FCC is VERY Clear and ordered that HIPPA and encryption or obscured data has no 
business, ever, on ham radio! See report and order rm-11699

 

https://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2013/db0918/DA-13-1918A1.pdf




 

Allen R. Brier N5XZ

1515 Windloch Lane

Richmond, TX 77406

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, December 1, 2018 6:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [tdxs-list] NPRM 16-239 and RM-11708

 

Allen:

      It could be if it were a medical necessity as HIPA will not allow in 
clear transmissions of patients information..Just saying. and yes to in higher 
parts of the bands.

 

Gerald Muller K9GEM

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

In a message dated 12/1/2018 4:51:01 PM Central Standard Time, 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  writes: 

 

Jerry,

 

When they regulate the high bandwidth transmissions to a higher part of the 
band(s), then I would accept this. Until then, no.

 

Regardless of any slogan, it is not our responsibility to transmit personal 
info at the detriment of all else.

 

Allen R. Brier N5XZ

1515 Windloch Lane

Richmond, TX 77406

 

From: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > 
Sent: Saturday, December 1, 2018 9:04 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [tdxs-list] NPRM 16-239 and RM-11708

 

Allen.

    If as is our slogan states,"When all else fails we are here" then to use 
the bands for transmission of personal info such as medical information would 
require encrypted transmission do to HIPA regulations. If this bill does not 
pass then how are we to provide aid to those that would use us. I do agree that 
there needs to be a separate band for this type of transmission as the regular 
bands will be flooded.

 

Gerald Muller K9GEM

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

In a message dated 12/1/2018 6:58:03 AM Central Standard Time, 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  writes:

 

Dear all:

 

We are at a pivotal time for our hobby, as new ARRL directors take their office 
on Jan. 1, and some odd things happened recently at the FCC’s Wireless Telecom 
Bureau (in charge of ham radio). 

 

The FCC is moving towards allowing unlimited bandwidth data in the HF bands, 
without any ability for other hams to eavesdrop, and we must take action now to 
stop this.

 

We need everyone to actively write their elected federal officials 
(congress/house/senate), the FCC leadership, law enforcement in Washington, and 
IRAC members, to ensure that the ARRL and FCC withdraw the ill-conceived 
rulemaking proposal NPRM 16-239 and RM-11708.

 

Getting our views out in the public FCC ECFS system helps let ARRL officials 
and FCC officials know that their position on RM-11708 and NPRM 16-239 is  
flawed, and is “against” what the licensees of our hobby want and need.         
         

 

But we also must write our elected US congressional officials, and law 
enforcement at the federal level (in Washington: DOJ, FBI, NTIA, NSA, CIA, and 
other members of the IRAC  in addition to the FCC).  

https://www.ntia.doc.gov/page/interdepartment-radio-advisory-committee-irac

 

Introduce yourself as a licensed ham with years of operating experience, and 
express your concerns for our country and our hobby, about how the ARRL and the 
FCC is perpetuating data transmissions that violate Part 97 rules since they 
cannot be self-policed by other amateur operators, and are proposing to open 
the flood gates on wideband signaling that cannot be intercepted over the 
airways, thus defeating the purpose of ham radio and Part 97 rules. 

 

… you should alert them in writing of the ongoing obscured traffic by various 
ARQ modes of DATA at HF frequencies. I am sounding the alarm, since there a few 
hams inside the FCC who also are friendly with the Dept. of Homeland Security 
(DHS) who are working with the ARRL to try and open the floodgates on this type 
of secure/private traffic through the proposed rulemaking NPRM 16-239.  

 

This became apparent to me when a Nov. 7, 2018 letter from SCS mysteriously 
appeared at the FCC website and from my dialogue with the CTO of the FCC (its 
all public at the FCC ECFS 16-239 site, links below now in the media). 

 

It became clear to me that this is basically an attempt to turn the HF ham 
bands into a DHS emcomm service with Winlink and various 
data/email/internet-capable modes that others cannot intercept over the air.  
Yet their approach will only hurt our national security by allowing more 
signals on the bands that we cannot decode or intercept!

 

We need to urge our elected officials in Congress to insist that the FCC 
withdraw NPRM 16-239 from consideration, and we need to let ARRL directors and 
vice directors know, loud and clear, that they need to pull back and urge the 
FCC to withdraw  NPRM 16-239 and RM-11708, until we can fix the existing 
problems of non-open-source data transmissions at HF that have been ignored by 
ARRL and FCC for the past 15 years in the FCC Proceedings RM-11306, RM-11708, 
WT 16-239, and 17-344.

 

The popular press is starting to catch wind about the perils that ARRL and a 
tiny minority of data operators (with help from a couple of insiders in the 
FCC) are trying to do with the amateur HF spectrum. 

 

See:

 

https://www.rrmediagroup.com/News/NewsDetails/NewsID/17667

 

https://hackaday.com/2018/11/26/fcc-gets-complaint-proposed-ham-radio-rules-hurt-national-security/

 

https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?limit=100 
<https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?limit=100&proceedings_name=16-239&sort=date_disseminated,DESC>
 &proceedings_name=16-239&sort=date_disseminated,DESC

 

 

This is our spectrum. 

 

Unless we take this seriously and write to Congress, the FCC leaders, and other 
IRAC members to withdraw NPRM 16-239, the ham HF spectrum will be consumed by 
unlimited bandwidth, unlimited baud rate data signals that cannot be 
intercepted for meaning. 

 

New ARRL directors were just elected, we need to reach them, too!

 

It is worth taking some time to preserve our hobby and the HF spectrum we love 
to use. Japan and other Asian countries have prohibited Pactor and Winlink 
transmissions on HF. There is a reason – a national security reason -  and we 
need to also.

 

Write your elected government officials and ARRL officials, FCC officials, and 
law enforcement, urging that NPRM 16-239 and RM-11708 be withdrawn by the FCC, 
and that all transmissions be documented, open source, and decodable by 3rd 
parties over the air (Many currently are not when operated with Winlink and 
other software that has ARQ and proprietary compression, and the proposed 
rulemakings by ARRL and FCC will widen the bandwidth on those transmissions 
without solving the existing problems).

 

PLEASE become involved and spread the word. This is our hobby, and our spectrum 
(for now). 

 

Don’t let it become host to unintelligible wideband internet users and crime.

 

Thanks for the bandwidth. 

 

Justification for posting:  This impacts all ham radio operators who use HF, 
and those on this list use HF…….

 

Please cross-post to other reflectors, lists, FB, etc.

 

73

 

 

Allen R. Brier N5XZ

1515 Windloch Lane

Richmond, TX 77406

 

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