2022-18380. Call Authentication Trust Anchor  

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    AGENCY:

    Federal Communications Commission.

    ACTION:

    Proposed rule and request for comments.

    SUMMARY:

    In this document, the Wireline Competition Bureau (Bureau) of the Federal Communications Commission (Commission) addresses two recurring statutory obligations under the TRACED Act relating to the Commission's caller ID authentication rules. First, the Bureau seeks comment for its annual reevaluation of the STIR/SHAKEN implementation extensions granted by the Commission for implementation of the STIR/SHAKEN call authentication framework. Second, the Bureau seeks comment for its first triennial assessment of the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN call authentication framework as a tool in our work combating illegal robocalls.

    DATES:

    Comments are due on or before October 3, 2022; reply comments are due on or before October 21, 2022.

    ADDRESSES:

    Pursuant to sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.415, 1.419, interested parties may file comments and reply comments on or before the dates indicated in this document. Comments and reply comments may be filed using the Commission's Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS). See Electronic Filing of Documents in Rulemaking Proceedings,63 FR 24121 (1998). Interested parties may file comments or reply comments, identified by WC Docket No. 17-97 by any of the following methods: Start Printed Page 53706

    Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically using the internet by accessing ECFS: https://www.fcc.gov/​ecfs/​.

    Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must file an original and one copy of each filing.

    • Filings can be sent by commercial overnight courier, or by first-class or overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All filings must be addressed to the Commission's Secretary, Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission.
    • Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9050 Junction Drive, Annapolis Junction, MD 20701.
    • U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority mail must be addressed to 45 L Street NE, Washington, DC 20554.

    • Effective March 19, 2020, and until further notice, the Commission no longer accepts any hand or messenger delivered filings. This is a temporary measure taken to help protect the health and safety of individuals, and to mitigate the transmission of COVID-19. See FCC Announces Closure of FCC Headquarters Open Window and Change in Hand-Delivery Policy, Public Notice, 35 FCC Rcd 2788 (March 19, 2020), https://www.fcc.gov/​document/​fcc-closes-headquarters-open-window-and-changes-hand-delivery-policy.

    Ex Parte Rules. This proceeding shall be treated as a “permit-but-disclose” proceeding in accordance with the Commission's ex parte rules. Persons making ex parte presentations must file a copy of any written presentation or a memorandum summarizing any oral presentation within two business days after the presentation (unless a different deadline applicable to the Sunshine period applies). Persons making oral ex parte presentations are reminded that memoranda summarizing the presentation must: (1) list all persons attending or otherwise participating in the meeting at which the ex parte presentation was made; and (2) summarize all data presented and arguments made during the presentation. If the presentation consisted in whole or in part of the presentation of data or arguments already reflected in the presenters written comments, memoranda, or other filings in the proceeding, the presenter may provide citations to such data or arguments in his or her prior comments, memoranda, or other filings (specifying the relevant page and/or paragraph numbers where such data or arguments can be found) in lieu of summarizing them in the memorandum. Documents shown or given to Commission staff during ex parte meetings are deemed to be written ex parte presentations and must be filed consistent with section 1.1206(b) of the Commission's rules. In proceedings governed by section 1.49(f) of the rules or for which the Commission has made available a method of electronic filing, written ex parte presentations and memoranda summarizing oral ex parte presentations, and all attachments thereto, must be filed through the electronic comment filing system available for that proceeding, and must be filed in their native format ( e.g.,.doc, .xml., .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants in this proceeding should familiarize themselves with the Commission's ex parte rules.

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    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

    For further information, please contact Jonathan Lechter, Competition Policy Division, Wireline Competition Bureau, at (202) 418-2343 or by email at Jonathan.Lechter@fcc.gov.

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    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

    This is a summary of the Bureau's Public Notice seeking comment on two recurring statutory obligations under the TRACED Act in WC Docket No. 17-97, DA 22-831, released on August 5, 2022. The full text of this document is available for public inspection at the following internet address: https://docs.fcc.gov/​public/​attachments/​DA-22-831A1.pdf. To request materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities ( e.g., braille, large print, electronic files, audio format, etc.), send an email to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), or (202) 418-0432 (TTY).

    Synopsis

    I. Comments Sought on STIR/SHAKEN Implementation Extensions for Annual Review, Pursuant to Section 4(b)(5) of the TRACED Act

    When Congress directed the Commission to mandate implementation of STIR/SHAKEN in the TRACED Act, it also required the Commission to assess burdens and barriers to implementation, and it gave the Commission discretion to extend compliance with the implementation mandate upon a public finding of undue hardship. The Commission performed this assessment and granted three categorical extensions of the STIR/SHAKEN mandate on the basis of undue hardship: (1) small voice service providers; (2) voice service providers unable to obtain the “token” necessary to participate in STIR/SHAKEN; and (3) services scheduled for section 214 discontinuance. See Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order,85 FR 73360 (Nov. 17, 2020). (As directed by a separate provision of the TRACED Act, TRACED Act § 4(b)(5)(B), the Commission also granted an extension for those portions of the network that rely on technology that cannot initiate, maintain, and terminate SIP calls. Because this extension was not granted on the basis of undue hardship, we do not seek comment on it in this Public Notice.)

    The TRACED Act further requires the Commission to assess burdens and barriers to implementation “as appropriate” after that initial assessment, and directs the Commission to, “not less frequently than annually after the first [extension] is granted,” reevaluate and potentially revise any extensions granted on the basis of undue hardship. It requires the Commission to issue a public notice explaining “why such [extension] remains necessary” and “when the Commission expects to achieve the goal of full participation” in caller ID authentication. To comply with these obligations, the Commission directed the Bureau in the Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order to annually reevaluate the Commission's granted extensions for undue hardship and revise or extend those extensions as necessary. (The Commission determined that the Bureau is in the best position to undertake this fact-intensive, case-by-case evaluation.) In its directions to the Bureau, the Commission permitted the Bureau to further extend an extension to which voice service providers are already subject, but prohibited the Bureau from terminating an extension prior to the extension's originally set end date. The Commission did not permit the Bureau to grant extensions to any voice service providers or services not already subject to one. Should we further extend a granted extension, we are permitted to decrease, but not expand, the scope of entities entitled to that extension based on our assessment of burdens and barriers.

    In September 2021, we released a Public Notice seeking comment on the Commission's three granted extensions and any associated burdens and barriers to the implementation of STIR/SHAKEN. 86 FR 56705 (Oct. 12, 2021). In December 2021, we issued our first annual reevaluation and declined to modify any of the existing extensions. The extension for services scheduled for section 214 discontinuance ended on June 30, 2022. We now seek comment to enable our second annual reevaluation of the two remaining STIR/SHAKEN implementation extensions— Start Printed Page 53707 for small voice service providers and for providers unable to obtain the required token—granted based on undue hardship.

    Small Voice Service Provider Extension. We seek comment on the Commission's extension for facilities-based small voice service providers. In September 2020, the Commission granted a two-year extension for all small voice service providers, defined as “a provider that has 100,000 or fewer voice service subscriber lines.” Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order. Under this extension, small voice service providers were given until June 30, 2023 to implement STIR/SHAKEN. The Commission found that this extension was appropriate because small voice service providers may face substantial costs—in addition to resource constraints—to implement STIR/SHAKEN and confront unique equipment availability issues. In December 2021, the Commission shortened the extension for a subset of small voice service providers likely to be the source of illegal robocalls. 87 FR 3684 (Jan. 25, 2022) It shortened the extension to one year—until June 30, 2022—for non-facilities-based small voice service providers based on overwhelming record support and available evidence showing that this subset of providers were originating a large and disproportionate amount of robocalls. It also required small voice service providers suspected of originating illegal robocalls to implement STIR/SHAKEN on an accelerated timeline. The Commission maintained the two-year extension for facilities-based small voice service providers because it found they were less likely to be the source of illegal robocalls. When we considered this remaining extension in the 2021 annual reevaluation, we declined to lengthen it beyond June 30, 2023, noting that the Commission's guiding principle in establishing the extension was “to achieve ubiquitous STIR/SHAKEN implementation to combat the scourge of illegal caller ID spoofing as quickly as possible.”

    We seek comment on the burdens and barriers to facilities-based small voice service provider implementation and whether we should revise their STIR/SHAKEN extension. Have the burdens or barriers affecting small providers originally discussed in the Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order, changed since last year's evaluation and, if so, how? Should any Commission actions in the previous year inform or impact our reevaluation of the small voice service provider extension? Have any new burdens or barriers emerged that the Commission did not consider or could not have been aware of when it initially gave small voice service providers a two-year extension? If so, do these burdens or barriers warrant an extension beyond the current June 30, 2023 date, and if so, how long of an extension is necessary and appropriate? How would any additional extension be consistent with the Commission's goal of ubiquitous STIR/SHAKEN implementation?

    In response to our Public Notice seeking comment for the 2021 annual extension reevaluation, the Satellite Industry Association (SIA) requested an “indefinite” extension for satellite voice service providers” in light of the “challenging circumstances facing small satellite VSPs, combined with their unique economic, operational, and technical characteristics.” The Bureau determined that the record was insufficient to evaluate SIA's request at that time, but stated it would seek further comment on the request as part of the instant 2022 reevaluation. In the interim, as part of its May 2022 Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,87 FR 42670 (July 18, 2022), the Commission sought comment on the larger questions of the applicability of the TRACED Act to small satellite providers and whether it should grant such providers an extension for implementing STIR/SHAKEN.

    Should the Bureau further extend the small provider implementation extension just for small satellite voice service providers as part of this inquiry or should we leave this issue to the full Commission to consider more generally? Do small satellite voice service providers face unique challenges in implementing STIR/SHAKEN? What are these challenges? How do they impact this subset of providers' ability to implement STIR/SHAKEN? What is a realistic time frame for any extension we grant? What impact would an extension for small satellite voice service providers have on other providers or the public? What impact would such an extension have on the Commission's longstanding goal of ubiquitous deployment of STIR/SHAKEN?

    Extension for Voice Service Providers That Cannot Obtain a SPC Token. We seek comment on the Commission's extension for voice service providers that cannot obtain the Service Provider Code (SPC) token necessary to participate in STIR/SHAKEN. In the Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order, the Commission granted voice service providers that are incapable of obtaining a SPC token due to Governance Authority policy an extension until they are capable of obtaining said token. (Recognizing that “a voice service provider may not be able to immediately come into compliance with its caller ID authentication obligations after it becomes eligible to receive” a SPC token, the Commission stated that it “will not consider a voice service provider that diligently pursues a certificate once it is able to receive one in violation of [its] rules.”). In May 2021, the Governance Authority revised the STI-GA Token Access Policy to enable token access by some voice service providers previously unable to receive a token. In the 2021 annual reevaluation, we found that this policy revision had resolved the main practical concern underlying this extension and that token access no longer stood as a significant barrier to full participation in STIR/SHAKEN. We nonetheless declined to revise this extension on the basis that it remains necessary for the reason the Commission previously identified: “[A]n entity that meets the definition of a provider of `voice service' cannot comply with the STIR/SHAKEN rules if it is unable to receive a token.”

    We seek comment on this extension and whether it remains necessary. Is it still true that a provider cannot comply with the STIR/SHAKEN rules if it is unable to receive a token? Has anything changed that has made a token unnecessary to participate in STIR/SHAKEN, making this extension no longer needed? Even if it remains theoretically necessary, are all practical impediments presented by token access resolved, such that we should consider recommending terminating this extension? If we did recommend terminating this extension, when is an appropriate end date? If the extension remains necessary, is token access an impediment to ubiquitous STIR/SHAKEN? Are there steps the Commission or the Governance Authority could take regarding token access to better promote full participation in STIR/SHAKEN?

    II. Comments Sought on STIR/SHAKEN Efficacy, Pursuant to Section 4(b)(4) of the TRACED Act

    When Congress mandated that the Commission require voice service providers to implement STIR/SHAKEN in the TRACED Act, it also directed the Commission to “assess the efficacy of the technologies used for [the] call authentication frameworks” no later than three years after the December 30, 2019 enactment date of the Act. The Commission was also directed to “revise or replace the call authentication frameworks” if the Commission Start Printed Page 53708 determines it is in the public interest to do so based on the assessment and to submit a report to Congress “on the findings of the assessment . . . and on any actions to revise or replace the call authentication frameworks.”

    Pursuant to this Congressional mandate, we seek comment to inform our analysis of the efficacy of the STIR/SHAKEN caller ID authentication framework that the Commission required voice service providers to implement on their IP networks. (We do not, in this Public Notification, seek comment on caller ID authentication in non-IP networks. In the September 2020 Second Caller ID Authentication Report and Order, the Commission determined that no standardized framework for non-IP networks existed and consequently required providers to work to develop a solution rather than implement a framework. The Commission recently sought comment on whether we should require providers to implement a non-IP caller ID authentication solution. Because the Commission has not yet mandated providers implement any particular non-IP caller ID authentication technology, there is no implemented technology to assess in this required reevaluation.) We start by seeking comment on the standard by which we should assess the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN. We propose to assess the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN based on how well it effectuates the authentication of caller ID information. We believe this is the best standard because it evaluates the effectiveness of the STIR/SHAKEN framework at executing the function of the technology mandated under section 4: performing caller ID authentication. We seek comment on this proposal. Is there another way to interpret this statutory language and assess the STIR/SHAKEN framework? For example, should we measure the impact of STIR/SHAKEN on preventing illegally spoofed robocalls, or preventing all illegal robocalls, to determine its efficacy? How would such an approach be consistent with the text of the statute? Would it be an appropriate measure of STIR/SHAKEN's effectiveness as a caller ID authentication framework? Or would such an approach only measure the impact and limitations of caller ID authentication generally, regardless of “the technologies used”? Could different caller ID authentication frameworks more or less effectively combat illegally spoofed or all illegal robocalls?

    We next seek comment on the efficacy of the STIR/SHAKEN framework under this standard. Has STIR/SHAKEN proven to effectively authenticate caller ID information? Are there ways it could be more effective at that task and, if so, how? Do any specific factors limit its efficacy, and what solutions might resolve those issues? Will any identified concerns be addressed by further deployment across the voice network? In the Bureau's December 2020 Report to Congress, we stated that, without widespread implementation, it was “premature to assess the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN in practice” at that time. (The TRACED Act required the Commission to submit that report “not later than 12 months after” enactment.) Since that date, many voice service providers have been required to implement, and have implemented, STIR/SHAKEN. Is it still premature to evaluate the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN in practice? If so, we seek comment on whether commenters continue to believe that the framework is effective as designed. And if commenters believe we should evaluate STIR/SHAKEN under a different or additional standard, we seek comment on the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN under any alternative standards proposed. Under any standard, we seek comment on whether the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN would improve when the framework is paired with other tools or if there are additional steps that the Bureau, Commission, or stakeholders such as voice service providers or the Governance Authority could take to improve the efficacy of STIR/SHAKEN. (Recognizing the benefits of pairing caller ID authentication with call analytics, the Commission adopted a safe harbor enabling voice service providers to block unwanted calls by default based on reasonable analytics that incorporate caller ID authentication information, so long as consumers are given the opportunity to opt out.)

    Should the Commission consider whether it is in the public interest to revise or replace the STIR/SHAKEN framework? Would revising or replacing the framework at this time be premature, as providers continue to take steps to implement the technology consistent with the Commission's efforts to bolster its caller ID authentication rule scheme? How would the costs of such revision or replacement compare to the benefits? We ask that any comments indicating that the STIR/SHAKEN framework is ineffective at authenticating caller ID information identify alternatives that would more effectively authenticate caller ID information.

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    Federal Communications Commission.

    Pamela Arluk,

    Chief, Competition Policy Division.

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    [FR Doc. 2022-18380 Filed 8-31-22; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P

Document Information

Published:
09/01/2022
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule and request for comments.
Document Number:
2022-18380
Dates:
Comments are due on or before October 3, 2022; reply comments are due on or before October 21, 2022.
Pages:
53705-53708 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
WC Docket No. 17-97, DA 22-831, FR ID 100507
PDF File:
2022-18380.pdf
CFR: (1)
47 CFR 64