Commission sought 
comment on whether to take certain steps to facilitate voice service 
providers' blocking of illegal robocalls. In the Advanced Methods NPRM 
and NOI, the Commission proposed rules to allow voice service providers 
to block telephone calls when the subscriber of a phone number requests 
that calls purporting to originate from that number be blocked, and 
when calls purport to originate from three categories of phone numbers: 
Invalid numbers, valid numbers that are not allocated to a voice 
service provider, and valid numbers that are allocated but not assigned 
to a subscriber.
    7. Call Completion Considerations. The Commission has generally 
found call blocking by voice service providers to be unlawful. The 
Commission also made clear that it is unlawful for providers to block 
VoIP-Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) traffic, and for 
interconnected and one-way VoIP providers to block voice traffic to or 
from the PSTN. The Commission has allowed call blocking only in ``rare 
and limited circumstances.''

Discussion

    8. In the Report and Order, the Commission adopts rules to give 
voice service providers the option of blocking illegal robocalls in 
certain, well-defined circumstances. By doing so, the Commission 
furthers its goal of removing regulatory roadblocks and gives industry 
the flexibility to block illegal calls. At the same time, the 
Commission affirms its commitment to protect the reliability of the 
nation's communications network and ensure that provider-initiated 
blocking helps, rather than harms, consumers. These rules outline 
specific, well-defined circumstances in which voice service providers 
may block calls that are highly likely to be illegitimate because there 
is no lawful reason to spoof certain kinds of numbers. Thus, a provider 
who blocks calls in accordance with these rules will not violate the 
call completion rules. Conversely, a provider that blocks calls that do 
not fall within the scope of these rules may be liable for violating 
the Commission's call completion rules.

Blocking at the Request of the Subscriber to the Originating Number

    9. First, the Commission codifies the Bureau's earlier 
clarification that providers may block calls when they receive a 
request from the subscriber to which the originating number is 
assigned, i.e., a DNO request. The 2016 Guidance Public Notice, 
document DA 16-1121, made clear that voice service providers--whether 
providing such service through TDM, VoIP, or CMRS--may block calls 
purporting to be from a telephone number if the subscriber to that 
number requests such blocking in order to prevent its number from being 
spoofed. The Bureau concluded that where the subscriber did not consent 
to the number being used, the call was very likely made to annoy and 
defraud, and therefore, no reasonable consumer would wish to receive 
such a call. The Commission agrees and finds such DNO calls highly 
likely to be illegal and to violate the Commission's anti-spoofing 
rule, with the potential to cause harm, defraud, or wrongfully obtain 
something of value.
    10. The record shows broad support among consumer groups, 
providers, government, and callers for blocking DNO calls. Consumers 
Union et. al. emphasizes the urgent need for providers to take action 
against spoofed calls, stating, ``DNO is one of several promising tools 
that they should implement to help address the problem.'' Several 
commenters note the positive results of DNO trials conducted by members 
of the Strike Force.
    11. ZipDX and others claim that gains from blocking DNO numbers 
will be temporary, because those making illegal robocalls will simply 
choose other numbers to spoof when their calls are blocked. The 
Commission disagrees that this possibility negates the

[[Page 1568]]

demonstrated benefits of such blocking. Allowing providers to block 
spoofed calls from high-profile numbers, such as IRS phone numbers, 
that are among those most likely to lure consumers into scams will 
substantially benefit consumers and help entities that make DNO 
requests control the integrity of their phone numbers. The Commission 
believes that codifying the Bureau's 2016 guidance in the form of a 
rule gives providers greater certainty that blocking calls at the 
request of the subscriber is lawful and provides an incentive to engage 
in this kind of beneficial blocking.
    12. Criteria for Blocking DNO Numbers. In its comments, USTelecom 
suggests five criteria used by the Industry Traceback Group (ITB) to 
evaluate numbers to determine whether they should be blocked, namely:

a candidate number must: (1) Be inbound-only; (2) be currently 
spoofed by a robocaller in order to perpetrate impersonation-focused 
fraud; (3) be the source of a substantial volume of calls; (4) have 
authorization for participation in the DNO effort from the party to 
which the telephone number is assigned; and/or (5) be recognized by 
consumers as belonging to a legitimate entity, lending credence to 
the impersonators and influencing successful execution of the scam.

The Commission finds that for purposes of the rule, only two of these 
criteria are necessary. The number must be used for inbound calls only, 
and the subscriber to the number must authorize it to be blocked. The 
Commission agrees with the ITB recommendation that both the subscriber 
making the request and the provider receiving the request validate that 
the number is used for inbound calls only. The Commission will not 
require the subscriber or the provider to determine whether the number 
is currently being spoofed, is the source of a substantial volume of 
calls, or is recognized by consumers. While the Commission believes the 
additional criteria may be helpful in some circumstances, they would 
impose too high a barrier for inclusion in the DNO list. In addition, 
the Commission does not want to impose a potentially burdensome 
analysis requirement on providers that might discourage them from 
blocking inbound-only numbers at the request of the subscriber.
    13. Coordination of Effort. The Commission agrees with Consumers 
Union et. al. that ``[m]uch responsibility rests with the providers to 
ensure that DNO works as well as possible'' through broad industry 
participation. While full industry participation is not required to 
achieve positive results, having more providers block a number will 
allow fewer calls purporting to be from that number to go through. 
Commenters note that providers must coordinate their efforts for this 
type of call blocking to be used effectively. For example, Sprint 
comments that, while it supports this type of blocking and participated 
in the collaborative effort to block spoofed IRS numbers, ``there are 
currently no automated systems in place to expand the scale of such 
projects industry-wide or to accommodate much larger numbers of 
customers requesting blocking.'' USTelecom points out the inefficiency 
of requiring subscribers ``requesting DNOs to be forced to make 
individual requests to multiple providers.'' ZipDX suggests that the 
originating provider is in the best position to block these kinds of 
calls.
    14. Other commenters, however, suggest that providers expand their 
existing ways of sharing information from the test cases and other 
initiatives to support this effort. As Comcast comments, 
``[p]articipants in the Strike Force have set up an ad hoc shared list 
of numbers that should not be originated and can add more for review.'' 
USTelecom comments that its ``Industry Traceback Group has been 
facilitating a targeted, centralized, and coordinated DNO trial and 
stands ready to continue to evolve industry efforts on this front going 
forward.''
    15. The Commission strongly encourages providers to continue to 
work cooperatively to share information about any inbound-only numbers 
for which the subscriber has requested that the number be blocked. At 
this time, the Commission declines to prescribe a sharing mechanism, 
especially in light of industry's existing efforts at coordination. The 
Commission emphasizes that safeguards must be put in place to prevent 
numbers used for outbound calls from being wrongly added to the DNO 
list, whether from hacking, honest mistakes, or some other cause, 
especially for calls made to emergency services. The Commission 
encourages industry to continue developing its methods for implementing 
DNO and encourages providers that choose to do such blocking to 
establish a mechanism for timely removal of erroneous blocks.
    16. Resellers. Finally, the Commission agree with TracFone that 
wireless resellers may pass along subscriber requests to the underlying 
carrier that the subscriber's inbound-only number be blocked. The 
Commission sees no reason on this record to not allow wireless reseller 
subscribers to participate in the DNO effort.

Calls Purporting To Originate From Unassigned Numbers

    17. The Commission next finds that providers may initiate blocking 
where the call purports to originate from a number that is unassigned. 
Use of an unassigned number provides a strong indication that the 
calling party is spoofing the Caller ID to potentially defraud and harm 
a voice service subscriber. Such calls are therefore highly likely to 
be illegal. The Commission identifies three categories of unassigned 
numbers that it determines can be reasonably subject to blocking: (1) 
Numbers that are invalid under the North American Numbering Plan 
(NANP); (2) numbers that have not been allocated by the North American 
Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA) or the Pooling Administrator (PA) 
to any provider; and (3) numbers that the NANPA or PA has allocated to 
a provider, but are not currently used. Providers may block calls 
purporting to be from numbers that fall into any one of these three 
categories.

Calls Purporting To Originate From Invalid Numbers

    18. Providers may block calls purportedly originating from numbers 
that are not valid NANP numbers. Examples of such numbers include those 
that use an unassigned area code; that use an abbreviated dialing code, 
such as 911 or 411, in place of an area code; that do not contain the 
requisite number of digits; and that are a single digit repeated, such 
as 000-000-0000, with the exception of 888-888-8888, which is an 
assignable number. With a few important exceptions detailed below, the 
record generally supports the assumption that, because these numbers 
are not valid, a subscriber could not lawfully originate calls from 
such numbers and these calls should be blocked. Providers, however, 
must take care that they do not block calls that purportedly originate 
from valid numbers, especially emergency calls.
    19. The record supports the proposal that no caller would spoof an 
invalid number for any lawful purpose; for example, unlike a business 
spoofing Caller ID on outgoing calls to show its main call-back number, 
invalid numbers cannot be called back. Thus, the Commission does not 
see a significant risk to network reliability in allowing providers to 
block this category of calls. ATIS suggests that benefits will be 
temporary because ``widespread blocking of invalid and unallocated 
numbers could have an unintended negative consequence by driving bad 
actors to focus their efforts on spoofing

[[Page 1569]]

assigned/valid numbers.'' Consumers Union et. al., however, comment 
that blocking such calls is imperative, because ``[c]onsumers do not 
expect that their phone service would be the means through which 
illegal and fraudulent scams enter their homes, and providers should 
not be obligated to deliver illegal messages that could cause consumers 
harm.'' In addition, blocking calls purporting to be from invalid 
numbers ``holds the greatest potential for success in the short term 
and likely would be the easiest to implement.''
    20. The Commission rejects suggestions that blocking calls 
purporting to originate from invalid numbers creates ``significant 
possibilities of false positives.'' Although ZipDX claims that ``a 
significant number'' of private branch exchanges (PBXs) ``are not 
properly configured'' to display an accurate Caller ID and that Caller 
ID information could theoretically be ``unintentionally altered'' 
during a call's transmission, the record belies such claims. Instead, 
the record demonstrates that the risk of erroneously blocking such 
calls is very low and should not be a barrier to allowing providers to 
block calls purporting to be from invalid numbers. Indeed, the 
Commission agrees with USTelecom that this small risk simply requires 
providers to exercise ``caution when instituting blocking in the 
network.'' And the Commission reiterates that caution to businesses 
with PBXs: The responsibility to properly configure PBX equipment lies 
with the owner, and those spoofing invalid numbers (whether 
intentionally or not) have the ability to ensure that their calls go 
through by properly reconfiguring that equipment.
    21. Identifying Invalid Numbers. Neustar, which currently is the 
NANPA and PA, comments that ``information for invalid numbers [is 
maintained] within the [NANP], and the industry has other sources to 
identify invalid numbers such as ATIS's Industry Numbering Committee. . 
. . Thus, service providers already have access to the information they 
need'' for this kind of blocking. Comcast similarly states that 
``[v]oice providers generally have `intimate knowledge of the [NANP]' 
and can `easily identify numbers that fall into this category,' 
including numbers that use an N11 code in place of an area code or that 
repeat a single digit.'' In light of the industry's assurance that it 
can confidently identify invalid numbers, the Commission sees no need 
to further define or limit what is meant by ``a number that is not a 
valid [NANP] number.'' The Commission encourages providers to conduct 
tests or simulations before blocking calls purporting to originate from 
invalid numbers to verify their methods.

Calls Purporting To Originate From Numbers Not Allocated to Any 
Provider

    22. The Commission finds that providers may block calls purportedly 
originating from numbers that are valid but have not yet been allocated 
by the NANPA or the PA to any provider. Though these numbers are valid 
under the NANP, the Commission finds that calls purporting to use 
unallocated numbers are similar to calls purporting to use invalid 
numbers in that no subscriber can actually originate a call from any of 
these numbers, and the Commission sees no lawful reason to spoof such 
numbers because they cannot be called back. Calls purporting to 
originate from such numbers therefore are highly likely to be illegal.
    23. Here, the provider must have knowledge that a certain block of 
numbers has not been allocated to any provider and therefore that the 
number being blocked could not have been assigned to a subscriber. The 
record generally supports allowing permissive blocking of calls 
purporting to be from unallocated numbers. For example, ATIS points out 
that ``no subscriber can actually originate a call from these 
unallocated central office codes and it is unlikely that there is any 
legitimate, lawful reason to.''
    24. Parties opposing this type of call blocking generally do so 
based on implementation difficulties and the risk of blocking legal 
calls. For example, NCTA warns that the proposal ``could 
unintentionally result in harm to consumers and should not be adopted 
at this time,'' and ZipDX cautions that ``[t]he unintended consequences 
of these blocks (false positives) are potentially quite troublesome and 
far outweigh any good that would result from successful robocall 
blocks.'' Several commenters also note that, if providers block 
unallocated numbers, then ``illegal robocallers could simply shift to 
spoofing assigned numbers.''
    25. Commenters do not agree on the potential volume of calls that 
might be blocked under this rule. While ZipDX says the ``fraction of 
complaints'' from unassigned numbers is ``miniscule,'' USTelecom states 
that ``the scale of numbers at issue in the Commission's latter two 
proposals [blocking calls from unallocated and unassigned numbers] are 
potentially enormous--encompassing 3 billion telephone numbers.'' 
Transaction Network Services (TNS) attempts to strike a middle ground, 
suggesting that ``[w]hile there is a large number of unallocated 
telephone numbers (over 33 million) that have been flagged as making 
calls, the volume of call activity from these numbers relative to all 
negative robocalling is very small.'' TNS concludes that blocking 
``this subset of numbers has significant, but limited value.'' In 
contrast, a recent Commission enforcement action found that one 
robocaller made a staggering 21,582,771 spoofed robocalls in a three-
month period; the caller ID for each of the robocalls examined by the 
FCC falsely identified a phone number that was not assigned to any 
carrier or subscriber at the time the calls were made. Although the 
number of complaints about calls from unassigned numbers may be small, 
the Commission agrees with USTelecom that the potential value of 
blocking such calls is enormous. Consumers will benefit from this type 
of blocking because the calls are highly likely to annoy or defraud.
    26. Defining Unallocated Numbers Subject to Blocking. Some 
commenters emphasize that a permissive rule does not require providers 
to identify and block every unallocated number, but rather simply 
allows a provider to block calls purporting to be from those numbers it 
can verify are unallocated. The Commission agrees. Providers may block 
calls purporting to be from unallocated numbers and should limit 
themselves to blocking only those numbers that they can verify are 
unallocated. Providers may not be able to identify the complete set of 
all unallocated numbers for purposes of call blocking. Accordingly, 
voice service providers might be unable to block calls purporting to 
originate from every unallocated number, but this shortcoming would not 
result in the blocking of legal calls.
    27. Obtaining Unallocated Number Information. The Commission does 
not prescribe a technical solution for identifying and communicating 
information about unallocated numbers at this time. The record shows 
consensus that, while information on unallocated numbers is available 
to providers, no currently available source identifies all unallocated 
numbers in real time and that ``the NANPA does not administer codes 
outside the United States, specifically in Canada and Caribbean 
countries, or toll-free numbers.'' Many commenters suggest that 
providers should use a new, centralized database as a resource for 
identification of unallocated numbers.
    28. Neustar lists categories of unallocated numbers that should not 
initiate calls, including ``telephone numbers in: (1) Unallocated area 
codes in the NANP; (2) unallocated geographic

[[Page 1570]]

Central Office (``CO'') codes (NPA-NXX) in the United States; and (3) 
unallocated non-contaminated thousands-blocks (NPA-NXX-X) in the United 
States.'' ATIS elaborates on the issue of contaminated thousands-
blocks, stating that available thousands-blocks ``publicly posted on 
the PA website . . . could contain up to 100 assigned numbers within 
those blocks.'' Therefore, providers blocking calls from contaminated 
blocks could erroneously block calls purporting to originate from 
assigned numbers. Providers that block calls purporting to originate 
from assigned numbers may be liable for violating the call completion 
rules.
    29. Several commenters propose enhancements to the information 
provided by the NANPA and the PA. Neustar suggests that the NANPA and 
the PA ``provide on their websites: (1) `Blacklists' of unallocated 
numbers that should not be making calls; and (2) `Whitelists' of 
allocated area codes in the NANP, allocated geographic CO codes in the 
United States, and allocated thousands-blocks in the United States.'' 
Comcast takes a similar approach, suggesting that the databases ``(1) 
more clearly identify which numbers have not yet been allocated and (2) 
are updated immediately to reflect any new allocations as they occur.''
    30. The Commission believes that providers, the NANPA, and the PA 
are in the best position to determine how to share information about 
unallocated numbers. The Commission encourages these parties to work 
together on whether and how to improve the availability of this 
information for blocking purposes. At the same time, the Commission 
cautions against blocking calls purporting to originate from allocated 
numbers and encourages providers to examine their practices carefully 
to verify that they are not inadvertently doing so. A provider that 
erroneously blocks calls purporting to originate from allocated numbers 
may be liable for violating the call completion rules.

Calls Purporting To Originate From Numbers That Are Allocated but 
Unused

    31. The Commission finds that providers may block calls purportedly 
originating from numbers that are allocated to a provider by the NANPA 
or PA, but are unused, so long as the provider blocking the calls is 
the allocatee of the number or has obtained verification from the 
allocatee that the number is unused at the time of the blocking. For 
these purposes, an ``unused'' number is a number that is not assigned 
to a subscriber or otherwise set aside for outbound call use. As with 
invalid numbers and unallocated numbers, calls cannot originate from 
such a number, and the Commission foresees no lawful purpose for 
intentionally spoofing a number that is unused and thus cannot be 
called back.
    32. The record shows mixed support for allowing providers to block 
these kinds of calls. For example, EPIC points out that ``because they 
are not assigned anyone using them without the provider's knowledge is 
almost certainly engaging in unlawful activity.'' Many commenters, 
however, express concerns about legal calls being blocked, similar to 
the concerns about unallocated number call blocking, because ``the 
status of numbers is always changing.'' The record also shows 
``potentially thorny implementation issues'' for blocking calls from 
unused numbers, similar to but greater in scale than those identified 
for unallocated numbers. In addition, the argument concerning the 
likely reaction of robocallers to the blocking of unallocated numbers 
detailed above applies here as well.
    33. Obtaining Unused Number Information. The record clearly shows 
``an industry-wide recognition that there is currently no technical 
solution that allows providers to accurately and promptly identify 
numbers that have been allocated to a carrier but not yet assigned to a 
subscriber.'' Commenters assert that without such a database, providers 
cannot be certain of the status of numbers not assigned to them. The 
Number Portability Administration Center (NPAC) and other existing 
databases do not show the details of provider assignment of numbers and 
are not capable of identifying reassigned numbers. Microsoft claims 
that such blocking, ``if not supported by use of a 100 percent reliable 
real-time database (which does not exist), could prevent outgoing 
domestic call completion for consumers who are assigned newly-activated 
telephone numbers.''
    34. The record reveals that creating such a database would be 
difficult. Neustar comments that providers ``often consider such 
information to be competitively sensitive.'' In addition, the 
information changes very quickly, ``as providers are constantly 
assigning new numbers to subscribers or are de-assigning numbers when a 
subscriber leaves and decides not to take advantage of number 
portability.'' While the FTC encourages providers to share this 
information, providers oppose mandatory information sharing. CTIA 
cautions that creating a centralized database ``is technically 
challenging and would divert resources away from innovative 
solutions.''
    35. The Commission concludes, however, that a narrowly tailored 
rule could be implemented without a database. Noble Systems makes a 
distinction between allowing providers to block calls purported to 
originate from numbers allocated to that provider, which the provider 
knows to be unused, and requiring providers to share information to 
block all unused numbers. Regarding their own numbers, ``each 
individual service provider certainly knows which telephone numbers it 
has been allocated but not yet assigned to subscribers.'' As such, the 
rule permits providers to block on this basis. Should the industry 
develop more comprehensive information sources that would facilitate 
broader blocking of calls purported to originate from unused numbers, 
the rule would also permit that kind of blocking.
    36. Scope of Rule. The record shows significant obstacles to 
implementing a rule requiring all providers to pool their information, 
yet where the allocatee of the number in question is the only provider 
able to block calls purporting to originate from that number, ``the 
value of the initiative would be significantly diminished and would 
create a disadvantage for smaller providers.'' With fewer providers 
blocking each number, fewer illegal calls will be blocked overall.
    37. The Commission will not require providers to share 
competitively sensitive information on an industry-wide basis, nor will 
it limit providers to blocking only unused numbers they have been 
allocated. The Commission therefore defines the scope of this rule to 
allow providers to block calls purporting to originate from an unused 
number, so long as the provider blocking the call either (1) is the 
allocatee of the number and has confirmed the number is unused, or (2) 
has verified the unused status of the number with the allocatee at the 
time of the blocking. This gives providers the flexibility to share 
information if they wish to, and the Commission encourages providers to 
do so.
    38. In addition, this is a permissive rule. CTIA points out that 
such ``[a] voluntary regime will allow carriers that develop the 
ability to identify these numbers to block calls originating from them 
without forcing carriers to develop capabilities they do not currently 
possess.''
    39. Types of Used Numbers. Many commenters indicate that legal 
calls may be made from what appear to be unassigned numbers. For 
example, INCOMPAS points out that ``many

[[Page 1571]]

legitimate callers do not originate calls on the [PSTN] and, therefore, 
do not have telephone numbers.'' Commenters identify three specific 
kinds of unassigned numbers that should not be blocked because they are 
being used to make legal outbound calls: Intermediate numbers, 
administrative numbers, and proxy numbers. The Commission acknowledges 
this concern and the rule is clear that providers should not block any 
type of number that, although it is not assigned to a subscriber, is 
used for these lawful purposes. The Commission encourages providers to 
examine the status of their numbers before blocking calls that purport 
to originate from unused numbers to verify that they are not 
inadvertently blocking calls that fall outside the scope of this rule, 
which would risk liability for violating the call completion rules.

Other Issues

    40. Emergency Calls. The Commission makes clear that the rules do 
not authorize the blocking of calls to 911 under any circumstance. The 
Commission notes that the NANP itself contemplates certain non-standard 
numbers to facilitate emergency calling; the NANP, for example, 
``permits the use of `911' as the [Numbering Plan Area code] for 
emergency calls from non-initialized mobile devices.'' To make it 
abundantly clear, nonetheless, that voice providers should not block 
such calls, the Commission makes clear these rules do not permit the 
blocking of emergency calls except as otherwise expressly permitted by 
the Commission's rules.
    41. International Calls. In the Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI, the 
Commission sought comment ``on whether an internationally originated 
call purportedly originated from a NANP number should be subject to 
these rules, whereas an internationally originated call showing an 
international number would be beyond the scope of this rule.'' The 
Commission adopts this proposal. The Commission agrees with Neustar 
that it should apply to international calls purporting to use NANP 
numbers ``the same blocking rules applicable to domestic originated 
calls.'' Many illegal robocalls originate from overseas call centers, 
and excluding such calls that purport to use NANP numbers from the 
ambit of the rule would create an exception that threatens to swallow 
the rule. In contrast, international calls from purported non-NANP 
numbers would not, by definition, follow the NANP numbering scheme and 
thus are beyond the scope of this proceeding.
    42. The Commission agrees with commenters that internationally 
originated calls may have lawful reasons to use a NANP number. VON, for 
example, suggests ``a US-based user of a service may be traveling in 
Europe but uses their service to make Wi-Fi-based calls (and have their 
US caller ID shown).'' And the Commission agrees with Microsoft that it 
must ``avoid inadvertently authorizing international call blocking.'' 
But the Commission disagrees with ZipDX's apparent suggestion that some 
possibility of international call blocking means the Commission must 
abandon its efforts. Because the Commission authorizes blocking only 
for purported NANP numbers, it sees no reason why the actual 
origination point of the call would bear on whether it is blocked. In 
other words, the Commission finds the likelihood of blocking a 
legitimate call is minimal--no matter its origin. And the Commission 
reiterates that the rules do not authorize the blocking of any 
international call purporting to use a valid NANP number assigned to 
that user.
    43. Subscriber Consent. The Commission does not require consumer 
opt-in for providers to block the specific types of calls addressed 
herein. The Commission believes that no reasonable consumer would want 
to receive the calls the Commission has determined may be subject to 
blocking. For call blocking to be most effective, it must be applied 
throughout the calling network. An opt-in requirement would thwart 
providers' efforts.
    44. The record shows support for allowing providers to block these 
specific types of spoofed calls without requiring consent from the 
subscriber. Some commenters emphasize the limited scope of calls that 
do not require consent. ITTA agrees with the Commission's reasoning 
that ``obtaining opt-in consent from subscribers would add unnecessary 
burdens and complexity, . . . may not be technically feasible for some 
providers'' and ``would also add unnecessary delays.'' EPIC comments 
that ``proactive blocking'' would benefit consumers, ``especially those 
that rely on landlines, [who] may not have or use caller ID.''
    45. Consumers Union et. al. propose that providers should obtain 
consent from all consumers before blocking calls other than those 
purporting to originate from DNO numbers, but, as stated above, the 
Commission does not believe any reasonable consumer would want to 
receive these calls. The administrative burden of tracking individual 
opt-in responses would likely be a disincentive to blocking.
    46. While providers are not required to obtain subscriber consent 
before blocking these calls, the Commission emphasizes that the types 
of calls that can be blocked are very limited. The Commission agrees 
with the recommendation from the Consumer Advisory Committee (CAC) and 
encourages providers to inform their customers about the features and 
risks of their own call blocking programs.
    47. Call Completion Rates. The Strike Force requested that the 
Commission amend its call completion rules to ensure that providers can 
block illegal calls without those blocked calls being held against them 
in calculating call completion rates. The Commission agrees that 
providers do not need to count these blocked calls for purposes of 
calculating their call completion rates on FCC Form 480 and therefore 
the Commission interprets the rules and the form to not require 
inclusion of calls blocked in accordance with the rules adopted here. 
Reporting carriers may exclude these calls to the extent that they are 
able to identify them.
    48. The record shows significant support for excluding these calls 
from the call completion calculations to ``incentivize carriers to 
participate in voluntary blocking when appropriate and consistent with 
the rules.'' CenturyLink comments that ``[w]ithout this protection, 
carriers may be unwilling to use any of the tools that may be adopted 
in the proceeding and the consumer benefits the Commission hopes to 
achieve may not be realized.'' Consumers Union et. al. agrees that 
``the calls that are blocked according to these guidelines should be 
exempt from call completion rates.''
    49. Notwithstanding this support for the concept of excluding 
blocked calls from call completion rate calculations, it might not 
currently be possible for all providers to identify blocked calls. 
Originating providers required to file call completion reports have no 
standard mechanism to identify calls that are blocked intentionally 
under these rules by downstream providers and distinguish them from 
calls that are not completed for other reasons. Further, NTCA suggests 
that excluding such calls from call completion would be premature 
``until the definitions and practical considerations noted above are 
addressed and standardized by industry and the Commission.''
    50. Given the inability of all providers who must file call 
completion reports to identify blocked calls in every instance and the 
Commission's revisiting of the rural call completion requirements in a 
separate rulemaking proceeding, the Commission does not believe that

[[Page 1572]]

requiring exclusion of these calls is appropriate at this time. The 
Commission instead simply notes that providers subject to the call-
completion reporting rules may, but are not required to, exclude 
blocked calls from the recordkeeping and reporting requirements to the 
extent they can identify such calls.
    51. CPNI Rules. In the Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI, the 
Commission sought comment on whether there are concerns about sharing 
DNO request information and whether any clarifications or rule changes 
could be helpful. Some commenters asked the Commission to clarify the 
applicability of section 222 of the Act, and the implementing rules, in 
order to allow sharing of robocall information for traceback purposes 
or sharing of a subscriber's request to block an inbound-only number.
    52. USTelecom notes that ``the sharing of CPNI by 
telecommunications providers is essential to ensuring accurate and 
thorough call traceback efforts in multiple providers' networks related 
to suspicious calling events.'' The Commission notes that traceback 
efforts are aimed at identifying persons who make illegal robocalls, 
including calls that involve fraud in violation of the Truth in Caller 
ID Act. The FTC comments that ``information sharing by providers at the 
subscriber's request appears to be consistent'' with the CPNI rules. 
The Commission agrees. Section 222 of the Act and the implementing 
rules explicitly allow telecommunications carriers to use, disclose, or 
permit access to CPNI obtained from its customers, either directly or 
indirectly through its agents, ``to protect the rights or property of 
the carrier, or to protect users of those services and other carriers 
from fraudulent, abusive, or unlawful use of, or subscription to, such 
services.'' Furthermore, the Commission agrees with the FTC that when a 
subscriber requests that the carrier block calls purporting to be from 
the subscriber's inbound-only number, ``the subscriber is almost 
certainly seeking to have the number blocked by as many providers as 
possible.'' Therefore, such a request should be understood as 
authorizing the carrier to share that request with other carriers as 
permitted by section 222(c)(1) of the Act. Thus, voice service 
providers are free to share DNO requests as necessary to block calls in 
the limited circumstances identified in the Report and Order.
    53. Removing Blocks on Valid Numbers. A challenge mechanism may be 
needed for voice service providers that block calls given the small 
possibility of blocking legitimate calls. AARP suggested ``[i]t would 
seem to be prudent to have the needed procedures to allow consumers to 
quickly counteract inadvertent blocking in place prior to the 
commencement of the general robocall blocking program.'' The 
Commission's Consumer Advisory Committee similarly states that 
providers and consumers should ``work collaboratively to develop 
processes and solutions whereby unintended blocking of legitimate 
callers can be remedied in a timely and efficient manner.'' The 
Commission encourages providers that block calls to establish a means 
for a caller whose number is blocked to contact the provider and remedy 
the problem. Specifically, the Commission encourages providers that 
block calls in accordance with these rules to provide a way for 
subscribers to challenge a blocked number using a simple method that is 
easy for the average subscriber to understand. The Commission also 
encourages providers to quickly resolve the matter so subscribers 
making legitimate calls may resume doing so speedily.
    54. As a reminder, the call completion rules require voice service 
providers to complete calls and they should therefore not block 
legitimate calls. The Commission also reminds callers that the 
Commission's complaint process is available when calls that fall 
outside the scope of these rules are improperly blocked.
    55. Definition of ``Illegal Robocall.'' Although the Advanced 
Methods NPRM and NOI sought comment on the definition of ``illegal 
robocall'' for the purposes of this proceeding, the Commission declines 
to adopt a definition here given that none of the rules adopted here 
rely on such a definition. Indeed, the record shows confusion regarding 
how the proposed definition of ``illegal robocall'' should apply to the 
call blocking rules. Sprint comments that providers cannot determine 
whether a call meets the definition of an illegal robocall before 
blocking it, because ``[u]nlike spam prevention in email, the content 
of a call cannot be determined before the call rings through to the 
customer's phone.'' First Orion states ``the Commission clearly intends 
to give carriers the flexibility to prevent all illegal calls, 
regardless of the technology used.'' Similarly, the FTC suggests that 
the Commission use the term ``illegal call'' rather than ``illegal 
robocall,'' because ``the problematic calls here are not limited to 
just robocalls, but also abusive, fraudulent, or unlawful calls that 
are `live.' '' Because the Commission makes clear that providers need 
not listen to the content of calls or otherwise to determine whether a 
particular call is expressly illegal before blocking it, the Commission 
sees no reason to define the term at the present moment.

Report on Robocalling

    56. To shed additional light on the issue of robocalling and inform 
the Commission's actions going forward, the Commission directs the 
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, in consultation with the 
Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection, to prepare a 
report on the state of robocalling in the United States and to submit 
it to the Commission within one year from publication of the Report and 
Order in the Federal Register. This report should encompass both the 
progress made by industry, government, and consumers in combatting 
illegal robocalls, as well as the remaining challenges to continuing 
these important efforts. A focus on quantitative data, including, but 
not limited to, calling trends and consumer complaints, will provide 
particular insight into the current state of the robocalling problem 
and how to target additional measures to help consumers avoid the fraud 
and annoyance that they experience.

Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    57. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), as 
amended, an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was 
incorporated into the Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI. The Commission 
sought written public comment on the proposals in the Advanced Methods 
NPRM and NOI, including comment on the IRFA. The comments received are 
discussed below. This Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) 
conforms to the RFA.

Need for, and Objectives of, the Order

    58. The Report and Order takes another important step in combatting 
illegal robocalls by enabling voice service providers to block certain 
calls before they reach consumers' phones. In the year since August 1, 
2016, the Commission has received nearly 185,000 complaints about calls 
that consumers did not want. Stopping illegal robocalls and the 
problems they cause has united industry, government, and consumer 
groups. Caller ID spoofing is often the key to making robocall scams 
work. Therefore, the rules outline specific, well-defined circumstances 
in which voice service providers may block calls that are highly likely 
to be illegitimate because

[[Page 1573]]

there is no lawful reason to spoof certain kinds of numbers. 
Specifically, the Report and Order adopts rules allowing providers to 
block calls from phone numbers on a DNO list and those that purport to 
be from invalid, unallocated, or unused numbers. By doing so, the 
Commission furthers its goal of removing regulatory roadblocks and 
gives industry the flexibility to block illegal calls. At the same 
time, the Commission affirms its commitment to protect the reliability 
of the nation's communications network and ensure that provider-
initiated blocking helps, rather than harms, consumers. A provider that 
blocks calls that do not fall within the scope of these rules may be 
liable for violating the Commission's call completion rules.
    59. Blocking at the Request of the Subscriber to the Originating 
Number. In the Report and Order, the Commission codifies the Bureau's 
earlier clarification that voice service providers may block calls 
purporting to be from a telephone number if the subscriber to that 
number requests such blocking in order to prevent its number from being 
spoofed. Where the subscriber did not consent to the number being used, 
the call was very likely made with the intent to defraud, and therefore 
no reasonable consumer would wish to receive such a call.
    60. Calls Supposedly Originating From Invalid Numbers. Similarly, 
the Report and Order allows providers to block calls purportedly 
originating from numbers that are not valid under the NANP. Examples of 
such numbers include those that use an unassigned area code; that use 
an abbreviated dialing code, such as 411, in place of an area code; 
that do not contain the requisite number of digits; and that are a 
single digit repeated, such as 000-000-0000, with the exception of 888-
888-8888, which is an assignable number. No caller would spoof an 
invalid number for any lawful purpose; for example, unlike a business 
spoofing Caller ID on outgoing calls to show its main call-back number, 
invalid numbers cannot be called back. Providers, however, must take 
care that they do not block calls that purportedly originate from valid 
numbers, especially emergency calls.
    61. Calls Supposedly Originating From Numbers Not Allocated to Any 
Provider. The Report and Order also allows providers to block calls 
purportedly originating from numbers that are valid but have not yet 
been allocated by the NANPA or the PA to any provider. Though these 
numbers are valid under the North American Numbering Plan, the 
Commission finds that calls purporting to use unallocated numbers are 
similar to calls purporting to use invalid numbers in that no 
subscriber can actually originate a call from any of these numbers, and 
the Commission sees no lawful reason to spoof such numbers because they 
cannot be called back.
    62. Calls Supposedly Originating From Numbers That are Allocated 
but Unused. Document FCC 17-151 allows providers to block calls 
purportedly originating from numbers that are allocated to a provider 
by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator or Pooling 
Administrator, but are unused, so long as the provider blocking the 
calls is the allocatee of the number or has obtained verification from 
the allocatee that the number is unused at the time of the blocking. 
For these purposes, an ``unused'' number is a number that is not 
assigned to a subscriber or otherwise set aside for legitimate outbound 
call use. As with invalid numbers and unallocated numbers, a subscriber 
cannot originate a call from such a number, and the Commission foresees 
no lawful purpose for intentionally spoofing a number that is unused 
and thus cannot be called back.
    63. Other Issues. The Report and Order also clarifies that these 
rules do not permit the blocking of emergency calls except as otherwise 
expressly permitted by the Commission's rules, that all calls 
purporting to originate from a NANP number, including international 
calls, are subject to these rules, and that international calls from 
purported non-NANP numbers would not, by definition, follow the NANP 
numbering scheme and thus are beyond the scope of this proceeding. It 
confirms that the Commission does not require consumer opt-in for 
providers to block these specific types of calls, clarifies that 
providers do not need to count these blocked calls for purposes of 
calculating their call completion rates, clarifies that voice service 
providers are free to share the CPNI necessary to block calls in the 
limited circumstances identified in the Report and Order, encourages 
providers to establish a means for a caller whose number is blocked to 
contact the provider and remedy the problem, and declines to adopt a 
definition of the term ``illegal robocall'' at the present moment.

Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response to 
the IRFA

    64. In the Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI, the Commission solicited 
comments on how to minimize the economic impact of the new rules on 
small businesses. The Commission received one comment directly 
addressing the IRFA and several comments addressing small business 
concerns. Two of the comments requested that the call blocking rules be 
permissive, rather than mandatory, three pertained to the 
administration of a database for unassigned numbers, and two addressed 
other issues. In addition, the Commission received two consumer 
comments documenting the negative impact of unwanted calls on small 
businesses. None of the other comments pointed out any areas where 
small businesses would incur a particular hardship in complying with 
the rules.
    65. Permissive Rules. Both CTIA and ITTA support permissive rules. 
CTIA suggests that ``blocking of numbers . . . should be authorized, 
but not required.'' ITTA claims that permissive rules give providers 
``flexibility in how aggressively they choose to block calls.'' The 
rules the Commission adopts here are permissive and not mandatory.
    66. Database Administration. INCOMPAS, ITTA, and PACE suggest that 
a centralized database of unused numbers be created, and then suggest 
ways to minimize disproportionate costs to small businesses in using 
such a database. The Commission considered both the technical and cost 
issues inherent in the creations of a database and determined not to 
require one. Without a database, concerns about its administration are 
rendered moot.
    67. INCOMPAS requests a mechanism that will ``spare smaller 
providers from using additional resources to prove the legitimacy of 
its call traffic to other providers.'' In the Report and Order, the 
Commission allows a provider to block unused numbers only if the 
provider blocking the calls is the allocatee of the number or has 
obtained verification from the allocatee that the number is unused at 
the time of the blocking. Therefore, if a smaller provider does not 
give information to other providers, its call traffic will not be 
blocked.
    68. Other Issues. Commenters raise three other issues. First, 
INCOMPAS requests that the Commission require providers to put a 
mechanism in place to remove blocks on valid numbers, and that in doing 
so, ``providers should be given discretion to adjust their policies 
according to their size and services.'' In the Report and Order, the 
Commission urges, but does not require providers to implement such a 
mechanism, nor does the Commission provide specific requirements for 
how providers might remove blocks on valid numbers, allowing smaller 
providers the flexibility they request. Second, NTCA suggests that the 
North American

[[Page 1574]]

Numbering Council (NANC) ``may be best positioned to help clarify 
practical requirements'' to ``to assess and mitigate the costs of 
compliance for smaller firms.'' However, industry has already 
established the Robocall Strike Force (Strike Force), which has 
produced significant documentation clarifying the practical 
requirements for the limited and specific types of call blocking 
authorized in the Report and Order. Blocking these calls presents a 
very low risk, and NANC participation is not required to move forward 
at this time. Third, TNS suggests that providers be permitted to block 
unused numbers allocated to other providers to avoid creating ``a 
disadvantage for smaller providers.'' The record also shows that many 
providers view their unused number data as competitively sensitive 
information. In the Report and Order, the Commission balances these 
concerns by allowing, but not requiring, providers to block unused 
numbers allocated to other providers if they have verified the unused 
status of the number.

Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
Business Administration

    69. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended 
the RFA, the Commission is required to respond to any comments filed by 
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration 
(SBA), and to provide a detailed statement of any change made to the 
proposed rules as a result of those comments. The Chief Counsel did not 
file any comments in response to the proposed rules in this proceeding.

Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which Rules 
Will Apply

    70. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where 
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be 
affected by the rules adopted herein. The RFA generally defines the 
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small 
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental 
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same 
meaning as the term ``small-business concern'' under the Small Business 
Act. A ``small-business concern'' is one which: (1) Is independently 
owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and 
(3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.

Wireline Carriers

    71. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau 
defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use 
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry.'' The SBA has developed a small business size standard 
for Wired Telecommunications Carriers, which consists of all such 
companies having 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 shows 
that there were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 
3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this size 
standard, the majority of firms in this industry can be considered 
small.
    72. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs). Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for local 
exchange services. The closest applicable size standard under SBA rules 
is for the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census 
Bureau defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use 
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry.'' Under that size standard, such a business is small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that there 
were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated 
with fewer than 1,000 employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates 
that most providers of local exchange service are small businesses.
    73. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Incumbent LECs). Neither the 
Commission nor the SBA has developed a small business size standard 
specifically for incumbent local exchange services. The closest 
applicable size standard under SBA rules is for the category Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau defines this 
industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in operating and/or 
providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure that 
they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text, sound, 
and video using wired communications networks. Transmission facilities 
may be based on a single technology or a combination of technologies. 
Establishments in this industry use the wired telecommunications 
network facilities that they operate to provide a variety of services, 
such as wired telephony services, including VoIP services, wired 
(cable) audio and video programming distribution, and wired broadband 
internet services. By exception, establishments providing satellite 
television distribution services using facilities and infrastructure 
that they operate are included in this industry.'' Under that size 
standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. 
Census data for 2012 show that there were 3,117 firms that operated 
that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000 
employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that most providers 
of incumbent local exchange service are small businesses.
    74. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (Competitive LECs), 
Competitive Access Providers (CAPs), Shared-Tenant Service Providers, 
and Other Local Service Providers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA 
has developed a small business size standard specifically for these 
service providers. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules is for 
the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau 
defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of

[[Page 1575]]

technologies. Establishments in this industry use the wired 
telecommunications network facilities that they operate to provide a 
variety of services, such as wired telephony services, including VoIP 
services, wired (cable) audio and video programming distribution, and 
wired broadband internet services. By exception, establishments 
providing satellite television distribution services using facilities 
and infrastructure that they operate are included in this industry.'' 
Under that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or 
fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that there were 3,117 firms 
that operated that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated with fewer than 
1,000 employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that most 
providers of competitive local exchange service, competitive access 
providers, shared-tenant service providers, and other local service 
providers are small entities.
    75. The Commission has included small incumbent LECs in this 
present RFA analysis. As noted above, a ``small business'' under the 
RFA is one that, inter alia, meets the pertinent small business size 
standard (e.g., a telephone communications business having 1,500 or 
fewer employees), and ``is not dominant in its field of operation.'' 
The SBA's Office of Advocacy contends that, for RFA purposes, small 
incumbent LECs are not dominant in their field of operation because any 
such dominance is not ``national'' in scope. The Commission has 
therefore included small incumbent LECs in this RFA analysis, although 
it emphasizes that this RFA action has no effect on Commission analyses 
and determinations in other, non-RFA contexts.
    76. Interexchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a small business size standard specifically for providers of 
interexchange services. The appropriate size standard under SBA rules 
is for the category Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census 
Bureau defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use 
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry.'' Under that size standard, such a business is small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that there 
were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated 
with fewer than 1,000 employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates 
that the majority of interexchange carriers are small entities.
    77. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The 
Communications Act also contains a size standard for small cable system 
operators, which is ``a cable operator that, directly or through an 
affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all 
subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any entity 
or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed 
$250,000,000.'' There are approximately 52,403,705 cable video 
subscribers in the United States today. Accordingly, an operator 
serving fewer than 524,037 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator 
if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual revenues of 
all its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the aggregate. Based 
on available data, the Commission finds that all but nine incumbent 
cable operators are small entities under this size standard. Note that 
the Commission neither requests nor collects information on whether 
cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual 
revenues exceed $250 million. Although it seems certain that some of 
these cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross 
annual revenues exceed $250 million, the Commission is unable at this 
time to estimate with greater precision the number of cable system 
operators that would qualify as small cable operators under the 
definition in the Communications Act.
    78. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a size standard for small businesses specifically applicable 
to other toll carriers. This category includes toll carriers that do 
not fall within the categories of interexchange carriers, operator 
service providers, prepaid calling card providers, satellite service 
carriers, or toll resellers. The closest applicable size standard under 
SBA rules is for Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census 
Bureau defines this industry as ``establishments primarily engaged in 
operating and/or providing access to transmission facilities and 
infrastructure that they own and/or lease for the transmission of 
voice, data, text, sound, and video using wired communications 
networks. Transmission facilities may be based on a single technology 
or a combination of technologies. Establishments in this industry use 
the wired telecommunications network facilities that they operate to 
provide a variety of services, such as wired telephony services, 
including VoIP services, wired (cable) audio and video programming 
distribution, and wired broadband internet services. By exception, 
establishments providing satellite television distribution services 
using facilities and infrastructure that they operate are included in 
this industry.'' Under that size standard, such a business is small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that there 
were 3,117 firms that operated that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated 
with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the 
associated small business size standard, the majority of other toll 
carriers can be considered small.

Wireless Carriers

    79. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). Since 
2007, the Census Bureau has placed wireless firms within this new, 
broad, economic census category. Under the present and prior 
categories, the SBA has deemed a wireless business to be small if it 
has 1,500 or fewer employees. For the category of Wireless 
Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite), Census data for 2012 
show that there were 967 firms that operated for the entire year. Of 
this total, 955 firms had fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this 
category and the associated size standard, the Commission estimates 
that the majority of wireless telecommunications carriers (except 
satellite) are small entities. Similarly, according to internally 
developed Commission data, 413 carriers reported that they were engaged 
in the provision of wireless telephony, including cellular service, 
Personal Communications Service (PCS), and Specialized Mobile Radio 
(SMR) services. Of this total, an estimated 261 have 1,500 or fewer 
employees. Thus, using available data, the Commission estimates that 
the majority of wireless firms can be considered small.
    80. Satellite Telecommunications Providers. The category of 
Satellite Telecommunications ``comprises establishments primarily 
engaged in providing telecommunications services to other 
establishments in the telecommunications and broadcasting

[[Page 1576]]

industries by forwarding and receiving communications signals via a 
system of satellites or reselling satellite telecommunications.'' This 
category has a small business size standard of $32.5 million or less in 
average annual receipts, under SBA rules. For this category, Census 
Bureau data for 2012 show that there were a total of 333 firms that 
operated for the entire year. Of this total, 299 firms had annual 
receipts of under $25 million. Consequently, the Commission estimates 
that the majority of satellite telecommunications firms are small 
entities.
    81. All Other Telecommunications. All other telecommunications 
comprise, inter alia, ``establishments primarily engaged in providing 
specialized telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, 
communications telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry 
also includes establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite 
terminal stations and associated facilities connected with one or more 
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to, 
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems. 
Establishments providing internet services or voice over internet 
protocol (VoIP) services via client-supplied telecommunications 
connections are also included in this industry.'' The SBA has developed 
a small business size standard for the category of All Other 
Telecommunications. Under that size standard, such a business is small 
if it has $32.5 million in annual receipts. For this category, Census 
Bureau data for 2012 show that there were a total of 1,442 firms that 
operated for the entire year. Of this total, 1,400 had annual receipts 
below $25 million per year. Consequently, the Commission estimates that 
the majority of all other telecommunications firms are small entities.

Resellers

    82. Toll Resellers. The Commission has not developed a definition 
for toll resellers. The closest NAICS Code Category is 
Telecommunications Resellers. The Telecommunications Resellers industry 
comprises establishments engaged in purchasing access and network 
capacity from owners and operators of telecommunications networks and 
reselling wired and wireless telecommunications services (except 
satellite) to businesses and households. Establishments in this 
industry resell telecommunications; they do not operate transmission 
facilities and infrastructure. Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) 
are included in this industry. The SBA has developed a small business 
size standard for the category of Telecommunications Resellers. Under 
that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer 
employees. Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 firms provided resale 
services during that year. Of that number, 1,341 operated with fewer 
than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated 
small business size standard, the majority of these resellers can be 
considered small entities. According to Commission data, 881 carriers 
have reported that they are engaged in the provision of toll resale 
services. Of this total, an estimated 857 have 1,500 or fewer 
employees. Consequently, the Commission estimates that the majority of 
toll resellers are small entities.
    83. Local Resellers. The SBA has developed a small business size 
standard for the category of Telecommunications Resellers. The 
Telecommunications Resellers industry comprises establishments engaged 
in purchasing access and network capacity from owners and operators of 
telecommunications networks and reselling wired and wireless 
telecommunications services (except satellite) to businesses and 
households. Establishments in this industry resell telecommunications; 
they do not operate transmission facilities and infrastructure. Mobile 
virtual network operators (MVNOs) are included in this industry. Under 
that size standard, such a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer 
employees. Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 firms provided resale 
services during that year. Of that number, all operated with fewer than 
1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and the associated small 
business size standard, the majority of these local resellers can be 
considered small entities.
    84. Prepaid Calling Card Providers. The SBA has developed a small 
business size standard for the category of Telecommunications 
Resellers. The Telecommunications Resellers industry comprises 
establishments engaged in purchasing access and network capacity from 
owners and operators of telecommunications networks and reselling wired 
and wireless telecommunications services (except satellite) to 
businesses and households. Establishments in this industry resell 
telecommunications; they do not operate transmission facilities and 
infrastructure. Mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) are included 
in this industry. Under that size standard, such a business is small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. Census data for 2012 show that 1,341 
firms provided resale services during that year. Of that number, all 
operated with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, under this category and 
the associated small business size standard, the majority of these 
prepaid calling card providers can be considered small entities.

Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance 
Requirements for Small Entities

    85. The Report and Order gives voice service providers the option 
of blocking illegal robocalls in certain, well-defined circumstances. 
These changes affect small and large companies equally, and apply 
equally to all of the classes of regulated entities identified above.
    86. Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements. The Report and Order 
clarifies the call completion rules by allowing, but not requiring, 
voice service providers to exclude calls blocked under these new rules 
from their call completion calculations, to the extent that they are 
aware of which calls are blocked. To do so, voice service providers 
that choose to exclude such calls may modify their current reporting 
and recordkeeping procedures already in place for performing their call 
completion calculations on existing FCC Form 480. This is a minor 
modification to an existing process, so the Commission anticipates that 
the impact will be minimal.
    87. Other Compliance Requirements. Voice service providers will be 
permitted, but not required, to block calls purportedly originating 
from (1) a telephone number if the subscriber to that number requests 
such blocking in order to prevent its number from being spoofed; (2) 
numbers that purport to be NANP numbers but are not valid under the 
NANP; (3) numbers that are valid but have not yet been allocated by the 
NANPA or the PA to any provider; (4) numbers that are allocated to a 
provider by the NANPA or PA, but are unused, so long as the provider 
blocking the calls is the allocatee of the number and or has obtained 
verification from the allocatee that the number is unused at the time 
of the blocking.

Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small 
Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered

    88. The RFA requires an agency to describe any significant 
alternatives that it has considered in reaching its approach, which may 
include the following four alternatives, among others: (1) The 
establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or 
timetables that take into

[[Page 1577]]

account the resources available to small entities; (2) the 
clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance or 
reporting requirements under the rule for small entities; (3) the use 
of performance, rather than design, standards; and (4) an exemption 
from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for small entities.
    89. The Commission considered feedback from the Advanced Methods 
NPRM and NOI in crafting the final order. The Commission evaluated the 
comments in light of balancing the goal of removing regulatory 
roadblocks and giving industry the flexibility to block illegal calls 
with its commitment to protect the reliability of the nation's 
communications network. Small businesses supported the proposal to make 
the call blocking rules permissive rather than mandatory. While the 
Commission considered mandatory rules, it both proposed and implemented 
permissive rules to address the concerns of voice service providers, 
including small businesses, that the cost and burden of complying with 
mandatory rules could be significant and might require implementation 
of new technology. The Commission also took small business concerns 
into consideration in its determination to not require a database of 
unused numbers. While the Commission considered mandating the use of a 
database for providers that choose to block unused numbers, such a 
database could impose disproportionate costs on small businesses and 
would be challenging to create and maintain. Similarly, the Commission 
considered the needs of small businesses in its guidance regarding 
removing blocks from valid numbers. While the Commission considered 
requiring specific processes or dedicated resources, it does not 
mandate them at this time to allow small providers to scale their 
efforts in accordance with their businesses and to develop a more 
robust record on the issue before the Commission addresses this in a 
future proceeding.
    90. The Commission does not see a need to establish a special 
timetable for small entities to reach compliance with the modification 
to the rules. No small business has asked for a delay in implementing 
the rules. Small businesses may avoid compliance costs entirely by 
declining to block robocalls, or may delay implementation of call 
blocking indefinitely to allow for more time to come into compliance 
with the rules. Similarly, there are no design standards or performance 
standards to consider in this rulemaking.

Report to Congress

    91. The Commission sent a copy of the Report and Order, including 
the FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress and the Government 
Accountability Office pursuant to the Congressional Review Act.

Ordering Clauses

    92. Pursuant to sections 201, 202, 222, 251(e), and 403 of the 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 201, 202, 222, 
251(e), 403, the Report and Order is adopted and that part 64 of the 
Commission's rules, 47 CFR 64.1200, is amended.
    93. The Commission's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, 
Reference Information Center, shall send a copy of the Report and Order 
to Congress and the Government Accountability Office pursuant to the 
Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).
    94. The Commission's Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, 
Reference Information Center, shall send a copy of the Report and 
Order, including the Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief 
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration.

List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 64

    Telecommunications, Telephone.

Federal Communications Commission.
Katura Jackson,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the Secretary.

Final Rules

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
Communications Commission amends part 64 as follows:

PART 64--MISCELLANEOUS RULES RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS

0
1. The authority citation for part 64 is amended to read as follows:

    Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 202, 225, 251(e), 254(k), 
403(b)(2)(B), (c), 616, 620, Pub. L. 104-104, 110 Stat. 56. 
Interpret or apply 47 U.S.C. 201, 202, 218, 222, 225, 226, 227, 228, 
251(e), 254(k), 616, 620, and the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job 
Creation Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112-96, unless otherwise noted.


0
2. In Sec.  64.1200, add reserved paragraphs (i) and (j) and paragraph 
(k) to read as follows:


Sec.  64.1200  Delivery restrictions.

* * * * *
    (i) [Reserved]
    (j) [Reserved]
    (k) Voice service providers may block calls so that they do not 
reach a called party as follows:
    (1) A provider may block a voice call when the subscriber to which 
the originating number is assigned has requested that calls purporting 
to originate from that number be blocked because the number is used for 
inbound calls only.
    (2) A provider may block a voice call purporting to originate from 
any of the following:
    (i) A North American Numbering Plan number that is not valid;
    (ii) A valid North American Numbering Plan number that is not 
allocated to a provider by the North American Numbering Plan 
Administrator or the Pooling Administrator; and
    (iii) A valid North American Numbering Plan number that is 
allocated to a provider by the North American Numbering Plan 
Administrator or Pooling Administrator, but is unused, so long as the 
provider blocking the calls is the allocatee of the number and confirms 
that the number is unused or has obtained verification from the 
allocatee that the number is unused at the time of the blocking.
    (3) A provider may not block a voice call under paragraph (k)(1) or 
(2) of this section if the call is an emergency call placed to 911.
    (4) For purposes of this subsection, a provider may rely on Caller 
ID information to determine the purported originating number without 
regard to whether the call in fact originated from that number.

[FR Doc. 2018-00457 Filed 1-11-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6712-01-P



                                              1566                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              13, 2017, for the information collection                Messages received at the CMS Provider                  providers to proactively block telephone
                                              requirements contained in the                           Alert Gateway, including time stamps                   calls when the subscriber of a phone
                                              modifications to 47 CFR 10.320(g).                      that verify when the message is                        number requests that calls purporting to
                                                Under 5 CFR part 1320, an agency                      received, and when it is retransmitted or              originate from that number be blocked,
                                              may not conduct or sponsor a collection                 rejected by the Participating CMS                      and when calls purport to originate from
                                              of information unless it displays a                     Provider Alert Gateway. If an Alert                    three categories of unassigned phone
                                              current, valid OMB Control Number.                      Message is rejected, a Participating CMS               numbers: Invalid numbers, valid
                                                No person shall be subject to any                     Provider is required to log the specific               numbers that are not allocated to a voice
                                              penalty for failing to comply with a                    error code generated by the rejection.                 service provider, and valid numbers that
                                              collection of information subject to the                The CMS provider must also maintain a                  are allocated but not assigned to a
                                              Paperwork Reduction Act that does not                   log of all active and cancelled Alert                  subscriber. While such calls may appear
                                              display a current, valid OMB Control                    Messages for at least 12 months after                  to be legitimate to those who receive
                                              Number. The OMB Control Number is                       receipt of such alert or cancellation and              them, they can result in fraud or
                                              3060–1126.                                              make their alert logs available to the                 identity theft. To combat these scams,
                                                The foregoing notice is required by                   Commission and FEMA upon request.                      the new rules expressly authorize voice
                                              the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,                    Participating CMS Providers are also                   service providers to block these
                                              Public Law 104–13, October 1, 1995,                     required to make alert logs available to               robocalls without running afoul of the
                                              and 44 U.S.C. 3507.                                     emergency management agencies that                     FCC’s call completion rules. To
                                                The total annual reporting burdens                    offer confidentiality protection at least              minimize blocking of lawful calls, the
                                              and costs for the respondents are as                    equal to that provided by the federal                  Commission encourages voice service
                                              follows:                                                Freedom of Information Act upon                        providers that elect to block calls to
                                                                                                      request, but only insofar as those logs                establish a simple way to identify and
                                                OMB Control Number: 3060–1126.                        pertain to Alert Messages initiated by
                                                OMB Approval Date: March 13, 2017.                                                                           fix blocking errors. The rules also
                                                                                                      that emergency management agency.                      prohibit providers from blocking 911
                                                OMB Expiration Date: March 31,                           This information will inform
                                              2020.                                                                                                          emergency calls.
                                                                                                      emergency managers whether their
                                                Title: Testing and Logging                            alerts are delivered, and if not, why not.             DATES:   Effective February 12, 2018.
                                              Requirements for Wireless Emergency                     We anticipate that the alert log                       FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                              Alerts (WEA).                                           maintenance requirements will serve to                 Karen A Schroeder, Consumer Policy
                                                Form Number: N/A.                                     ensure that alert logs are available when              Division, Consumer and Governmental
                                                Respondents: Business or other for-                   needed, both to the Commission and to                  Affairs Bureau (CGB), at (202) 418–0654,
                                              profit entities, and state, local, or tribal            emergency management agencies. These                   email: Karen.Schroeder@fcc.gov.
                                              government.                                             logs have potential to increase their
                                                Number of Respondents and                                                                                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:     This is a
                                                                                                      confidence that WEA will work as
                                              Responses: 80 respondents; 451,600                                                                             summary of the Commission’s Report
                                                                                                      intended when needed. Alert logs are
                                              responses.                                                                                                     and Order, in CG Docket No. 17–59;
                                                                                                      also necessary to establish a baseline for
                                                Estimated Time per Response:                                                                                 FCC 17–151, adopted on November 16,
                                                                                                      system integrity against which future
                                              0.0000694 hours (2.5 seconds)–2 hours.                                                                         2017 and released on November 17,
                                                                                                      iterations of WEA can be evaluated.
                                                Frequency of Response: Monthly and                                                                           2017. The full text of this document will
                                                                                                      Without records that can be used to
                                              on occasion reporting requirements and                                                                         be available for public inspection and
                                                                                                      describe the quality of system integrity,
                                              recordkeeping requirement.                                                                                     copying via ECFS, and during regular
                                                                                                      and the most common causes of
                                                Obligation To Respond: Statutory                                                                             business hours at the FCC Reference
                                                                                                      message transmission failure, it will be
                                              authority for these collection is                                                                              Information Center, Portals II, 445 12th
                                                                                                      difficult to evaluate how any changes to
                                              contained in sections 1, 2, 4(i), 4(o), 301,                                                                   Street SW, Room CY–A257,
                                                                                                      WEA could affect system integrity.
                                              303(r), 303(v), 307, 309, 335, 403,                                                                            Washington, DC 20554. The full text of
                                              624(g), 706, and 715 of the                             Federal Communications Commission.                     this document and any subsequently
                                              Communications Act of 1934, as                          Katura Jackson,                                        filed documents in this matter may also
                                              amended, 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 154(i),                    Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the        be found by searching ECFS at: http://
                                              154(o), 301, 301(r), 303(v), 307, 309,                  Secretary.                                             apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/ (insert CG Docket No.
                                              335, 403, 544(g), 606, and 615, as well                 [FR Doc. 2018–00463 Filed 1–11–18; 8:45 am]            17–59 into the Proceeding block). The
                                              as by sections 602(a), (b), (c), (f), 603,              BILLING CODE 6712–01–P                                 Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
                                              604 and 606 of the WARN Act, 47                                                                                (FNPRM) that was adopted concurrently
                                              U.S.C. 1202(a), (b), (c), (f), 1203, 1204                                                                      with the Report and Order is published
                                              and 1206, unless otherwise noted.                       FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS                                 elsewhere in the Federal Register.
                                                Total Annual Burden: 125,390 hours.                   COMMISSION
                                                                                                                                                             Final Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                                                Total Annual Cost: No Cost.                                                                                  Analysis
                                                                                                      47 CFR Part 64
                                                Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
                                              Confidentiality protection at least equal               [CG Docket No. 17–59; FCC 17–151]                        The Report and Order does not
                                              to that provided by the federal Freedom                                                                        contain any new or modified
                                              of Information Act upon request, but                    Advanced Methods To Target and                         information collection requirements
                                              only insofar as those logs pertain to                   Eliminate Unlawful Robocalls                           subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
                                              Alert Messages initiated by that                        AGENCY:  Federal Communications                        of 1995, Public Law 104–13. In addition,
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES




                                              emergency management agency.                            Commission.                                            therefore, it does not contain any new
                                                Privacy Act: No impact(s).                            ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                                                                             or modified information collection
                                                Needs and Uses: Section 10.320                                                                               burden for small business concerns with
                                              describes the provider alert gateway                    SUMMARY:   In this document,                           fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to
                                              requirements, specifically with respect                 Commission issues new rules that                       the Small Business Paperwork Relief
                                              to logging. The CMS provider must log                   protect consumers from unwanted                        Act of 2002, Public Law 107–198, see 44
                                              the CMAC attributes of all Alert                        robocalls by permitting voice service                  U.S.C. 3506(c)(4).


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           1567

                                              Congressional Review Act                                holistic manner through deployment of                  removing regulatory roadblocks and
                                                The Commission sent a copy of the                     a wide variety of tools by a broad range               gives industry the flexibility to block
                                              Report and Order to Congress and the                    of stakeholders’’ that includes industry               illegal calls. At the same time, the
                                              Government Accountability Office                        blocking of calls. On October 26, 2016,                Commission affirms its commitment to
                                              pursuant to the Congressional Review                    it published the Robocall Strike Force                 protect the reliability of the nation’s
                                              Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).                         Report (Strike Force Report). The Strike               communications network and ensure
                                                                                                      Force specifically asked the                           that provider-initiated blocking helps,
                                              Synopsis                                                Commission to provide guidance on                      rather than harms, consumers. These
                                                 1. In the Report and Order, the                      when providers may block a call that                   rules outline specific, well-defined
                                              Commission takes another important                      the provider believes is illegal.                      circumstances in which voice service
                                              step in combatting illegal robocalls by                    5. The Consumer and Governmental                    providers may block calls that are
                                              enabling voice service providers to                     Affairs Bureau (Bureau) addressed one                  highly likely to be illegitimate because
                                                                                                      of the Strike Force’s requests in 2016 by              there is no lawful reason to spoof
                                              block certain calls before they reach
                                                                                                      clarifying that voice service providers                certain kinds of numbers. Thus, a
                                              consumers’ phones. Specifically, the
                                                                                                      may block calls using a spoofed Caller                 provider who blocks calls in accordance
                                              Commission adopts rules allowing
                                                                                                      ID number if the number’s subscriber                   with these rules will not violate the call
                                              providers to block calls from phone
                                                                                                      requests that they do so. Following that               completion rules. Conversely, a
                                              numbers on a Do-Not-Originate (DNO)
                                                                                                      initial guidance, the Strike Force Report              provider that blocks calls that do not fall
                                              list and those that purport to be from
                                                                                                      sought additional clarification regarding              within the scope of these rules may be
                                              invalid, unallocated, or unused
                                                                                                      the legality of certain provider-initiated             liable for violating the Commission’s
                                              numbers. Providers have been active in
                                                                                                      call blocking. Specifically, it sought                 call completion rules.
                                              identifying these calls and there is broad
                                                                                                      clarification that: (1) Providers may
                                              support for these rules. At the same                    block calls where the Caller ID shows an               Blocking at the Request of the
                                              time, the Commission establishes                        unassigned number; and (2) providers                   Subscriber to the Originating Number
                                              safeguards to mitigate the possibility of               may block calls that the provider has                    9. First, the Commission codifies the
                                              blocking desired calls.                                 determined to be illegal robocalls, so                 Bureau’s earlier clarification that
                                                 2. Caller ID spoofing is often the key               long as the provider takes reasonable                  providers may block calls when they
                                              to making robocall scams work.                          steps to confirm that the calls are illegal.           receive a request from the subscriber to
                                              Generally, Caller ID services permit the                   6. In the March 2017 Advanced                       which the originating number is
                                              recipient of an incoming call to know                   Methods NPRM and NOI, document                         assigned, i.e., a DNO request. The 2016
                                              the telephone number of the calling                     FCC 17–24, published at 82 FR 22625,                   Guidance Public Notice, document DA
                                              party, and in some cases a name                         May 17, 2017, the Commission sought                    16–1121, made clear that voice service
                                              associated with the number, before the                  comment on whether to take certain                     providers—whether providing such
                                              recipient answers the call. But Caller ID               steps to facilitate voice service                      service through TDM, VoIP, or CMRS—
                                              information can be altered or                           providers’ blocking of illegal robocalls.              may block calls purporting to be from a
                                              manipulated, i.e., spoofed, so that the                 In the Advanced Methods NPRM and                       telephone number if the subscriber to
                                              name or number displayed to the called                  NOI, the Commission proposed rules to                  that number requests such blocking in
                                              party does not match that of the actual                 allow voice service providers to block                 order to prevent its number from being
                                              subscriber or the actual originating                    telephone calls when the subscriber of                 spoofed. The Bureau concluded that
                                              number. Though callers can use                          a phone number requests that calls                     where the subscriber did not consent to
                                              spoofing to mislead or even defraud the                 purporting to originate from that                      the number being used, the call was
                                              called party, there are legitimate uses for             number be blocked, and when calls                      very likely made to annoy and defraud,
                                              spoofing.                                               purport to originate from three                        and therefore, no reasonable consumer
                                                 3. Congress passed the 2009 Truth in                 categories of phone numbers: Invalid                   would wish to receive such a call. The
                                              Caller ID Act to ‘‘address the growing                  numbers, valid numbers that are not                    Commission agrees and finds such DNO
                                              problem of Caller ID spoofing done for                  allocated to a voice service provider,                 calls highly likely to be illegal and to
                                              fraudulent or harmful purposes.’’                       and valid numbers that are allocated but               violate the Commission’s anti-spoofing
                                              Congress limited the spoofing                           not assigned to a subscriber.                          rule, with the potential to cause harm,
                                              prohibition to the knowing transmission                    7. Call Completion Considerations.                  defraud, or wrongfully obtain something
                                              of misleading or inaccurate Caller ID                   The Commission has generally found                     of value.
                                              information ‘‘with the intent to defraud,               call blocking by voice service providers                  10. The record shows broad support
                                              cause harm, or wrongfully obtain                        to be unlawful. The Commission also                    among consumer groups, providers,
                                              anything of value,’’ except where such                  made clear that it is unlawful for                     government, and callers for blocking
                                              transmission is determined to be exempt                 providers to block VoIP-Public                         DNO calls. Consumers Union et. al.
                                              by the Commission.                                      Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)                      emphasizes the urgent need for
                                                 4. Despite these protections,                        traffic, and for interconnected and one-               providers to take action against spoofed
                                              consumers still receive an unacceptably                 way VoIP providers to block voice                      calls, stating, ‘‘DNO is one of several
                                              high volume of illegal robocalls. To                    traffic to or from the PSTN. The                       promising tools that they should
                                              combat the robocall problem in a                        Commission has allowed call blocking                   implement to help address the
                                              coordinated way, industry established                   only in ‘‘rare and limited                             problem.’’ Several commenters note the
                                              the Robocall Strike Force (Strike Force)                circumstances.’’                                       positive results of DNO trials conducted
                                              in 2016. The Strike Force includes                                                                             by members of the Strike Force.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES




                                              representatives from providers of                       Discussion                                                11. ZipDX and others claim that gains
                                              traditional landline, mobile, and Voice                    8. In the Report and Order, the                     from blocking DNO numbers will be
                                              over internet Protocol (VoIP) services,                 Commission adopts rules to give voice                  temporary, because those making illegal
                                              handset manufacturers, operating                        service providers the option of blocking               robocalls will simply choose other
                                              system developers, and VoIP gateway                     illegal robocalls in certain, well-defined             numbers to spoof when their calls are
                                              providers. The Strike Force has said that               circumstances. By doing so, the                        blocked. The Commission disagrees that
                                              ‘‘robocalls are best addressed in a                     Commission furthers its goal of                        this possibility negates the


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                                              1568                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              demonstrated benefits of such blocking.                 number to go through. Commenters note                  Calls Purporting To Originate From
                                              Allowing providers to block spoofed                     that providers must coordinate their                   Unassigned Numbers
                                              calls from high-profile numbers, such as                efforts for this type of call blocking to                17. The Commission next finds that
                                              IRS phone numbers, that are among                       be used effectively. For example, Sprint               providers may initiate blocking where
                                              those most likely to lure consumers into                comments that, while it supports this                  the call purports to originate from a
                                              scams will substantially benefit                        type of blocking and participated in the               number that is unassigned. Use of an
                                              consumers and help entities that make                   collaborative effort to block spoofed IRS              unassigned number provides a strong
                                              DNO requests control the integrity of                   numbers, ‘‘there are currently no                      indication that the calling party is
                                              their phone numbers. The Commission                     automated systems in place to expand                   spoofing the Caller ID to potentially
                                              believes that codifying the Bureau’s                    the scale of such projects industry-wide               defraud and harm a voice service
                                              2016 guidance in the form of a rule                     or to accommodate much larger                          subscriber. Such calls are therefore
                                              gives providers greater certainty that                  numbers of customers requesting                        highly likely to be illegal. The
                                              blocking calls at the request of the                    blocking.’’ USTelecom points out the                   Commission identifies three categories
                                              subscriber is lawful and provides an                    inefficiency of requiring subscribers                  of unassigned numbers that it
                                              incentive to engage in this kind of                     ‘‘requesting DNOs to be forced to make                 determines can be reasonably subject to
                                              beneficial blocking.                                    individual requests to multiple                        blocking: (1) Numbers that are invalid
                                                12. Criteria for Blocking DNO                         providers.’’ ZipDX suggests that the                   under the North American Numbering
                                              Numbers. In its comments, USTelecom
                                                                                                      originating provider is in the best                    Plan (NANP); (2) numbers that have not
                                              suggests five criteria used by the
                                                                                                      position to block these kinds of calls.                been allocated by the North American
                                              Industry Traceback Group (ITB) to
                                                                                                         14. Other commenters, however,                      Numbering Plan Administrator
                                              evaluate numbers to determine whether
                                                                                                      suggest that providers expand their                    (NANPA) or the Pooling Administrator
                                              they should be blocked, namely:
                                                                                                      existing ways of sharing information                   (PA) to any provider; and (3) numbers
                                              a candidate number must: (1) Be inbound-                                                                       that the NANPA or PA has allocated to
                                              only; (2) be currently spoofed by a robocaller          from the test cases and other initiatives
                                                                                                      to support this effort. As Comcast                     a provider, but are not currently used.
                                              in order to perpetrate impersonation-focused
                                                                                                      comments, ‘‘[p]articipants in the Strike               Providers may block calls purporting to
                                              fraud; (3) be the source of a substantial
                                              volume of calls; (4) have authorization for                                                                    be from numbers that fall into any one
                                                                                                      Force have set up an ad hoc shared list
                                              participation in the DNO effort from the party                                                                 of these three categories.
                                                                                                      of numbers that should not be
                                              to which the telephone number is assigned;              originated and can add more for                        Calls Purporting To Originate From
                                              and/or (5) be recognized by consumers as
                                              belonging to a legitimate entity, lending               review.’’ USTelecom comments that its                  Invalid Numbers
                                              credence to the impersonators and                       ‘‘Industry Traceback Group has been                       18. Providers may block calls
                                              influencing successful execution of the scam.           facilitating a targeted, centralized, and              purportedly originating from numbers
                                              The Commission finds that for purposes                  coordinated DNO trial and stands ready                 that are not valid NANP numbers.
                                              of the rule, only two of these criteria are             to continue to evolve industry efforts on              Examples of such numbers include
                                              necessary. The number must be used for                  this front going forward.’’                            those that use an unassigned area code;
                                              inbound calls only, and the subscriber                     15. The Commission strongly                         that use an abbreviated dialing code,
                                              to the number must authorize it to be                   encourages providers to continue to                    such as 911 or 411, in place of an area
                                              blocked. The Commission agrees with                     work cooperatively to share information                code; that do not contain the requisite
                                              the ITB recommendation that both the                    about any inbound-only numbers for                     number of digits; and that are a single
                                              subscriber making the request and the                   which the subscriber has requested that                digit repeated, such as 000–000–0000,
                                              provider receiving the request validate                 the number be blocked. At this time, the               with the exception of 888–888–8888,
                                              that the number is used for inbound                     Commission declines to prescribe a                     which is an assignable number. With a
                                              calls only. The Commission will not                     sharing mechanism, especially in light                 few important exceptions detailed
                                              require the subscriber or the provider to               of industry’s existing efforts at                      below, the record generally supports the
                                              determine whether the number is                         coordination. The Commission                           assumption that, because these numbers
                                              currently being spoofed, is the source of               emphasizes that safeguards must be put                 are not valid, a subscriber could not
                                              a substantial volume of calls, or is                    in place to prevent numbers used for                   lawfully originate calls from such
                                              recognized by consumers. While the                      outbound calls from being wrongly                      numbers and these calls should be
                                              Commission believes the additional                      added to the DNO list, whether from                    blocked. Providers, however, must take
                                              criteria may be helpful in some                         hacking, honest mistakes, or some other                care that they do not block calls that
                                              circumstances, they would impose too                    cause, especially for calls made to                    purportedly originate from valid
                                              high a barrier for inclusion in the DNO                 emergency services. The Commission                     numbers, especially emergency calls.
                                              list. In addition, the Commission does                  encourages industry to continue                           19. The record supports the proposal
                                              not want to impose a potentially                        developing its methods for                             that no caller would spoof an invalid
                                              burdensome analysis requirement on                                                                             number for any lawful purpose; for
                                                                                                      implementing DNO and encourages
                                              providers that might discourage them                                                                           example, unlike a business spoofing
                                                                                                      providers that choose to do such
                                              from blocking inbound-only numbers at                                                                          Caller ID on outgoing calls to show its
                                                                                                      blocking to establish a mechanism for
                                              the request of the subscriber.                                                                                 main call-back number, invalid numbers
                                                                                                      timely removal of erroneous blocks.
                                                 13. Coordination of Effort. The                                                                             cannot be called back. Thus, the
                                              Commission agrees with Consumers                           16. Resellers. Finally, the Commission              Commission does not see a significant
                                              Union et. al. that ‘‘[m]uch responsibility              agree with TracFone that wireless                      risk to network reliability in allowing
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                                              rests with the providers to ensure that                 resellers may pass along subscriber                    providers to block this category of calls.
                                              DNO works as well as possible’’ through                 requests to the underlying carrier that                ATIS suggests that benefits will be
                                              broad industry participation. While full                the subscriber’s inbound-only number                   temporary because ‘‘widespread
                                              industry participation is not required to               be blocked. The Commission sees no                     blocking of invalid and unallocated
                                              achieve positive results, having more                   reason on this record to not allow                     numbers could have an unintended
                                              providers block a number will allow                     wireless reseller subscribers to                       negative consequence by driving bad
                                              fewer calls purporting to be from that                  participate in the DNO effort.                         actors to focus their efforts on spoofing


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          1569

                                              assigned/valid numbers.’’ Consumers                     simulations before blocking calls                      telephone numbers (over 33 million)
                                              Union et. al., however, comment that                    purporting to originate from invalid                   that have been flagged as making calls,
                                              blocking such calls is imperative,                      numbers to verify their methods.                       the volume of call activity from these
                                              because ‘‘[c]onsumers do not expect that                                                                       numbers relative to all negative
                                                                                                      Calls Purporting To Originate From
                                              their phone service would be the means                                                                         robocalling is very small.’’ TNS
                                                                                                      Numbers Not Allocated to Any Provider
                                              through which illegal and fraudulent                                                                           concludes that blocking ‘‘this subset of
                                              scams enter their homes, and providers                     22. The Commission finds that                       numbers has significant, but limited
                                              should not be obligated to deliver illegal              providers may block calls purportedly                  value.’’ In contrast, a recent Commission
                                              messages that could cause consumers                     originating from numbers that are valid                enforcement action found that one
                                              harm.’’ In addition, blocking calls                     but have not yet been allocated by the                 robocaller made a staggering 21,582,771
                                              purporting to be from invalid numbers                   NANPA or the PA to any provider.                       spoofed robocalls in a three-month
                                              ‘‘holds the greatest potential for success              Though these numbers are valid under                   period; the caller ID for each of the
                                              in the short term and likely would be                   the NANP, the Commission finds that                    robocalls examined by the FCC falsely
                                              the easiest to implement.’’                             calls purporting to use unallocated                    identified a phone number that was not
                                                 20. The Commission rejects                           numbers are similar to calls purporting                assigned to any carrier or subscriber at
                                              suggestions that blocking calls                         to use invalid numbers in that no                      the time the calls were made. Although
                                              purporting to originate from invalid                    subscriber can actually originate a call               the number of complaints about calls
                                              numbers creates ‘‘significant                           from any of these numbers, and the                     from unassigned numbers may be small,
                                              possibilities of false positives.’’                     Commission sees no lawful reason to                    the Commission agrees with USTelecom
                                              Although ZipDX claims that ‘‘a                          spoof such numbers because they                        that the potential value of blocking such
                                              significant number’’ of private branch                  cannot be called back. Calls purporting                calls is enormous. Consumers will
                                              exchanges (PBXs) ‘‘are not properly                     to originate from such numbers                         benefit from this type of blocking
                                              configured’’ to display an accurate                     therefore are highly likely to be illegal.             because the calls are highly likely to
                                              Caller ID and that Caller ID information                   23. Here, the provider must have                    annoy or defraud.
                                              could theoretically be ‘‘unintentionally                knowledge that a certain block of                         26. Defining Unallocated Numbers
                                              altered’’ during a call’s transmission, the             numbers has not been allocated to any                  Subject to Blocking. Some commenters
                                              record belies such claims. Instead, the                 provider and therefore that the number                 emphasize that a permissive rule does
                                              record demonstrates that the risk of                    being blocked could not have been                      not require providers to identify and
                                              erroneously blocking such calls is very                 assigned to a subscriber. The record                   block every unallocated number, but
                                              low and should not be a barrier to                      generally supports allowing permissive                 rather simply allows a provider to block
                                              allowing providers to block calls                       blocking of calls purporting to be from                calls purporting to be from those
                                              purporting to be from invalid numbers.                  unallocated numbers. For example,                      numbers it can verify are unallocated.
                                              Indeed, the Commission agrees with                      ATIS points out that ‘‘no subscriber can               The Commission agrees. Providers may
                                              USTelecom that this small risk simply                   actually originate a call from these                   block calls purporting to be from
                                              requires providers to exercise ‘‘caution                unallocated central office codes and it is             unallocated numbers and should limit
                                              when instituting blocking in the                        unlikely that there is any legitimate,                 themselves to blocking only those
                                              network.’’ And the Commission                           lawful reason to.’’                                    numbers that they can verify are
                                              reiterates that caution to businesses                      24. Parties opposing this type of call              unallocated. Providers may not be able
                                              with PBXs: The responsibility to                        blocking generally do so based on                      to identify the complete set of all
                                              properly configure PBX equipment lies                   implementation difficulties and the risk               unallocated numbers for purposes of
                                              with the owner, and those spoofing                      of blocking legal calls. For example,                  call blocking. Accordingly, voice service
                                              invalid numbers (whether intentionally                  NCTA warns that the proposal ‘‘could                   providers might be unable to block calls
                                              or not) have the ability to ensure that                 unintentionally result in harm to                      purporting to originate from every
                                              their calls go through by properly                      consumers and should not be adopted at                 unallocated number, but this
                                              reconfiguring that equipment.                           this time,’’ and ZipDX cautions that                   shortcoming would not result in the
                                                 21. Identifying Invalid Numbers.                     ‘‘[t]he unintended consequences of                     blocking of legal calls.
                                              Neustar, which currently is the NANPA                   these blocks (false positives) are                        27. Obtaining Unallocated Number
                                              and PA, comments that ‘‘information for                 potentially quite troublesome and far                  Information. The Commission does not
                                              invalid numbers [is maintained] within                  outweigh any good that would result                    prescribe a technical solution for
                                              the [NANP], and the industry has other                  from successful robocall blocks.’’                     identifying and communicating
                                              sources to identify invalid numbers                     Several commenters also note that, if                  information about unallocated numbers
                                              such as ATIS’s Industry Numbering                       providers block unallocated numbers,                   at this time. The record shows
                                              Committee. . . . Thus, service                          then ‘‘illegal robocallers could simply                consensus that, while information on
                                              providers already have access to the                    shift to spoofing assigned numbers.’’                  unallocated numbers is available to
                                              information they need’’ for this kind of                   25. Commenters do not agree on the                  providers, no currently available source
                                              blocking. Comcast similarly states that                 potential volume of calls that might be                identifies all unallocated numbers in
                                              ‘‘[v]oice providers generally have                      blocked under this rule. While ZipDX                   real time and that ‘‘the NANPA does not
                                              ‘intimate knowledge of the [NANP]’ and                  says the ‘‘fraction of complaints’’ from               administer codes outside the United
                                              can ‘easily identify numbers that fall                  unassigned numbers is ‘‘miniscule,’’                   States, specifically in Canada and
                                              into this category,’ including numbers                  USTelecom states that ‘‘the scale of                   Caribbean countries, or toll-free
                                              that use an N11 code in place of an area                numbers at issue in the Commission’s                   numbers.’’ Many commenters suggest
                                              code or that repeat a single digit.’’ In                latter two proposals [blocking calls from              that providers should use a new,
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                                              light of the industry’s assurance that it               unallocated and unassigned numbers]                    centralized database as a resource for
                                              can confidently identify invalid                        are potentially enormous—                              identification of unallocated numbers.
                                              numbers, the Commission sees no need                    encompassing 3 billion telephone                          28. Neustar lists categories of
                                              to further define or limit what is meant                numbers.’’ Transaction Network                         unallocated numbers that should not
                                              by ‘‘a number that is not a valid [NANP]                Services (TNS) attempts to strike a                    initiate calls, including ‘‘telephone
                                              number.’’ The Commission encourages                     middle ground, suggesting that ‘‘[w]hile               numbers in: (1) Unallocated area codes
                                              providers to conduct tests or                           there is a large number of unallocated                 in the NANP; (2) unallocated geographic


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                                              1570                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              Central Office (‘‘CO’’) codes (NPA–NXX)                 not assigned to a subscriber or otherwise              would divert resources away from
                                              in the United States; and (3) unallocated               set aside for outbound call use. As with               innovative solutions.’’
                                              non-contaminated thousands-blocks                       invalid numbers and unallocated                           35. The Commission concludes,
                                              (NPA–NXX–X) in the United States.’’                     numbers, calls cannot originate from                   however, that a narrowly tailored rule
                                              ATIS elaborates on the issue of                         such a number, and the Commission                      could be implemented without a
                                              contaminated thousands-blocks, stating                  foresees no lawful purpose for                         database. Noble Systems makes a
                                              that available thousands-blocks                         intentionally spoofing a number that is                distinction between allowing providers
                                              ‘‘publicly posted on the PA website . . .               unused and thus cannot be called back.                 to block calls purported to originate
                                              could contain up to 100 assigned                           32. The record shows mixed support                  from numbers allocated to that provider,
                                              numbers within those blocks.’’                          for allowing providers to block these                  which the provider knows to be unused,
                                              Therefore, providers blocking calls from                kinds of calls. For example, EPIC points               and requiring providers to share
                                              contaminated blocks could erroneously                   out that ‘‘because they are not assigned               information to block all unused
                                              block calls purporting to originate from                anyone using them without the                          numbers. Regarding their own numbers,
                                              assigned numbers. Providers that block                  provider’s knowledge is almost certainly               ‘‘each individual service provider
                                              calls purporting to originate from                      engaging in unlawful activity.’’ Many                  certainly knows which telephone
                                              assigned numbers may be liable for                      commenters, however, express concerns                  numbers it has been allocated but not
                                              violating the call completion rules.                    about legal calls being blocked, similar               yet assigned to subscribers.’’ As such,
                                                 29. Several commenters propose                       to the concerns about unallocated                      the rule permits providers to block on
                                              enhancements to the information                         number call blocking, because ‘‘the                    this basis. Should the industry develop
                                              provided by the NANPA and the PA.                       status of numbers is always changing.’’                more comprehensive information
                                              Neustar suggests that the NANPA and                     The record also shows ‘‘potentially                    sources that would facilitate broader
                                              the PA ‘‘provide on their websites: (1)                 thorny implementation issues’’ for                     blocking of calls purported to originate
                                              ‘Blacklists’ of unallocated numbers that                blocking calls from unused numbers,                    from unused numbers, the rule would
                                              should not be making calls; and (2)                     similar to but greater in scale than those             also permit that kind of blocking.
                                              ‘Whitelists’ of allocated area codes in                                                                           36. Scope of Rule. The record shows
                                                                                                      identified for unallocated numbers. In
                                              the NANP, allocated geographic CO                                                                              significant obstacles to implementing a
                                                                                                      addition, the argument concerning the
                                              codes in the United States, and                                                                                rule requiring all providers to pool their
                                                                                                      likely reaction of robocallers to the
                                              allocated thousands-blocks in the                                                                              information, yet where the allocatee of
                                                                                                      blocking of unallocated numbers
                                              United States.’’ Comcast takes a similar                                                                       the number in question is the only
                                                                                                      detailed above applies here as well.
                                              approach, suggesting that the databases                                                                        provider able to block calls purporting
                                                                                                         33. Obtaining Unused Number                         to originate from that number, ‘‘the
                                              ‘‘(1) more clearly identify which
                                                                                                      Information. The record clearly shows                  value of the initiative would be
                                              numbers have not yet been allocated
                                                                                                      ‘‘an industry-wide recognition that there              significantly diminished and would
                                              and (2) are updated immediately to
                                                                                                      is currently no technical solution that                create a disadvantage for smaller
                                              reflect any new allocations as they
                                                                                                      allows providers to accurately and                     providers.’’ With fewer providers
                                              occur.’’
                                                 30. The Commission believes that                     promptly identify numbers that have                    blocking each number, fewer illegal
                                              providers, the NANPA, and the PA are                    been allocated to a carrier but not yet                calls will be blocked overall.
                                              in the best position to determine how to                assigned to a subscriber.’’ Commenters                    37. The Commission will not require
                                              share information about unallocated                     assert that without such a database,                   providers to share competitively
                                              numbers. The Commission encourages                      providers cannot be certain of the status              sensitive information on an industry-
                                              these parties to work together on                       of numbers not assigned to them. The                   wide basis, nor will it limit providers to
                                              whether and how to improve the                          Number Portability Administration                      blocking only unused numbers they
                                              availability of this information for                    Center (NPAC) and other existing                       have been allocated. The Commission
                                              blocking purposes. At the same time,                    databases do not show the details of                   therefore defines the scope of this rule
                                              the Commission cautions against                         provider assignment of numbers and are                 to allow providers to block calls
                                              blocking calls purporting to originate                  not capable of identifying reassigned                  purporting to originate from an unused
                                              from allocated numbers and encourages                   numbers. Microsoft claims that such                    number, so long as the provider
                                              providers to examine their practices                    blocking, ‘‘if not supported by use of a               blocking the call either (1) is the
                                              carefully to verify that they are not                   100 percent reliable real-time database                allocatee of the number and has
                                              inadvertently doing so. A provider that                 (which does not exist), could prevent                  confirmed the number is unused, or (2)
                                              erroneously blocks calls purporting to                  outgoing domestic call completion for                  has verified the unused status of the
                                              originate from allocated numbers may                    consumers who are assigned newly-                      number with the allocatee at the time of
                                              be liable for violating the call                        activated telephone numbers.’’                         the blocking. This gives providers the
                                              completion rules.                                          34. The record reveals that creating                flexibility to share information if they
                                                                                                      such a database would be difficult.                    wish to, and the Commission
                                              Calls Purporting To Originate From                      Neustar comments that providers ‘‘often                encourages providers to do so.
                                              Numbers That Are Allocated but                          consider such information to be                           38. In addition, this is a permissive
                                              Unused                                                  competitively sensitive.’’ In addition,                rule. CTIA points out that such ‘‘[a]
                                                 31. The Commission finds that                        the information changes very quickly,                  voluntary regime will allow carriers that
                                              providers may block calls purportedly                   ‘‘as providers are constantly assigning                develop the ability to identify these
                                              originating from numbers that are                       new numbers to subscribers or are de-                  numbers to block calls originating from
                                              allocated to a provider by the NANPA                    assigning numbers when a subscriber                    them without forcing carriers to develop
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                                              or PA, but are unused, so long as the                   leaves and decides not to take advantage               capabilities they do not currently
                                              provider blocking the calls is the                      of number portability.’’ While the FTC                 possess.’’
                                              allocatee of the number or has obtained                 encourages providers to share this                        39. Types of Used Numbers. Many
                                              verification from the allocatee that the                information, providers oppose                          commenters indicate that legal calls
                                              number is unused at the time of the                     mandatory information sharing. CTIA                    may be made from what appear to be
                                              blocking. For these purposes, an                        cautions that creating a centralized                   unassigned numbers. For example,
                                              ‘‘unused’’ number is a number that is                   database ‘‘is technically challenging and              INCOMPAS points out that ‘‘many


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           1571

                                              legitimate callers do not originate calls                  42. The Commission agrees with                         46. While providers are not required
                                              on the [PSTN] and, therefore, do not                    commenters that internationally                        to obtain subscriber consent before
                                              have telephone numbers.’’ Commenters                    originated calls may have lawful reasons               blocking these calls, the Commission
                                              identify three specific kinds of                        to use a NANP number. VON, for                         emphasizes that the types of calls that
                                              unassigned numbers that should not be                   example, suggests ‘‘a US-based user of a               can be blocked are very limited. The
                                              blocked because they are being used to                  service may be traveling in Europe but                 Commission agrees with the
                                              make legal outbound calls: Intermediate                 uses their service to make Wi-Fi-based                 recommendation from the Consumer
                                              numbers, administrative numbers, and                    calls (and have their US caller ID                     Advisory Committee (CAC) and
                                              proxy numbers. The Commission                           shown).’’ And the Commission agrees                    encourages providers to inform their
                                              acknowledges this concern and the rule                  with Microsoft that it must ‘‘avoid                    customers about the features and risks
                                              is clear that providers should not block                inadvertently authorizing international                of their own call blocking programs.
                                              any type of number that, although it is                 call blocking.’’ But the Commission                       47. Call Completion Rates. The Strike
                                              not assigned to a subscriber, is used for               disagrees with ZipDX’s apparent                        Force requested that the Commission
                                              these lawful purposes. The Commission                   suggestion that some possibility of                    amend its call completion rules to
                                              encourages providers to examine the                     international call blocking means the                  ensure that providers can block illegal
                                              status of their numbers before blocking                 Commission must abandon its efforts.                   calls without those blocked calls being
                                              calls that purport to originate from                    Because the Commission authorizes                      held against them in calculating call
                                              unused numbers to verify that they are                  blocking only for purported NANP                       completion rates. The Commission
                                              not inadvertently blocking calls that fall              numbers, it sees no reason why the                     agrees that providers do not need to
                                              outside the scope of this rule, which                   actual origination point of the call                   count these blocked calls for purposes
                                              would risk liability for violating the call             would bear on whether it is blocked. In                of calculating their call completion rates
                                              completion rules.                                       other words, the Commission finds the                  on FCC Form 480 and therefore the
                                                                                                      likelihood of blocking a legitimate call               Commission interprets the rules and the
                                              Other Issues                                            is minimal—no matter its origin. And                   form to not require inclusion of calls
                                                 40. Emergency Calls. The Commission                  the Commission reiterates that the rules               blocked in accordance with the rules
                                              makes clear that the rules do not                       do not authorize the blocking of any                   adopted here. Reporting carriers may
                                              authorize the blocking of calls to 911                  international call purporting to use a                 exclude these calls to the extent that
                                              under any circumstance. The                             valid NANP number assigned to that                     they are able to identify them.
                                                                                                      user.                                                     48. The record shows significant
                                              Commission notes that the NANP itself
                                                                                                         43. Subscriber Consent. The                         support for excluding these calls from
                                              contemplates certain non-standard
                                                                                                      Commission does not require consumer                   the call completion calculations to
                                              numbers to facilitate emergency calling;
                                                                                                      opt-in for providers to block the specific             ‘‘incentivize carriers to participate in
                                              the NANP, for example, ‘‘permits the
                                                                                                      types of calls addressed herein. The                   voluntary blocking when appropriate
                                              use of ‘911’ as the [Numbering Plan
                                                                                                      Commission believes that no reasonable                 and consistent with the rules.’’
                                              Area code] for emergency calls from
                                                                                                      consumer would want to receive the                     CenturyLink comments that ‘‘[w]ithout
                                              non-initialized mobile devices.’’ To
                                                                                                      calls the Commission has determined                    this protection, carriers may be
                                              make it abundantly clear, nonetheless,                                                                         unwilling to use any of the tools that
                                                                                                      may be subject to blocking. For call
                                              that voice providers should not block                                                                          may be adopted in the proceeding and
                                                                                                      blocking to be most effective, it must be
                                              such calls, the Commission makes clear                                                                         the consumer benefits the Commission
                                                                                                      applied throughout the calling network.
                                              these rules do not permit the blocking                                                                         hopes to achieve may not be realized.’’
                                                                                                      An opt-in requirement would thwart
                                              of emergency calls except as otherwise                                                                         Consumers Union et. al. agrees that ‘‘the
                                                                                                      providers’ efforts.
                                              expressly permitted by the                                 44. The record shows support for                    calls that are blocked according to these
                                              Commission’s rules.                                     allowing providers to block these                      guidelines should be exempt from call
                                                 41. International Calls. In the                      specific types of spoofed calls without                completion rates.’’
                                              Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI, the                      requiring consent from the subscriber.                    49. Notwithstanding this support for
                                              Commission sought comment ‘‘on                          Some commenters emphasize the                          the concept of excluding blocked calls
                                              whether an internationally originated                   limited scope of calls that do not require             from call completion rate calculations, it
                                              call purportedly originated from a                      consent. ITTA agrees with the                          might not currently be possible for all
                                              NANP number should be subject to                        Commission’s reasoning that ‘‘obtaining                providers to identify blocked calls.
                                              these rules, whereas an internationally                 opt-in consent from subscribers would                  Originating providers required to file
                                              originated call showing an international                add unnecessary burdens and                            call completion reports have no
                                              number would be beyond the scope of                     complexity, . . . may not be                           standard mechanism to identify calls
                                              this rule.’’ The Commission adopts this                 technically feasible for some providers’’              that are blocked intentionally under
                                              proposal. The Commission agrees with                    and ‘‘would also add unnecessary                       these rules by downstream providers
                                              Neustar that it should apply to                         delays.’’ EPIC comments that ‘‘proactive               and distinguish them from calls that are
                                              international calls purporting to use                   blocking’’ would benefit consumers,                    not completed for other reasons.
                                              NANP numbers ‘‘the same blocking                        ‘‘especially those that rely on landlines,             Further, NTCA suggests that excluding
                                              rules applicable to domestic originated                 [who] may not have or use caller ID.’’                 such calls from call completion would
                                              calls.’’ Many illegal robocalls originate                  45. Consumers Union et. al. propose                 be premature ‘‘until the definitions and
                                              from overseas call centers, and                         that providers should obtain consent                   practical considerations noted above are
                                              excluding such calls that purport to use                from all consumers before blocking calls               addressed and standardized by industry
                                              NANP numbers from the ambit of the                      other than those purporting to originate               and the Commission.’’
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                                              rule would create an exception that                     from DNO numbers, but, as stated                          50. Given the inability of all providers
                                              threatens to swallow the rule. In                       above, the Commission does not believe                 who must file call completion reports to
                                              contrast, international calls from                      any reasonable consumer would want to                  identify blocked calls in every instance
                                              purported non-NANP numbers would                        receive these calls. The administrative                and the Commission’s revisiting of the
                                              not, by definition, follow the NANP                     burden of tracking individual opt-in                   rural call completion requirements in a
                                              numbering scheme and thus are beyond                    responses would likely be a disincentive               separate rulemaking proceeding, the
                                              the scope of this proceeding.                           to blocking.                                           Commission does not believe that


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                                              1572                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              requiring exclusion of these calls is                   possibility of blocking legitimate calls.              need not listen to the content of calls or
                                              appropriate at this time. The                           AARP suggested ‘‘[i]t would seem to be                 otherwise to determine whether a
                                              Commission instead simply notes that                    prudent to have the needed procedures                  particular call is expressly illegal before
                                              providers subject to the call-completion                to allow consumers to quickly                          blocking it, the Commission sees no
                                              reporting rules may, but are not required               counteract inadvertent blocking in place               reason to define the term at the present
                                              to, exclude blocked calls from the                      prior to the commencement of the                       moment.
                                              recordkeeping and reporting                             general robocall blocking program.’’ The
                                                                                                                                                             Report on Robocalling
                                              requirements to the extent they can                     Commission’s Consumer Advisory
                                              identify such calls.                                    Committee similarly states that                           56. To shed additional light on the
                                                 51. CPNI Rules. In the Advanced                      providers and consumers should ‘‘work                  issue of robocalling and inform the
                                              Methods NPRM and NOI, the                               collaboratively to develop processes and               Commission’s actions going forward, the
                                              Commission sought comment on                            solutions whereby unintended blocking                  Commission directs the Consumer and
                                              whether there are concerns about                        of legitimate callers can be remedied in               Governmental Affairs Bureau, in
                                              sharing DNO request information and                     a timely and efficient manner.’’ The                   consultation with the Federal Trade
                                              whether any clarifications or rule                      Commission encourages providers that                   Commission’s Bureau of Consumer
                                              changes could be helpful. Some                          block calls to establish a means for a                 Protection, to prepare a report on the
                                              commenters asked the Commission to                      caller whose number is blocked to                      state of robocalling in the United States
                                              clarify the applicability of section 222 of             contact the provider and remedy the                    and to submit it to the Commission
                                              the Act, and the implementing rules, in                 problem. Specifically, the Commission                  within one year from publication of the
                                              order to allow sharing of robocall                      encourages providers that block calls in               Report and Order in the Federal
                                              information for traceback purposes or                   accordance with these rules to provide                 Register. This report should encompass
                                              sharing of a subscriber’s request to block              a way for subscribers to challenge a                   both the progress made by industry,
                                              an inbound-only number.                                 blocked number using a simple method                   government, and consumers in
                                                 52. USTelecom notes that ‘‘the                       that is easy for the average subscriber to             combatting illegal robocalls, as well as
                                              sharing of CPNI by telecommunications                   understand. The Commission also                        the remaining challenges to continuing
                                              providers is essential to ensuring                      encourages providers to quickly resolve                these important efforts. A focus on
                                              accurate and thorough call traceback                    the matter so subscribers making                       quantitative data, including, but not
                                              efforts in multiple providers’ networks                 legitimate calls may resume doing so                   limited to, calling trends and consumer
                                              related to suspicious calling events.’’                 speedily.                                              complaints, will provide particular
                                              The Commission notes that traceback                        54. As a reminder, the call completion              insight into the current state of the
                                              efforts are aimed at identifying persons                rules require voice service providers to               robocalling problem and how to target
                                              who make illegal robocalls, including                   complete calls and they should                         additional measures to help consumers
                                              calls that involve fraud in violation of                therefore not block legitimate calls. The              avoid the fraud and annoyance that they
                                              the Truth in Caller ID Act. The FTC                     Commission also reminds callers that                   experience.
                                              comments that ‘‘information sharing by                  the Commission’s complaint process is
                                              providers at the subscriber’s request                                                                          Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
                                                                                                      available when calls that fall outside the
                                              appears to be consistent’’ with the CPNI                scope of these rules are improperly                      57. As required by the Regulatory
                                              rules. The Commission agrees. Section                   blocked.                                               Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), as
                                              222 of the Act and the implementing                        55. Definition of ‘‘Illegal Robocall.’’             amended, an Initial Regulatory
                                              rules explicitly allow                                  Although the Advanced Methods NPRM                     Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was
                                              telecommunications carriers to use,                     and NOI sought comment on the                          incorporated into the Advanced
                                              disclose, or permit access to CPNI                      definition of ‘‘illegal robocall’’ for the             Methods NPRM and NOI. The
                                              obtained from its customers, either                     purposes of this proceeding, the                       Commission sought written public
                                              directly or indirectly through its agents,              Commission declines to adopt a                         comment on the proposals in the
                                              ‘‘to protect the rights or property of the              definition here given that none of the                 Advanced Methods NPRM and NOI,
                                              carrier, or to protect users of those                   rules adopted here rely on such a                      including comment on the IRFA. The
                                              services and other carriers from                        definition. Indeed, the record shows                   comments received are discussed below.
                                              fraudulent, abusive, or unlawful use of,                confusion regarding how the proposed                   This Final Regulatory Flexibility
                                              or subscription to, such services.’’                    definition of ‘‘illegal robocall’’ should              Analysis (FRFA) conforms to the RFA.
                                              Furthermore, the Commission agrees                      apply to the call blocking rules. Sprint
                                                                                                                                                             Need for, and Objectives of, the Order
                                              with the FTC that when a subscriber                     comments that providers cannot
                                              requests that the carrier block calls                   determine whether a call meets the                        58. The Report and Order takes
                                              purporting to be from the subscriber’s                  definition of an illegal robocall before               another important step in combatting
                                              inbound-only number, ‘‘the subscriber                   blocking it, because ‘‘[u]nlike spam                   illegal robocalls by enabling voice
                                              is almost certainly seeking to have the                 prevention in email, the content of a call             service providers to block certain calls
                                              number blocked by as many providers                     cannot be determined before the call                   before they reach consumers’ phones. In
                                              as possible.’’ Therefore, such a request                rings through to the customer’s phone.’’               the year since August 1, 2016, the
                                              should be understood as authorizing the                 First Orion states ‘‘the Commission                    Commission has received nearly
                                              carrier to share that request with other                clearly intends to give carriers the                   185,000 complaints about calls that
                                              carriers as permitted by section                        flexibility to prevent all illegal calls,              consumers did not want. Stopping
                                              222(c)(1) of the Act. Thus, voice service               regardless of the technology used.’’                   illegal robocalls and the problems they
                                              providers are free to share DNO requests                Similarly, the FTC suggests that the                   cause has united industry, government,
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                                              as necessary to block calls in the limited              Commission use the term ‘‘illegal call’’               and consumer groups. Caller ID
                                              circumstances identified in the Report                  rather than ‘‘illegal robocall,’’ because              spoofing is often the key to making
                                              and Order.                                              ‘‘the problematic calls here are not                   robocall scams work. Therefore, the
                                                 53. Removing Blocks on Valid                         limited to just robocalls, but also                    rules outline specific, well-defined
                                              Numbers. A challenge mechanism may                      abusive, fraudulent, or unlawful calls                 circumstances in which voice service
                                              be needed for voice service providers                   that are ‘live.’ ’’ Because the                        providers may block calls that are
                                              that block calls given the small                        Commission makes clear that providers                  highly likely to be illegitimate because


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          1573

                                              there is no lawful reason to spoof                      that calls purporting to use unallocated               small businesses. The Commission
                                              certain kinds of numbers. Specifically,                 numbers are similar to calls purporting                received one comment directly
                                              the Report and Order adopts rules                       to use invalid numbers in that no                      addressing the IRFA and several
                                              allowing providers to block calls from                  subscriber can actually originate a call               comments addressing small business
                                              phone numbers on a DNO list and those                   from any of these numbers, and the                     concerns. Two of the comments
                                              that purport to be from invalid,                        Commission sees no lawful reason to                    requested that the call blocking rules be
                                              unallocated, or unused numbers. By                      spoof such numbers because they                        permissive, rather than mandatory,
                                              doing so, the Commission furthers its                   cannot be called back.                                 three pertained to the administration of
                                              goal of removing regulatory roadblocks                     62. Calls Supposedly Originating                    a database for unassigned numbers, and
                                              and gives industry the flexibility to                   From Numbers That are Allocated but                    two addressed other issues. In addition,
                                              block illegal calls. At the same time, the              Unused. Document FCC 17–151 allows                     the Commission received two consumer
                                              Commission affirms its commitment to                    providers to block calls purportedly                   comments documenting the negative
                                              protect the reliability of the nation’s                 originating from numbers that are                      impact of unwanted calls on small
                                              communications network and ensure                       allocated to a provider by the North                   businesses. None of the other comments
                                              that provider-initiated blocking helps,                 American Numbering Plan                                pointed out any areas where small
                                              rather than harms, consumers. A                         Administrator or Pooling Administrator,                businesses would incur a particular
                                              provider that blocks calls that do not fall             but are unused, so long as the provider                hardship in complying with the rules.
                                              within the scope of these rules may be                  blocking the calls is the allocatee of the                65. Permissive Rules. Both CTIA and
                                              liable for violating the Commission’s                   number or has obtained verification                    ITTA support permissive rules. CTIA
                                              call completion rules.                                  from the allocatee that the number is                  suggests that ‘‘blocking of numbers . . .
                                                 59. Blocking at the Request of the                   unused at the time of the blocking. For                should be authorized, but not required.’’
                                              Subscriber to the Originating Number.                   these purposes, an ‘‘unused’’ number is                ITTA claims that permissive rules give
                                              In the Report and Order, the                            a number that is not assigned to a                     providers ‘‘flexibility in how
                                              Commission codifies the Bureau’s                        subscriber or otherwise set aside for                  aggressively they choose to block calls.’’
                                              earlier clarification that voice service                legitimate outbound call use. As with                  The rules the Commission adopts here
                                              providers may block calls purporting to                 invalid numbers and unallocated                        are permissive and not mandatory.
                                              be from a telephone number if the                       numbers, a subscriber cannot originate a                  66. Database Administration.
                                              subscriber to that number requests such                 call from such a number, and the                       INCOMPAS, ITTA, and PACE suggest
                                              blocking in order to prevent its number                 Commission foresees no lawful purpose                  that a centralized database of unused
                                              from being spoofed. Where the                           for intentionally spoofing a number that               numbers be created, and then suggest
                                              subscriber did not consent to the                       is unused and thus cannot be called                    ways to minimize disproportionate costs
                                              number being used, the call was very                    back.                                                  to small businesses in using such a
                                              likely made with the intent to defraud,                    63. Other Issues. The Report and                    database. The Commission considered
                                              and therefore no reasonable consumer                    Order also clarifies that these rules do               both the technical and cost issues
                                              would wish to receive such a call.                      not permit the blocking of emergency                   inherent in the creations of a database
                                                 60. Calls Supposedly Originating                     calls except as otherwise expressly                    and determined not to require one.
                                              From Invalid Numbers. Similarly, the                    permitted by the Commission’s rules,                   Without a database, concerns about its
                                              Report and Order allows providers to                    that all calls purporting to originate                 administration are rendered moot.
                                              block calls purportedly originating from                from a NANP number, including                             67. INCOMPAS requests a mechanism
                                              numbers that are not valid under the                    international calls, are subject to these              that will ‘‘spare smaller providers from
                                              NANP. Examples of such numbers                          rules, and that international calls from               using additional resources to prove the
                                              include those that use an unassigned                    purported non-NANP numbers would                       legitimacy of its call traffic to other
                                              area code; that use an abbreviated                      not, by definition, follow the NANP                    providers.’’ In the Report and Order, the
                                              dialing code, such as 411, in place of an               numbering scheme and thus are beyond                   Commission allows a provider to block
                                              area code; that do not contain the                      the scope of this proceeding. It confirms              unused numbers only if the provider
                                              requisite number of digits; and that are                that the Commission does not require                   blocking the calls is the allocatee of the
                                              a single digit repeated, such as 000–                   consumer opt-in for providers to block                 number or has obtained verification
                                              000–0000, with the exception of 888–                    these specific types of calls, clarifies               from the allocatee that the number is
                                              888–8888, which is an assignable                        that providers do not need to count                    unused at the time of the blocking.
                                              number. No caller would spoof an                        these blocked calls for purposes of                    Therefore, if a smaller provider does not
                                              invalid number for any lawful purpose;                  calculating their call completion rates,               give information to other providers, its
                                              for example, unlike a business spoofing                 clarifies that voice service providers are             call traffic will not be blocked.
                                              Caller ID on outgoing calls to show its                 free to share the CPNI necessary to block                 68. Other Issues. Commenters raise
                                              main call-back number, invalid numbers                  calls in the limited circumstances                     three other issues. First, INCOMPAS
                                              cannot be called back. Providers,                       identified in the Report and Order,                    requests that the Commission require
                                              however, must take care that they do not                encourages providers to establish a                    providers to put a mechanism in place
                                              block calls that purportedly originate                  means for a caller whose number is                     to remove blocks on valid numbers, and
                                              from valid numbers, especially                          blocked to contact the provider and                    that in doing so, ‘‘providers should be
                                              emergency calls.                                        remedy the problem, and declines to                    given discretion to adjust their policies
                                                 61. Calls Supposedly Originating                     adopt a definition of the term ‘‘illegal               according to their size and services.’’ In
                                              From Numbers Not Allocated to Any                       robocall’’ at the present moment.                      the Report and Order, the Commission
                                              Provider. The Report and Order also                                                                            urges, but does not require providers to
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                                              allows providers to block calls                         Summary of Significant Issues Raised by                implement such a mechanism, nor does
                                              purportedly originating from numbers                    Public Comments in Response to the                     the Commission provide specific
                                              that are valid but have not yet been                    IRFA                                                   requirements for how providers might
                                              allocated by the NANPA or the PA to                       64. In the Advanced Methods NPRM                     remove blocks on valid numbers,
                                              any provider. Though these numbers are                  and NOI, the Commission solicited                      allowing smaller providers the
                                              valid under the North American                          comments on how to minimize the                        flexibility they request. Second, NTCA
                                              Numbering Plan, the Commission finds                    economic impact of the new rules on                    suggests that the North American


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                                              1574                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              Numbering Council (NANC) ‘‘may be                       Wireline Carriers                                      employees. Census data for 2012 show
                                              best positioned to help clarify practical                  71. Wired Telecommunications                        that there were 3,117 firms that operated
                                              requirements’’ to ‘‘to assess and mitigate              Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau                       that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated
                                              the costs of compliance for smaller                     defines this industry as ‘‘establishments              with fewer than 1,000 employees.
                                              firms.’’ However, industry has already                  primarily engaged in operating and/or                  Consequently, the Commission
                                              established the Robocall Strike Force                   providing access to transmission                       estimates that most providers of local
                                              (Strike Force), which has produced                      facilities and infrastructure that they                exchange service are small businesses.
                                              significant documentation clarifying the                own and/or lease for the transmission of                  73. Incumbent Local Exchange
                                              practical requirements for the limited                  voice, data, text, sound, and video using              Carriers (Incumbent LECs). Neither the
                                                                                                      wired communications networks.                         Commission nor the SBA has developed
                                              and specific types of call blocking
                                                                                                                                                             a small business size standard
                                              authorized in the Report and Order.                     Transmission facilities may be based on
                                                                                                                                                             specifically for incumbent local
                                              Blocking these calls presents a very low                a single technology or a combination of
                                                                                                                                                             exchange services. The closest
                                              risk, and NANC participation is not                     technologies. Establishments in this
                                                                                                                                                             applicable size standard under SBA
                                              required to move forward at this time.                  industry use the wired
                                                                                                                                                             rules is for the category Wired
                                              Third, TNS suggests that providers be                   telecommunications network facilities
                                                                                                                                                             Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S.
                                              permitted to block unused numbers                       that they operate to provide a variety of
                                                                                                                                                             Census Bureau defines this industry as
                                              allocated to other providers to avoid                   services, such as wired telephony
                                                                                                                                                             ‘‘establishments primarily engaged in
                                              creating ‘‘a disadvantage for smaller                   services, including VoIP services, wired
                                                                                                                                                             operating and/or providing access to
                                              providers.’’ The record also shows that                 (cable) audio and video programming
                                                                                                                                                             transmission facilities and infrastructure
                                              many providers view their unused                        distribution, and wired broadband                      that they own and/or lease for the
                                              number data as competitively sensitive                  internet services. By exception,                       transmission of voice, data, text, sound,
                                              information. In the Report and Order,                   establishments providing satellite                     and video using wired communications
                                              the Commission balances these                           television distribution services using                 networks. Transmission facilities may
                                              concerns by allowing, but not requiring,                facilities and infrastructure that they                be based on a single technology or a
                                                                                                      operate are included in this industry.’’               combination of technologies.
                                              providers to block unused numbers
                                                                                                      The SBA has developed a small                          Establishments in this industry use the
                                              allocated to other providers if they have
                                                                                                      business size standard for Wired                       wired telecommunications network
                                              verified the unused status of the
                                                                                                      Telecommunications Carriers, which                     facilities that they operate to provide a
                                              number.
                                                                                                      consists of all such companies having                  variety of services, such as wired
                                              Response to Comments by the Chief                       1,500 or fewer employees. Census data                  telephony services, including VoIP
                                              Counsel for Advocacy of the Small                       for 2012 shows that there were 3,117                   services, wired (cable) audio and video
                                              Business Administration                                 firms that operated that year. Of this                 programming distribution, and wired
                                                                                                      total, 3,083 operated with fewer than                  broadband internet services. By
                                                69. Pursuant to the Small Business                    1,000 employees. Thus, under this size                 exception, establishments providing
                                              Jobs Act of 2010, which amended the                     standard, the majority of firms in this                satellite television distribution services
                                              RFA, the Commission is required to                      industry can be considered small.                      using facilities and infrastructure that
                                              respond to any comments filed by the                       72. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs).                 they operate are included in this
                                              Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small                 Neither the Commission nor the SBA                     industry.’’ Under that size standard,
                                              Business Administration (SBA), and to                   has developed a small business size                    such a business is small if it has 1,500
                                              provide a detailed statement of any                     standard specifically for local exchange               or fewer employees. Census data for
                                              change made to the proposed rules as a                  services. The closest applicable size                  2012 show that there were 3,117 firms
                                              result of those comments. The Chief                     standard under SBA rules is for the                    that operated that year. Of this total,
                                              Counsel did not file any comments in                    category Wired Telecommunications                      3,083 operated with fewer than 1,000
                                              response to the proposed rules in this                  Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau                       employees. Consequently, the
                                              proceeding.                                             defines this industry as ‘‘establishments              Commission estimates that most
                                                                                                      primarily engaged in operating and/or                  providers of incumbent local exchange
                                              Description and Estimate of the Number                  providing access to transmission                       service are small businesses.
                                              of Small Entities to Which Rules Will                   facilities and infrastructure that they                   74. Competitive Local Exchange
                                              Apply                                                   own and/or lease for the transmission of               Carriers (Competitive LECs),
                                                                                                      voice, data, text, sound, and video using              Competitive Access Providers (CAPs),
                                                 70. The RFA directs agencies to                      wired communications networks.                         Shared-Tenant Service Providers, and
                                              provide a description of, and where                     Transmission facilities may be based on                Other Local Service Providers. Neither
                                              feasible, an estimate of the number of                  a single technology or a combination of                the Commission nor the SBA has
                                              small entities that may be affected by                  technologies. Establishments in this                   developed a small business size
                                              the rules adopted herein. The RFA                       industry use the wired                                 standard specifically for these service
                                              generally defines the term ‘‘small                      telecommunications network facilities                  providers. The appropriate size standard
                                              entity’’ as having the same meaning as                  that they operate to provide a variety of              under SBA rules is for the category
                                              the terms ‘‘small business,’’ ‘‘small                   services, such as wired telephony                      Wired Telecommunications Carriers.
                                              organization,’’ and ‘‘small governmental                services, including VoIP services, wired               The U.S. Census Bureau defines this
                                              jurisdiction.’’ In addition, the term                   (cable) audio and video programming                    industry as ‘‘establishments primarily
                                              ‘‘small business’’ has the same meaning                 distribution, and wired broadband                      engaged in operating and/or providing
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                                              as the term ‘‘small-business concern’’                  internet services. By exception,                       access to transmission facilities and
                                              under the Small Business Act. A ‘‘small-                establishments providing satellite                     infrastructure that they own and/or
                                              business concern’’ is one which: (1) Is                 television distribution services using                 lease for the transmission of voice, data,
                                              independently owned and operated; (2)                   facilities and infrastructure that they                text, sound, and video using wired
                                              is not dominant in its field of operation;              operate are included in this industry.’’               communications networks.
                                              and (3) satisfies any additional criteria               Under that size standard, such a                       Transmission facilities may be based on
                                              established by the SBA.                                 business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer             a single technology or a combination of


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          1575

                                              technologies. Establishments in this                    (cable) audio and video programming                    facilities and infrastructure that they
                                              industry use the wired                                  distribution, and wired broadband                      own and/or lease for the transmission of
                                              telecommunications network facilities                   internet services. By exception,                       voice, data, text, sound, and video using
                                              that they operate to provide a variety of               establishments providing satellite                     wired communications networks.
                                              services, such as wired telephony                       television distribution services using                 Transmission facilities may be based on
                                              services, including VoIP services, wired                facilities and infrastructure that they                a single technology or a combination of
                                              (cable) audio and video programming                     operate are included in this industry.’’               technologies. Establishments in this
                                              distribution, and wired broadband                       Under that size standard, such a                       industry use the wired
                                              internet services. By exception,                        business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer             telecommunications network facilities
                                              establishments providing satellite                      employees. Census data for 2012 show                   that they operate to provide a variety of
                                              television distribution services using                  that there were 3,117 firms that operated              services, such as wired telephony
                                              facilities and infrastructure that they                 that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated               services, including VoIP services, wired
                                              operate are included in this industry.’’                with fewer than 1,000 employees.                       (cable) audio and video programming
                                              Under that size standard, such a                        Consequently, the Commission                           distribution, and wired broadband
                                              business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer              estimates that the majority of                         internet services. By exception,
                                              employees. Census data for 2012 show                    interexchange carriers are small entities.             establishments providing satellite
                                              that there were 3,117 firms that operated                  77. Cable System Operators (Telecom                 television distribution services using
                                              that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated                Act Standard). The Communications                      facilities and infrastructure that they
                                              with fewer than 1,000 employees.                        Act also contains a size standard for                  operate are included in this industry.’’
                                              Consequently, the Commission                            small cable system operators, which is                 Under that size standard, such a
                                              estimates that most providers of                        ‘‘a cable operator that, directly or                   business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer
                                              competitive local exchange service,                     through an affiliate, serves in the                    employees. Census data for 2012 show
                                              competitive access providers, shared-                   aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all                  that there were 3,117 firms that operated
                                              tenant service providers, and other local               subscribers in the United States and is                that year. Of this total, 3,083 operated
                                              service providers are small entities.                   not affiliated with any entity or entities             with fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus,
                                                 75. The Commission has included                      whose gross annual revenues in the                     under this category and the associated
                                              small incumbent LECs in this present                    aggregate exceed $250,000,000.’’ There                 small business size standard, the
                                              RFA analysis. As noted above, a ‘‘small                 are approximately 52,403,705 cable                     majority of other toll carriers can be
                                              business’’ under the RFA is one that,                   video subscribers in the United States                 considered small.
                                              inter alia, meets the pertinent small                   today. Accordingly, an operator serving
                                              business size standard (e.g., a telephone               fewer than 524,037 subscribers shall be                Wireless Carriers
                                              communications business having 1,500                    deemed a small operator if its annual                     79. Wireless Telecommunications
                                              or fewer employees), and ‘‘is not                       revenues, when combined with the total                 Carriers (except Satellite). Since 2007,
                                              dominant in its field of operation.’’ The               annual revenues of all its affiliates, do              the Census Bureau has placed wireless
                                              SBA’s Office of Advocacy contends that,                 not exceed $250 million in the                         firms within this new, broad, economic
                                              for RFA purposes, small incumbent                       aggregate. Based on available data, the                census category. Under the present and
                                              LECs are not dominant in their field of                 Commission finds that all but nine                     prior categories, the SBA has deemed a
                                              operation because any such dominance                    incumbent cable operators are small                    wireless business to be small if it has
                                              is not ‘‘national’’ in scope. The                       entities under this size standard. Note                1,500 or fewer employees. For the
                                              Commission has therefore included                       that the Commission neither requests                   category of Wireless
                                              small incumbent LECs in this RFA                        nor collects information on whether                    Telecommunications Carriers (except
                                              analysis, although it emphasizes that                   cable system operators are affiliated                  Satellite), Census data for 2012 show
                                              this RFA action has no effect on                        with entities whose gross annual                       that there were 967 firms that operated
                                              Commission analyses and                                 revenues exceed $250 million. Although                 for the entire year. Of this total, 955
                                              determinations in other, non-RFA                        it seems certain that some of these cable              firms had fewer than 1,000 employees.
                                              contexts.                                               system operators are affiliated with                   Thus, under this category and the
                                                 76. Interexchange Carriers. Neither                  entities whose gross annual revenues                   associated size standard, the
                                              the Commission nor the SBA has                          exceed $250 million, the Commission is                 Commission estimates that the majority
                                              developed a small business size                         unable at this time to estimate with                   of wireless telecommunications carriers
                                              standard specifically for providers of                  greater precision the number of cable                  (except satellite) are small entities.
                                              interexchange services. The appropriate                 system operators that would qualify as                 Similarly, according to internally
                                              size standard under SBA rules is for the                small cable operators under the                        developed Commission data, 413
                                              category Wired Telecommunications                       definition in the Communications Act.                  carriers reported that they were engaged
                                              Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau                           78. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the                in the provision of wireless telephony,
                                              defines this industry as ‘‘establishments               Commission nor the SBA has developed                   including cellular service, Personal
                                              primarily engaged in operating and/or                   a size standard for small businesses                   Communications Service (PCS), and
                                              providing access to transmission                        specifically applicable to other toll                  Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR)
                                              facilities and infrastructure that they                 carriers. This category includes toll                  services. Of this total, an estimated 261
                                              own and/or lease for the transmission of                carriers that do not fall within the                   have 1,500 or fewer employees. Thus,
                                              voice, data, text, sound, and video using               categories of interexchange carriers,                  using available data, the Commission
                                              wired communications networks.                          operator service providers, prepaid                    estimates that the majority of wireless
                                              Transmission facilities may be based on                 calling card providers, satellite service              firms can be considered small.
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                                              a single technology or a combination of                 carriers, or toll resellers. The closest                  80. Satellite Telecommunications
                                              technologies. Establishments in this                    applicable size standard under SBA                     Providers. The category of Satellite
                                              industry use the wired                                  rules is for Wired Telecommunications                  Telecommunications ‘‘comprises
                                              telecommunications network facilities                   Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau                       establishments primarily engaged in
                                              that they operate to provide a variety of               defines this industry as ‘‘establishments              providing telecommunications services
                                              services, such as wired telephony                       primarily engaged in operating and/or                  to other establishments in the
                                              services, including VoIP services, wired                providing access to transmission                       telecommunications and broadcasting


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                                              1576                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              industries by forwarding and receiving                  industry. The SBA has developed a                      show that 1,341 firms provided resale
                                              communications signals via a system of                  small business size standard for the                   services during that year. Of that
                                              satellites or reselling satellite                       category of Telecommunications                         number, all operated with fewer than
                                              telecommunications.’’ This category has                 Resellers. Under that size standard, such              1,000 employees. Thus, under this
                                              a small business size standard of $32.5                 a business is small if it has 1,500 or                 category and the associated small
                                              million or less in average annual                       fewer employees. Census data for 2012                  business size standard, the majority of
                                              receipts, under SBA rules. For this                     show that 1,341 firms provided resale                  these prepaid calling card providers can
                                              category, Census Bureau data for 2012                   services during that year. Of that                     be considered small entities.
                                              show that there were a total of 333 firms               number, 1,341 operated with fewer than
                                                                                                                                                             Description of Projected Reporting,
                                              that operated for the entire year. Of this              1,000 employees. Thus, under this
                                                                                                                                                             Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
                                              total, 299 firms had annual receipts of                 category and the associated small
                                                                                                                                                             Requirements for Small Entities
                                              under $25 million. Consequently, the                    business size standard, the majority of
                                              Commission estimates that the majority                  these resellers can be considered small                   85. The Report and Order gives voice
                                              of satellite telecommunications firms                   entities. According to Commission data,                service providers the option of blocking
                                              are small entities.                                     881 carriers have reported that they are               illegal robocalls in certain, well-defined
                                                 81. All Other Telecommunications.                    engaged in the provision of toll resale                circumstances. These changes affect
                                              All other telecommunications comprise,                  services. Of this total, an estimated 857              small and large companies equally, and
                                              inter alia, ‘‘establishments primarily                  have 1,500 or fewer employees.                         apply equally to all of the classes of
                                              engaged in providing specialized                        Consequently, the Commission                           regulated entities identified above.
                                              telecommunications services, such as                    estimates that the majority of toll                       86. Reporting and Recordkeeping
                                              satellite tracking, communications                      resellers are small entities.                          Requirements. The Report and Order
                                              telemetry, and radar station operation.                    83. Local Resellers. The SBA has                    clarifies the call completion rules by
                                              This industry also includes                             developed a small business size                        allowing, but not requiring, voice
                                              establishments primarily engaged in                     standard for the category of                           service providers to exclude calls
                                              providing satellite terminal stations and               Telecommunications Resellers. The                      blocked under these new rules from
                                              associated facilities connected with one                Telecommunications Resellers industry                  their call completion calculations, to the
                                              or more terrestrial systems and capable                 comprises establishments engaged in                    extent that they are aware of which calls
                                              of transmitting telecommunications to,                  purchasing access and network capacity                 are blocked. To do so, voice service
                                              and receiving telecommunications from,                  from owners and operators of                           providers that choose to exclude such
                                              satellite systems. Establishments                       telecommunications networks and                        calls may modify their current reporting
                                              providing internet services or voice over               reselling wired and wireless                           and recordkeeping procedures already
                                              internet protocol (VoIP) services via                   telecommunications services (except                    in place for performing their call
                                              client-supplied telecommunications                      satellite) to businesses and households.               completion calculations on existing FCC
                                              connections are also included in this                   Establishments in this industry resell                 Form 480. This is a minor modification
                                              industry.’’ The SBA has developed a                     telecommunications; they do not                        to an existing process, so the
                                              small business size standard for the                    operate transmission facilities and                    Commission anticipates that the impact
                                              category of All Other                                   infrastructure. Mobile virtual network                 will be minimal.
                                              Telecommunications. Under that size                     operators (MVNOs) are included in this                    87. Other Compliance Requirements.
                                              standard, such a business is small if it                industry. Under that size standard, such               Voice service providers will be
                                              has $32.5 million in annual receipts. For               a business is small if it has 1,500 or                 permitted, but not required, to block
                                              this category, Census Bureau data for                   fewer employees. Census data for 2012                  calls purportedly originating from (1) a
                                              2012 show that there were a total of                    show that 1,341 firms provided resale                  telephone number if the subscriber to
                                              1,442 firms that operated for the entire                services during that year. Of that                     that number requests such blocking in
                                              year. Of this total, 1,400 had annual                   number, all operated with fewer than                   order to prevent its number from being
                                              receipts below $25 million per year.                    1,000 employees. Thus, under this                      spoofed; (2) numbers that purport to be
                                              Consequently, the Commission                            category and the associated small                      NANP numbers but are not valid under
                                              estimates that the majority of all other                business size standard, the majority of                the NANP; (3) numbers that are valid
                                              telecommunications firms are small                      these local resellers can be considered                but have not yet been allocated by the
                                              entities.                                               small entities.                                        NANPA or the PA to any provider; (4)
                                                                                                         84. Prepaid Calling Card Providers.                 numbers that are allocated to a provider
                                              Resellers                                               The SBA has developed a small                          by the NANPA or PA, but are unused,
                                                 82. Toll Resellers. The Commission                   business size standard for the category                so long as the provider blocking the
                                              has not developed a definition for toll                 of Telecommunications Resellers. The                   calls is the allocatee of the number and
                                              resellers. The closest NAICS Code                       Telecommunications Resellers industry                  or has obtained verification from the
                                              Category is Telecommunications                          comprises establishments engaged in                    allocatee that the number is unused at
                                              Resellers. The Telecommunications                       purchasing access and network capacity                 the time of the blocking.
                                              Resellers industry comprises                            from owners and operators of
                                              establishments engaged in purchasing                    telecommunications networks and                        Steps Taken To Minimize the
                                              access and network capacity from                        reselling wired and wireless                           Significant Economic Impact on Small
                                              owners and operators of                                 telecommunications services (except                    Entities, and Significant Alternatives
                                              telecommunications networks and                         satellite) to businesses and households.               Considered
                                              reselling wired and wireless                            Establishments in this industry resell                    88. The RFA requires an agency to
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                                              telecommunications services (except                     telecommunications; they do not                        describe any significant alternatives that
                                              satellite) to businesses and households.                operate transmission facilities and                    it has considered in reaching its
                                              Establishments in this industry resell                  infrastructure. Mobile virtual network                 approach, which may include the
                                              telecommunications; they do not                         operators (MVNOs) are included in this                 following four alternatives, among
                                              operate transmission facilities and                     industry. Under that size standard, such               others: (1) The establishment of
                                              infrastructure. Mobile virtual network                  a business is small if it has 1,500 or                 differing compliance or reporting
                                              operators (MVNOs) are included in this                  fewer employees. Census data for 2012                  requirements or timetables that take into


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                1577

                                              account the resources available to small                Report to Congress                                     requested that calls purporting to
                                              entities; (2) the clarification,                          91. The Commission sent a copy of                    originate from that number be blocked
                                              consolidation, or simplification of                     the Report and Order, including the                    because the number is used for inbound
                                              compliance or reporting requirements                    FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress               calls only.
                                              under the rule for small entities; (3) the              and the Government Accountability                         (2) A provider may block a voice call
                                              use of performance, rather than design,                 Office pursuant to the Congressional                   purporting to originate from any of the
                                              standards; and (4) an exemption from                    Review Act.                                            following:
                                              coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,                                                                        (i) A North American Numbering Plan
                                              for small entities.                                     Ordering Clauses                                       number that is not valid;
                                                 89. The Commission considered                          92. Pursuant to sections 201, 202, 222,                 (ii) A valid North American
                                              feedback from the Advanced Methods                      251(e), and 403 of the Communications                  Numbering Plan number that is not
                                              NPRM and NOI in crafting the final                                                                             allocated to a provider by the North
                                                                                                      Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 201,
                                              order. The Commission evaluated the                                                                            American Numbering Plan
                                                                                                      202, 222, 251(e), 403, the Report and
                                              comments in light of balancing the goal                                                                        Administrator or the Pooling
                                                                                                      Order is adopted and that part 64 of the
                                                                                                                                                             Administrator; and
                                              of removing regulatory roadblocks and                   Commission’s rules, 47 CFR 64.1200, is                    (iii) A valid North American
                                              giving industry the flexibility to block                amended.                                               Numbering Plan number that is
                                              illegal calls with its commitment to                      93. The Commission’s Consumer and
                                                                                                                                                             allocated to a provider by the North
                                              protect the reliability of the nation’s                 Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
                                                                                                                                                             American Numbering Plan
                                              communications network. Small                           Information Center, shall send a copy of
                                                                                                                                                             Administrator or Pooling Administrator,
                                              businesses supported the proposal to                    the Report and Order to Congress and
                                                                                                                                                             but is unused, so long as the provider
                                              make the call blocking rules permissive                 the Government Accountability Office
                                                                                                                                                             blocking the calls is the allocatee of the
                                              rather than mandatory. While the                        pursuant to the Congressional Review                   number and confirms that the number is
                                              Commission considered mandatory                         Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).                        unused or has obtained verification
                                              rules, it both proposed and                               94. The Commission’s Consumer and
                                                                                                                                                             from the allocatee that the number is
                                              implemented permissive rules to                         Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
                                                                                                                                                             unused at the time of the blocking.
                                              address the concerns of voice service                   Information Center, shall send a copy of                  (3) A provider may not block a voice
                                              providers, including small businesses,                  the Report and Order, including the                    call under paragraph (k)(1) or (2) of this
                                              that the cost and burden of complying                   Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the                section if the call is an emergency call
                                              with mandatory rules could be                           Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small                placed to 911.
                                              significant and might require                           Business Administration.                                  (4) For purposes of this subsection, a
                                              implementation of new technology. The                   List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 64                     provider may rely on Caller ID
                                              Commission also took small business                                                                            information to determine the purported
                                              concerns into consideration in its                        Telecommunications, Telephone.
                                                                                                                                                             originating number without regard to
                                              determination to not require a database                 Federal Communications Commission.                     whether the call in fact originated from
                                              of unused numbers. While the                            Katura Jackson,                                        that number.
                                              Commission considered mandating the                     Federal Register Liaison Officer, Office of the        [FR Doc. 2018–00457 Filed 1–11–18; 8:45 am]
                                              use of a database for providers that                    Secretary.                                             BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
                                              choose to block unused numbers, such
                                              a database could impose                                 Final Rules
                                              disproportionate costs on small                           For the reasons discussed in the                     FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                              businesses and would be challenging to                  preamble, the Federal Communications                   COMMISSION
                                              create and maintain. Similarly, the                     Commission amends part 64 as follows:
                                              Commission considered the needs of                                                                             47 CFR Part 90
                                              small businesses in its guidance                        PART 64—MISCELLANEOUS RULES
                                                                                                      RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS                            [PS Docket No. 13–87; PS Docket No. 06–
                                              regarding removing blocks from valid                                                                           229, WT Docket No. 96–86, RM–11433 and
                                              numbers. While the Commission                                                                                  RM–11577, FCC 14–172]
                                                                                                      ■1. The authority citation for part 64 is
                                              considered requiring specific processes
                                                                                                      amended to read as follows:
                                              or dedicated resources, it does not                                                                            Service Rules Governing Narrowband
                                              mandate them at this time to allow                        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 202, 225, 251(e),          Operations in the 769–775/799–805
                                              small providers to scale their efforts in               254(k), 403(b)(2)(B), (c), 616, 620, Pub. L.           MHz Bands
                                                                                                      104–104, 110 Stat. 56. Interpret or apply 47
                                              accordance with their businesses and to
                                                                                                      U.S.C. 201, 202, 218, 222, 225, 226, 227, 228,         AGENCY:   Federal Communications
                                              develop a more robust record on the                     251(e), 254(k), 616, 620, and the Middle Class         Commission.
                                              issue before the Commission addresses                   Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012, Pub.          ACTION: Final rule; announcement of
                                              this in a future proceeding.                            L. 112–96, unless otherwise noted.
                                                                                                                                                             effective date.
                                                 90. The Commission does not see a
                                                                                                      ■ 2. In § 64.1200, add reserved
                                              need to establish a special timetable for                                                                      SUMMARY:   In this document, the
                                                                                                      paragraphs (i) and (j) and paragraph (k)
                                              small entities to reach compliance with                                                                        Commission announces that the Office
                                                                                                      to read as follows:
                                              the modification to the rules. No small                                                                        of Management and Budget (OMB) has
                                              business has asked for a delay in                       § 64.1200    Delivery restrictions.                    approved, for a period of three years, the
                                              implementing the rules. Small                           *      *    *     *    *                               information collection associated with
                                              businesses may avoid compliance costs                     (i) [Reserved]                                       the Service Rules Governing
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                                              entirely by declining to block robocalls,                 (j) [Reserved]                                       Narrowband Operations in the 769–775/
                                              or may delay implementation of call                       (k) Voice service providers may block                799–805 MHz Bands, FCC 14–172. This
                                              blocking indefinitely to allow for more                 calls so that they do not reach a called               document is consistent with the Report
                                              time to come into compliance with the                   party as follows:                                      and Order, which stated that the
                                              rules. Similarly, there are no design                     (1) A provider may block a voice call                Commission would publish a document
                                              standards or performance standards to                   when the subscriber to which the                       in the Federal Register announcing the
                                              consider in this rulemaking.                            originating number is assigned has                     effective date of the rules.


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Document Created: 2018-10-26 09:50:42
Document Modified: 2018-10-26 09:50:42
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective February 12, 2018.
ContactKaren A Schroeder, Consumer Policy Division, Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau (CGB), at (202) 418- 0654, email: [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 1566 
CFR AssociatedTelecommunications and Telephone

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