Strange Executive Order

denverpilot

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Anyone else make heads or tails of this?

I see a lot of words that say, "Write a report on our national communications capability".

What I'm wondering is what is behind it.

Who's about to get a huge national radio system contract after the report says "there is no National Communications network other than the PSTN, and satellite-based systems of various ownership and operation".

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press...national-security-and-emergency-preparedness-

Maybe a tailor made job for a former LightSquared exec?

Who knows...
 
It looks to me like something that originated within the bureaucracy, not the White House. I'm guessing they went to the President and said, "Here is something that needs to happen, and here's why."
 
The communication landscape has completely changed in the last 10 years. Who knows how many federal systems haven't caught up to that reality.
 
I wonder if mother Motorola isn't behind that. Since they have successfully scammed billions of dollars out of municipalities to switch over to encrypted 700-800 mhz trunking systems under the cloak of the narrow band mandates, maybe they are trying to sink their claws further into Government .
 
Motorla has nothing to do with this. It is our country taking away our freedoms. This is a control of our freedom of speach.
 
I wasn't meaning for this to turn into a commentary on narrowband mandates or anything. I honestly can't figure out why an Executive Order was necessary to write a report that any Communications pro can answer in five minutes. That was my interest.

P-25 is a public standard. Various manufacturers make the gear, no municipality has to buy it from Mototrola... Although from personal experience I'd stay far away from EF Johnson trash and would be far happier with Motorola gear in a life-or-death situation. EFJ radios blow.

What's NOT a public standard is the CODEC chosen for the original P-25 spec. There's one single-sourced company making those chips and selling the IMBE and AMBE algorithm. Those kids are making out like bandits for lack of an open CODEC.

Motorola's claim to fame in all of this is to trick municipalities into buying their gear at a cheaper price with their proprietary encryption algorithm installed and throwing a $250 or higher charge per radio to "upgrade" to public ally available encryption algorithms.

That's burned a lot of old radio-heads who don't realize their radios are really just customized computers in a box, these days.

But none of that has anything to do with the above mandate from the Executive Branch as far as I can see. It seems to simply be an order to launch a study to see if we can communicate nationally. We can, and that's clearly obvious to anyone with a telephone.

So... I'm wondering what the "study" is setting up that we'll all need to spend more money on, soon. That's my take, anyway. Government always needs to "do more". Note there's no rationale given to what the mission or goal is, just "write a report". Hmm.
 
It looks to me to be organizational in nature. What do you see in there that makes you think that a study is the central feature of it?
 
"Sec. 2.2. The Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) shall: (a) issue an annual memorandum to the NS/EP Communications Executive Committee (established in section 3 of this order) highlighting national priorities for Executive Committee analyses, studies, research, and development regarding NS/EP communications;"

OSTP traditionally has had very little input into anything Communications related. That has typically been divvied up to FCC for licensing and enforcement, and for truly Federal spectrum allocations and standards, NTIA.

Why FCC or NTIA would care at all about a "memorandum" from OSTP is the curious part. The order basically shoves OSTP into their traditional "turf" without really giving a solid reason why.

I suspect it's the Internet. Telcos own it. Fed has to play by the telco's pricing and rules. Fed wants their own system now, perhaps?

FCC Commissioners are both required to be chosen from competing political parties relatively evenly, and must not have any ties to the communication biz. (Which is a rule that is bent... Hard.

But it gives oversight to a relatively "fair" group of folks.). Having OSTP sending them "memos" is downright strange, and with the latest "buy a politician to gain spectrum" shenanigans of LightSquared, my Warning lights are all going off seeing this Executive Order.

Can't quite put a finger on exactly why yet, though. Can't play Partisan favor games as easily as desired through FCC?

If you want a report on effectiveness of FCC mandates, or NTIA mandates, just ask the non-Partisan GAO to do one. Lots of ways to get this report done outside of OSTP.

And what is the "National Communications" mandate, anyway? Did we all call up Congress and say we wanted a coast-to-coast communications system owned/operated by the Feds? Not really necessary, if you ask me. Nor something we really want to pay for after OSTP's report comes out and says, "The sky is falling, the sky is falling!" (If that's what this is prep for... Not sure.)

Perhaps it's more a sign that telcos are squeezing them for every penny after the illegal wiretapping and other shenanigans the Fed has forced them into?

Very strange. That's why I posted. Various significant attempts at basically giving away spectrum to get a national radio system, have all failed. Private industry doesn't see any money in running it as a national Federal venture. Even if given a significant chunk of spectrum to use for their own profit as a sweetener to the pot.

Very odd stuff going on.
 
Handprints of Mr. Falcone are everywhere...

Yes. Another high quality example of a human being trained at Harvard. ;)

I've been trying to figure out for years how that place cranks out so many fiscal sociopaths with misanthropic tendencies.

Ballmer, Blankfein, Cramer (perhaps reformed), Gates, Zuckerberg... the list goes on... (and yes, some of those dropped out, so apparently the training for this happens quite early on).

Or maybe the place just attracts them. Or a little of both.

Heh... Nature or Nurture?

I haven't met a Harvard grad I'd trust to have my back yet.

But then again, I work in Telecom and IT, and I wouldn't say either industry is very friendly, in that regard... :)

This is from 2001, but it caught my eye back then... 30 whopping Harvard students protested the school paying non-livable wages to guards, janitors, etc...

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/05/03/opinion/in-america-harvard-s-heroes.html

And we all know the place has the cash... It's not like they have a cash flow problem.

I found it more interesting that it was only 30 students. And the interviewee was a Divinity major. Go figure.
 
Well, to come full circle, there's some analysis out.

http://www.federalnewsradio.com/519...ing-government-connected-in-case-of-emergency

Basically it's busywork designed to officially hand strategic control of communications networks and systems to DHS.

Apparently triggered by widespread power outages in D.C. recently. Politicians making hay.

A committee to study communications systems instead of regulating the power distributors.

Yep. That's government work... and logic.

So at least for the moment, probably not Falcone-driven.

This is just government flying cover for an East coast power grid that's generally overloaded and falling apart.
 
I don't see what in that article makes you think it's busywork. Do you have some reason for believing that these efforts to coordinate emergency communications are not needed?
 
I don't see what in that article makes you think it's busywork. Do you have some reason for believing that these efforts to coordinate emergency communications are not needed?

That is correct. Those agencies have wildly different communications needs, and one system, full of compromises, will never work as well as them paying attention to what's built in their own backyards.

The "all-hazards" mandate will destroy any chance of that group ever reaching consensus. Been there, done that. When it hits the field, there are technical aspects that only affect subsets of those agencies that make a unified system either unfeasible or outrageously expensive.

Also think about coverage of such a system and plan. Do you cover big cities first? Do small towns in the middle of nowhere get ignored? Etc.

That question and lots of others are all things that smaller system planners and engineers can and do work through, every day... Those items looked at inside a national project would be dropped as "not high enough priority".

I'm quite literally right in the middle of a year or more long planning cycle for one dinky (compared to those guys) agency and already see where the compromises have to be made to make it "standard".

That big group is a farce that will never be able to produce anything but papers. Papers that will largely be ignored by local folks who "know the lay of the land" so to speak.

Even my "big" group needs to try desperately to stay out of the way of locals who've figured out a better way than we can possibly imagine. Our recommendations will need to be bendy and squishy for some things and inflexible on others. But they're still just recommendations with a few hard rules tossed in.

Example: One lone large city but in mountainous terrain agency here in Colorado, stayed on VHF analog longer than any other their size -- because their system engineer knew he would need ten years to acquire enough extra sites to cover the exact same geographical area, at very high cost to the taxpayer.

He also knew he'd be mandated to move to 700-800 MHz eventually, but a big delay gave time for all that extra infrastructure to be built and paid for. That's a very simple one. If he'd have just blindly followed the mandates passed down from NTIA, he'd have put many Public Safety workers lives in danger because his coverage area would have dropped significantly.

There are much harder problems out there than that obvious one, in anything called a "national communications plan". What's the intended coverage area of this giant group's systems? A big strategic plan is nice, for throwing underneath a log to set it on fire when you're cold and the infrastructure is out. Real strategy happens where the need is.

Plus, let's not forget that it's been tried before. By the time those systems were deployed, they were hopelessly out of date and not able to be upgraded without starting over on a new design. Technology is moving way faster than that group can. It's too big and will be bogged down by massive bureaucracy.

So yeah... Count me in the camp that says it's a waste of money and time...

Stuff like the NIFOG is where Feds can be useful. DHS did a good job on that. When they start talking about specifics, they're reaching too far down into the local knowledge pool's forte' and ignoring it. That never works out well.
 
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