Greetings all,
The final Technological Advisory Committee Meeting of 2022 for the Federal Communications Commission will be held 8 December.
My non-profit ORI was a member of the TAC for 2022, contributed to several reports, and will be represented in person (by me!) at the closing meeting.
We've advocated for #opensource and the #amateurradio service.
I’ve represented Open Source and Amateur Radio concerns over the past year on the Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning (AI/ML) working group of TAC. I co-chaired the sub-working group about “Safe Uses of AI/ML” with Paul Steinberg of Motorola, invited and organized a variety of speakers to present to the working groups, and had the opportunity to work on “how AI/ML is affecting bandwidth and throughput” paper with excellent FCC staffers. The amateur radio service is highlighted.
Thank you to everyone that has supported ORI (link in my profile) participating at this level of US government. It’s been very successful.
Karen Rucker (ORI Secretary Emeritus) was instrumental in the application process, and I’d like to recognize her service to ORI and the FCC.
Paul Williamson, with experience on standards committees, has been invaluable in terms of providing advice for deliberations and decisions.
If you are interested in “sticking up for#amateurradio and #opensource at the FCC”, then you can make a positive difference in the US regulatory process. This is much more involved than filing a comment or complaining on social media. It is a significant commitment of time and effort.
Please get in touch and I will do all I can to support your application to groups like the FCC TAC. *You* can shape the future success of open source and the amateur radio services that we care so much about.
A special thanks to Marty Woll of YASME Foundation for his guidance and advice, and to ARRL counsel for coordinating and cooperating with ORI on a wide variety of issues we’ve taken to the FCC over the past year. ARRL is ably represented at FCC TAC by Greg Lapin.