
On Fri, Sep 21, 2001 at 05:28:39PM -0400, Sean Donelan wrote:
On Fri, 21 Sep 2001, Rowland, Alan D wrote:
Or you could pony up for a non-preemptable circuit. Much more expensive. Your choice. Live with it.
There are several levels of preemption. At the highest level, which to my knowledge has *not* been activated, every carrier with an FCC license (including cable landing and satellite earthstation licenses) are subject to preemption by the US Government. Its in the FCC rules and regulations, but I don't have the citation with me. Even so-called "Irrevocable Right to Use" are subject to preemption under this condition. The only limitiation is in the US Constitution, 5th Amendment, which means US Carriers still get preempted, but also get a big check from the US Treasury in compensation.
You'd think satellite capacity would be subject to some more international set of regulations than those of the FCC. Are you saying that if I buy preemptable capacity on PAS-N to uplink from New Zealand and downlink to Fiji, that the capacity is subject to preemption by the US Government under FCC rules? Or is there an assumption here that there's an (up|down)link on US soil involved? Joe