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About Statutes
The statutes database contains the full text of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended. Also included is a separate, unengrossed version of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and its legislative history.
Specifically, this service includes the folllowing statutes:
- Communications Act of 1934, as amended
- Telecomminications Act of 1996 (Conference Report with text of Act)
- Senate Report on the 1996 Act
- House Report on the 1996 Act
- NTIA Organization Act
- Communications Satellite Act of 1962
- SHVIA (Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act of 1999)
- Children's Internet Protection Act
- CALEA (Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act)
- ECPA (Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986)
- Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act
- Mandatory Reimbursement for Frequency Band or Geographic Relocation of Spectrum-Dependent Systems (47 CFR Part 301)
- Criminal Provisions: Obscene Material
- Criminal Provisions: Lottery Broadcasts
- Submarine Cable Landing Licenses
- Vessel Bridge-to-Bridge Radiotelephone Act
- EO 11966 (Intelsat - International Organizations Immunity Act)
- EO 12046 (Transfer of Telecommunications Functions)
- EO 12238 (Inmarsat - International Organizations Immunity Act)
- EO 12382 (National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee)
- EO 12472 (National Security and Emergency Preparedness Telecommunications Functions)
- EO 13026 (Export Controls on Encryption Products)
- Presidential Memorandum of August 10, 1995 (Mobile Services Antennas on Federal Property)
- Administrative Procedure Act
- Administrative Dispute Resolution Act
- Negotiated Rulemaking Act of 1990
- Judicial Review Acts of 1950 and 1958
- Copyright Act (excerpts)
- Submarine Cable Landing Licenses
- Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986
- Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act of 1969
- Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act of 1986
- Amortization Deductions for Intangible Property
The database also includes other federal laws and Executive Orders governing the provision of telecommunications, such as the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA), and relevant excerpts from the Copyright Act. Finally, the database includes selected regulations of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Federal Aviation Administration.
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Browse and Select Statutes to Search
This feature allows you to browse a list of statutes and documents and their
respective sections. To select a specific document and/or section, click
browse
and select statutes to search. Then, click on a document title to see
a list of sections in that document. You may then click the section you
wish to view or search.
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Choose a Statute or Document to Search
To select one or more federal statutes or other documents to search, you may also check the box adjacent to the relevant documents and click SEARCH STATUTES.
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Word or Phrase
Use this field to search for words or phrases within the statutes database, or within the document you chose using the browse or search fields described above. You do not need to use any special punctuation or commands to search for a phrase. Simply enter the phrase the way it ordinarily appears. If a phrase contains a noise word, your search will skip over that word when searching for it. Use connector, wildcard and stemming tools to fine-tune your results.
| Examples: | |
satellite |
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competitive bidding |
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frequency or spectrum |
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application and fees |
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Using Connectors
Your search may consist of a group of words or phrases linked by connectors
such as and and or
that indicate the relationship between them.
| Examples: | |
apple and pear |
« Both words must be present |
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apple or pear |
« Either word can be present |
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apple w/5 pear |
« Apple must occur within 5 words of pear |
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apple not w/5 pear |
« Apple must not occur within 5 words of pear |
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apple and not pear |
« Only apple must be present |
If you use more than one connector, you should use parentheses to indicate precisely what you want to search for. For example, apple and pear or orange juice could mean (apple and pear) or orange, or it could mean apple and (pear or orange).
Noise words, such as if and the, are ignored in searches. » More about connectors
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Using Wildcards ( * and ?)
A search word can contain the wildcard characters * and ?. A ? in a word matches any single character, and a * matches any number of characters. The wildcard characters can be in any position in a word.
| Examples: | |
appl* |
« would match apple, application, etc. |
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*cipl* |
« would match principle, participle, etc. |
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appl? |
« would match apply and apple but not apples. |
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apple not w/5 pear |
« Apple must not occur within 5 words of pear |
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ap*ed |
« would match applied, approved, etc |
Note that use of the * wildcard character near the beginning of a word may slow search performance.
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Using Stemming
You may use the ~ character to extend or stem your search to cover grammatical variations on a word.
| Examples: | |
test~ |
« would also find testing |
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apply~ |
« would also find applying, applies, and apply |
» More search tips
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