Radio regulation
Radio regulation refers to the regulation and licensing of radio in international law, by individual governments, and by municipalities.
International regulation
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) that is responsible for issues that concern information and communication technologies. ITU Radio Regulations are the set of ITU's regulations governing electromagnetic spectrum from 9 kHz to 275 GHz.
The reasons are that the radio waves spectrum is on the one hand considered to be a limited natural resource, on the other side some radio waves are able to propagate on considerable distances and interfere with radio services abroad.
Government regulation
United States
In the United States, radio is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NITA).
References
External links
- Media related to Radio regulations at Wikimedia Commons
- National and Regional Radio Regulatory Agencies
- European Radiocommunications Office
- Federal Communications Commission (USA)
- IFT (Mexico)[1]
- Ofcom (UK)
- Traficom (Finland)[2]
- Agence Nationale des Fréquences (France)
- Bakom/Ofcom (Switzerland) OFCOM, Federal Office of Communications. "OFCOM". www.bakom.admin.ch. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
- Bundesnetzagentur (Germany)[3]
- UKE (Poland) [4]
- KKDI (Indonesia)[5]
- IRRS (India)
- Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (UAE)
- Australian Communications and Media Authority (Australia)
- v
- t
- e
- Beacon
- Broadcasting
- Cable protection system
- Cable TV
- Communications satellite
- Computer network
- Data compression
- Digital media
- Drums
- Edholm's law
- Electrical telegraph
- Fax
- Heliographs
- Hydraulic telegraph
- Information Age
- Information revolution
- Internet
- Mass media
- Mobile phone
- Optical telecommunication
- Optical telegraphy
- Pager
- Photophone
- Prepaid mobile phone
- Radio
- Radiotelephone
- Satellite communications
- Semaphore
- Semiconductor
- Smoke signals
- Telecommunications history
- Telautograph
- Telegraphy
- Teleprinter (teletype)
- Telephone
- The Telephone Cases
- Television
- Undersea telegraph line
- Videotelephony
- Whistled language
- Wireless revolution
- Nasir Ahmed
- Edwin Howard Armstrong
- Mohamed M. Atalla
- John Logie Baird
- Paul Baran
- John Bardeen
- Alexander Graham Bell
- Emile Berliner
- Tim Berners-Lee
- Francis Blake (telephone)
- Jagadish Chandra Bose
- Charles Bourseul
- Walter Houser Brattain
- Vint Cerf
- Claude Chappe
- Yogen Dalal
- Daniel Davis Jr.
- Donald Davies
- Amos Dolbear
- Thomas Edison
- Lee de Forest
- Philo Farnsworth
- Reginald Fessenden
- Elisha Gray
- Oliver Heaviside
- Robert Hooke
- Erna Schneider Hoover
- Harold Hopkins
- Gardiner Greene Hubbard
- Internet pioneers
- Bob Kahn
- Dawon Kahng
- Charles K. Kao
- Narinder Singh Kapany
- Hedy Lamarr
- Innocenzo Manzetti
- Guglielmo Marconi
- Robert Metcalfe
- Antonio Meucci
- Samuel Morse
- Jun-ichi Nishizawa
- Charles Grafton Page
- Radia Perlman
- Alexander Stepanovich Popov
- Tivadar Puskás
- Johann Philipp Reis
- Claude Shannon
- Almon Brown Strowger
- Henry Sutton
- Charles Sumner Tainter
- Nikola Tesla
- Camille Tissot
- Alfred Vail
- Thomas A. Watson
- Charles Wheatstone
- Vladimir K. Zworykin
media
and switching
- Bandwidth
- Links
- Nodes
- terminal
- Network switching
- Telephone exchange
- Africa
- Americas
- North
- South
- Antarctica
- Asia
- Europe
- Oceania
- (Global telecommunications regulation bodies)
- Telecommunication portal
- Category
- Outline
- Commons
This article related to radio is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e