Wireless
Dutch regulators start investigation into possible use of T-Mobile customer data by statistics agency Thursday 11 March 2021 | 08:53 CET | News Dutch spectrum regulator Agentschap Telecom and the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AT) have started an investigation into the possible use of T-Mobile Netherlands data by Dutch statistics agency CBS. The two authorities started looking into the matter following revelations from the NRC Handelsblad daily, after obtaining government documents. The papers showed that CBS employees have had access the non-anonymous location data of T-Mobile NL susbcribers since 2017. Specifically, the employees would have had access to IMSI numbers, which can be traced back to telephones, through laptops at
Statistics agency and T-Mobile broke privacy laws over data: NRC
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Dutch spectrum regulator to focus this year on safety equipment, AI, 5G and infrastructure in general
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Netherlands Radio Amateurs Face Fee Increases 12/21/2020
While US radio amateurs face the possibility of a $50 application fee, some countries have been imposing license fees for some time now. Netherlands International Amateur Radio Union member-society,
VERON, reports that the Dutch regulator Agentschap Telecom (AT) is imposing higher annual amateur radio fees, including higher exam and repeater fees. The new rates go into effect in 2021. VERON said radio amateurs pay the fees to support AT’s activities and services, and that the fee for Novice and Full exams will rise from €68 ($80.66) in 2020 to €71 ($84.22) in 2021.
“An additional rate of €79 ($93.71) has been introduced for repeater stations. This became necessary to cover the costs of investigations and surveillance due to the increased illegal use of these stations,” VERON said. “The