Virtual event to take place December 7-11, 2020; Will feature a series of special webinars on issues vital to the ongoing development and deployment of the STIR/SHAKEN Call Authentication Framework and the communication industry’s ongoing efforts to combat illegal Robocalls and Caller ID Spoofing
The SIP Forum has announced that due to the continuing Coronavirus Pandemic, it will produce a virtual version of its acclaimed SIPNOC conference – SIPNOC 2020 – which will feature a comprehensive webinar series focusing on the challenges and opportunities related to the deployment of the STIR/SHAKEN Call Authentication Framework.
SIPNOC 2020 will take place during a period of five days, from December 7th through December 11th, 2020, and will build on the success of the SIP Forum’s June 2020 STIR/SHAKEN VIRTUAL SUMMIT and 2019’s SIPNOC 2019 live, in-person conference, which both earned high praise from attendees for their educational, technical and regulatory content that focused on the real-world challenges service providers face when deploying STIR/SHAKEN.
The SIP Forum is also proud to announce that a number of leading companies are supporting SIPNOC 2020 through their generous support as sponsors, including Diamond Sponsors iconectiv and Neustar; Platinum Sponsor Ribbon Communications; and Gold Sponsors AT&T, ECG, Metaswitch, NetNumber, SecureLogix, and TransNexus.
Developed jointly by the SIP Forum and ATIS (the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions) to efficiently implement the Internet Engineering Task Force’s (IETF) STIR (for Secure Telephony Identity Revisited) standard, SHAKEN (for Signature-based Handling of Asserted information using toKENs) defines a mechanism to verify the calling number and specifies how it will be transported across communications networks.
Together, STIR/SHAKEN offers a practical mechanism to provide verified information about the calling party as well as the origin of the call — what is known as “attestation” — for the first time in the network. Giving service providers the tools needed to sign and verify calling numbers makes it possible for businesses and consumers to know, before answering, that the calls they receive are from legitimate parties.
President Trump signed into law the Pallone-Thune Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence Act, or the “TRACED Act” (S.151) on December 30, 2019.
The TRACED Act authorizes the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to issue additional civil penalties on individuals who intentionally violate restrictions on the use of automated telephone equipment (i.e., illegal robocalls and spoofing); and directs the FCC to require voice service providers to offer call authentication technologies (i.e., STIR/SHAKEN) to consumers.
On March 31, 2020, the United States Federal Communications Commission adopted new rules requiring implementation of caller ID authentication using “STIR/SHAKEN.” These rules will further the FCC’s efforts to protect consumers against malicious caller ID “spoofing,” which is often used during robocall scam campaigns to trick consumers into answering their phones.
Most recently, with the recent release by the FCC on October 1, 2020 of the Second Report and Order in the Matter of the Call Authentication Trust Anchor (WC Docket No. 17-97), there are a host of new issues for the industry at large to consider.
“With the latest release by the FCC of Docket 17-97, there is a renewed and continuing need for the telecommunications industry to gather and study the ramifications of this new report and order, and to respond with well-considered action. This, and the fact that the TRACED Act and associated rules adopted by the FCC officially mandate the deployment of STIR/SHAKEN across the telecommunications landscape, there is a pressing need to provide those with a vested interest in the deployment of STIR/SHAKEN the most timely and essential information they need to tackle the technological, logistical, business and regulatory and enforcement challenges involved in that endeavor,” said Marc Robins, SIPNOC 2020 Program Chair, and SIP Forum President and Managing Director.
SIPNOC 2020 will feature a series of webinars that focus on issues critical to the reliable and successful deployment and operation of STIR/SHAKEN in today’s IP-based network environments, as well as associated topics including discussion of the ramifications of governmental regulatory, legislative and enforcement actions and critical security issues.
SIPNOC 2020 will feature content such as:
Out-Of-Band STIR solutions
The Ramifications of the Second Report and Order (WC 17-97) in the Matter of the Call Authentication Trust Anchor
Review of other proposed DOJ/FCC/FTC Enforcement Actions and Their Ramifications
The Evolving Model for Attestation
Track and Trace Issues and Considerations
Important Certificate Management Considerations and Procedures
Delegated Certificates and Call Identity Challenges: What Data is Shared Between Carriers and Enterprises?
Call Diversion and Priority Call Header Challenges and Solutions
The State of International Adoption of STIR/SHAKEN
RCD (Rich Call Data) and other Call Validation Display Framework Solutions
STIR/SHAKEN Deployment Best-Practices
Considerations for Management, Performance and Troubleshooting
Trusted Customer Solutions: Implementing STIR/SHAKEN with Enterprise Customers
IP Interconnection, Inter-Carrier Compensation and Access Reform Challenges
SIPNOC 2020 will offer actionable information for all industry stakeholders in the Robocall and Caller ID Spoofing elimination/mitigation ecosystem, including telecommunications providers, major backbone operators, interconnect and wholesale solution providers, ISPs, cable operators, and wireless network operators, as well as governmental regulators and agencies, regulatory attorneys with state and federal jurisdictions, equipment manufacturers and mobile product developers, device integration specialists, large enterprise service assurance operations and IT/communications staff, government agencies, customer care/contact centers, and application providers and data analytics firms.