Thanks both to you and Mary Lou for your thoughtful responses. Okay, so just to be clear, the remaining carriers for whom the June 2023 deadline applies to are providers who provide dialtone to end-users via POTS, but who originate at least some of the calls from those end-users to the PSTN via an IP peer/trunk, and it is specifically those calls that they now need to start signing but were exempt from doing so until a month from now? And the reason that they didn't have to implement a year ago (but pure IP-based interconnected VoIP providers with < 100K subs *did*) is because § 64.6304(a)(1)(i) only applies to "non-facilities-based" providers, and if a telecom is building and maintaining POTS circuits to end-users, they are facilities-based by definition?
This gets us into the weeds on the definition of "facilities-based". I assume that the "facilities" in question must be facilities with traditional telecom switching equipment (either analog or TDM). So even if you run your own pure IP network end-to-end with no underlying leased circuits, and outright own your physical data centers where you house and run all of your own routers and SIP proxies, if 100% of your voice subscriber base is provisioned via VoIP, even if the end-user's VoIP equipment is talking to a server that you own, run, and maintain in your own data center "facilities", you still do not count as a "facilities-based" telecom, correct? Is there some "minimum" amount of actual TDM you can be running on your network in order for you to meet the definition of -- or claim for yourself the status of -- "facilities-based"? If someone had zero POTS circuits built to any of their end-users & all of their users are connected to their voice network via VoIP, but they have a single ICA with a single LEC, a TDM trunk between them and that LEC (where they immediately gateway the TDM traffic to/from IP as it ingresses or egresses their network), and a presence on the SS7 network...are they now considered to be "facilities-based"? And would they similarly have had all of their IP-trunked origination (calls that weren't going out via their TDM connection to the LEC) exempted until this year, if they had under 100K subs? As far as my question about white-labeling service goes, to be clear, we aren't in this category and have been signing our customers' calls with our own SHAKEN cert for the past year. But I know of plenty of other providers of similar size & scale (regional ISP whose bread and butter is internet connectivity, but with a small sprinkling of VoIP on top) who want to have a VoIP offering for various reasons, but simply outsource 100% of the VoIP component to a white-labeler. They bill the customer for the service, and presumably have a 499 Filer-ID and file As and Qs with USAC, but they have nothing to do with the underlying voice service...ATAs get drop-shipped to customers from the white-labeler when service is ordered, the ISP doesn't have any hand in the provisioning, they don't operate a single SIP proxy or media gateway, they have zero numbering resources of their own and zero ICAs with other carriers, etc. It's like the interconnected VoIP equivalent to reselling an ILEC analog POTS line...they're just a middle-man when it comes to billing (and thus, as an indirect result, to collecting and remitting USF) and front-line support. Now of course, many wholesale origination providers these days support having you house your SHAKEN cert on their server & will sign your outgoing calls for you with your own cert, and even those that don't do this will still pass your own signature/Identity header in the SIP INVITEs you send to them unmolested. But to be able to do the latter, you need to be running a SIP proxy or B2BUA somewhere between the end-user and your wholesale provider, which these other providers I'm talking about aren't doing. And it's not at all clear to me that most?/many?/any? *white-label* interconnected VoIP providers are set up to do the former...they're all STIR/SHAKEN compliant of course, but I'd guess they are signing all of the calls they originate with their own cert. That's only an educated guess on my part, of course, since I've been looking around even after asking here, and have yet to find any first- or even second-hand accounts one way or the other. -- Nathan -----Original Message----- From: David Frankel [mailto:dfran...@zipdx.com] Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2023 1:45 PM To: 'Mary Lou Carey'; Nathan Anderson Cc: 'Voice Ops' Subject: RE: [VoiceOps] All carriers must get their STIR/SHAKEN certificate by June 30th! I am not an attorney; this is not legal advice. The (primary) purpose of STIR/SHAKEN was not to help the ITG. The purposes are to (at the terminating or called-party end of the call) identify the entity responsible for originating the call, and allow that entity to signal what they know about the association between the caller and the calling number. We are just about to the point (end of this month) where virtually all providers are required to sign the calls they originate and send onward via IP. That includes providers that serve so-called POTS customers (when those POTS customers place calls sent via other providers). See 47 CFR § 64.6301(a)(2) This applies to the ORIGINATING provider. The expectation, as made clear in the implementing specs and regulations, is that the originating provider KNOWS who the caller is. ATIS says (ATIS-1000088): "Has a direct authenticated relationship with the customer and can identify the customer." If you are a reseller and you are the one with the "direct authenticated relationship with the customer" then your (A- or B-) signature should be on the calls. As noted, you can get a SHAKEN token and delegate the signing to your underlying provider. But it will be your name, and your reputation, on the calls. If you are an underlying provider and you do NOT know who the customer is, then insist that your reseller get a token and either sign the calls or delegate that to you (with their token). If you do not know anything about the caller, then you are risking your reputation (and perhaps more) by signing those calls. More of my thoughts on this topic are here: https://legalcallsonly.org/attestation-inflation-the-abcs-of-signing-calls/ If you find the regulations confusing, your best bet is to play it safe. That would mean signing calls with your OWN token when your direct customer is the one initiating the calls (that is, they are the "caller" for legal purposes and they are going to take responsibility for conformance of the calls to ALL the applicable regulations -- and there are many, including TCPA, TSR, fraud, and state statutes). You, as the originating provider, still have a set of responsibilities here -- see 47 CFR § 64.1200(n)(3) as ONE EXAMPLE. If the calls come to you from an entity that is not the one initiating the calls, then insist that the calls are signed when you get them (or that your customer provides you with their token so you can affix their signature). As Mary Lou indicates, you are playing Russian roulette if you are originating calls and they do not bear your signature. And your underlying provider is doing the same if they are accepting those calls unsigned and sending them onward. The FCC has a Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that is open for comment RIGHT NOW on the topic of "Third-Party Caller ID Authentication." The FNPRM is available here: https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-23-18A1.pdf. See starting at paragraph 97. Initial public comments on this FNPRM are due June 5 (Monday) and Reply Comments are due a month later. You'll be able to read (and file) comments here: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/search-filings/results?q=(proceedings.name:( %2217-97%22)). Once comments are filed the FCC will likely issue an Order in due course, which may be clarifying or confusing or both or neither. David Frankel ZipDX® LLC St. George, UT USA Tel: 1-800-FRANKEL (1-800-372-6535) Visit My Robocall Blog -----Original Message----- From: VoiceOps <voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> On Behalf Of Mary Lou Carey via VoiceOps Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2023 2:01 PM To: Nathan Anderson <nath...@fsr.com> Cc: Voice Ops <voiceops@voiceops.org> Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] All carriers must get their STIR/SHAKEN certificate by June 30th! US telecom brain trust? Wow......I don't even know what to say, but I'm thinking I should send my 21-year-old your way because he thinks he's a lot smarter than I am. LOL! Im going to preface my response by saying I'm not sure anyone knows exactly what the ruling means because I've called the FCC and STI-GA multiple times to ask specific questions like yours. Any time my question gets too detailed, I've been told to go read the ruling myself because they aren't attorneys and don't want to give legal advice that would steer me in the wrong direction. I don't know of any attorneys that have felt so comfortable discussing the details of the network that they have gone out on a limb to explain it to everyone either, so I can only tell you what I think based on what I've been told to date. My understanding from talking to the FCC and STI-GA is that the purpose of STIR/SHAKEN was to help the ITG identify all the players in the industry so the ITG can more easily shut down the bad players and if necessary the providers that enable those bad players. To me, that means regardless of whether a company has its own network, leases another carrier's network, or resells services, the FCC wants to identify every player in the network. We can debate which networks are exempt and which networks aren't, but ultimately there's not a lot you can do if the powers that be decide your network should be compliant and it's not. The choice to get a STIR/SHAKEN certificate is ultimately up to each company. They can either play it safe and get a token or they can play Russian Roulette with their business and not get a token. To date, I've seen the FCC/ITG give non-compliant carriers 30 days to become compliant, but that's not always enough time. I don't know if that is going to change after the deadline, but it could. It's not that difficult to get your own certificate and if another carrier is already signing your calls it's not that much more cost-wise to have your own certificate. So to me it's better to be safe than sorry. I hope that helps, MARY LOU CAREY BackUP Telecom Consulting Office: 615-791-9969 Cell: 615-796-1111 On 2023-05-31 09:33 PM, Nathan Anderson via VoiceOps wrote: > I do find this a little confusing. > > It's already clear that POTS service has been made exempt "until > further notice". So when the small operators exemption deadline was > pushed up from end of June 2023 to end of June 2022, that -- by > logical deduction -- could only have included small interconnected > VoIP operators (which I believe was made explicitly clear anyway, but > even if it had been ambiguous in the language, ...). > > So, out of all the interconnected VoIP operators in the States large > OR small...who the heck is left who HASN'T already been required to > have it implemented on their network by this point?? I don't > understand who this June 2023 deadline applies to: the POTS circuit > providers aren't covered by it, and all sizes of interconnected VoIP > providers should have already implemented it a year ago at the latest. > > Another question that occurs to me (I could probably find the answer > to this question with a little searching, but since I'm already here > talking to the U.S. telecom brain-trust): would a provider who merely > supplies white-labeled service from another interconnected VoIP > provider and slaps their own name on it be required to obtain their > own SHAKEN cert, and have the underlying VoIP provider sign any of > their customers' calls with that cert instead of a cert belonging to > the actual VoIP provider, even if the white-labeler/reseller has > literally nothing to do with the network at all that services the > calls? > > -- Nathan > > -----Original Message----- > From: VoiceOps [mailto:voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org] On Behalf Of > Michael Graves via VoiceOps > Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2023 1:12 PM > To: Mary Lou Carey; Alex Balashov > Cc: voiceops@voiceops.org > Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] All carriers must get their STIR/SHAKEN > certificate by June 30th! > > There was an extension for "small" providers (under 100k lines) ends > on June 30, 2023. > > That extension was basically was targeting rural LECs. It was amended > so it only included those who have physical infrastructure to their > clients. > > Those who do not operate such legacy infrastructure are supposed to be > signing their calls as of June 30, 2022. > > There are further "gateway" orders about how any operator is supposed > to handle calls arriving on their network that are not signed. > > Michael Graves > mgra...@mstvp.com > o: (713) 861-4005 > c: (713) 201-1262 > sip:mgra...@mjg.onsip.com > > -----Original Message----- > From: VoiceOps <voiceops-boun...@voiceops.org> On Behalf Of Mary Lou > Carey via VoiceOps > Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2023 2:46 PM > To: Alex Balashov <abalas...@evaristesys.com> > Cc: voiceops@voiceops.org > Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] All carriers must get their STIR/SHAKEN > certificate by June 30th! > Importance: High > > Any carrier that provides originating VOIP or a combination of > originating VOIP / PSTN / Wireless VOICE services needs to get its > own certificate. My understanding is that only those who provide > PSTN-only voice services do not need to have their own STIR/SHAKEN > token because the technology still does not support it. > > Mary Lou Carey > (615) 796-1111 > > MARY LOU CAREY > BackUP Telecom Consulting > Office: 615-791-9969 > Cell: 615-796-1111 > > On 2023-05-31 02:11 PM, Alex Balashov wrote: >> Hi Mary Lou, >> >> Thank you for this. >> >> A stupid - and certainly belated - question: how exactly is a carrier >> defined, in the letter of the regulations underlying this deadline? >> Or to put it another way: who, as a VoIP service provider of one sort >> or another, _doesn't_ have to get their own token? >> >> -- Alex >> >>> On May 31, 2023, at 1:46 PM, Mary Lou Carey via VoiceOps >>> <voiceops@voiceops.org> wrote: >>> >>> Hey all, >>> >>> I just wanted to send out a reminder that the drop dead date for all >>> carriers to get THEIR OWN STIR/SHAKEN certificate is coming up on >>> June 30th. You can still have an underlying carrier sign your calls >>> for you, but they must sign with YOUR token......not their own! You >>> have to register with the STI-PA to start the process at this link: >>> >>> https://authenticatereg.iconectiv.com/register >>> >>> You must have your own IPES Company Code (aka OCN) and 499 filer ID >>> to get a STIR/SHAKEN certificate. Just getting the certificate can >>> take up to several weeks so please don't wait until the last minute >>> to get one. I would hate to see anyone's network get shut down >>> because they aren't signing their calls as per the FCC guidelines. >>> >>> MARY LOU CAREY >>> BackUP Telecom Consulting >>> Office: 615-791-9969 >>> Cell: 615-796-1111 >>> _______________________________________________ >>> VoiceOps mailing list >>> VoiceOps@voiceops.org >>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops > _______________________________________________ > VoiceOps mailing list > VoiceOps@voiceops.org > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops > _______________________________________________ > VoiceOps mailing list > VoiceOps@voiceops.org > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops > _______________________________________________ > VoiceOps mailing list > VoiceOps@voiceops.org > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops _______________________________________________ VoiceOps mailing list VoiceOps@voiceops.org https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops _______________________________________________ VoiceOps mailing list VoiceOps@voiceops.org https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops