Vega for Regulators
Spectrum enforcement backed by verifiable data — not simulation assumptions.
The Problem
- No attribution capability — FCC and ITU cannot currently identify RFI offenders and are forced to only arbitrate disputes brought to them
- No coordination mechanism — 1,000+ organizations operating independently with overlapping frequency allocations
- Growing congestion — Satellite deployments growing 24% CAGR while spectrum allocation remains nearly flat
- Limited resources — Enforcement agencies lack the tooling and bandwidth to proactively monitor spectrum compliance
Capabilities
Interference attribution
Physics-based source identification for enforcement actions. Pattern-of-life analysis attributes interference events to specific actors. Standardized reports for consistent, simplified filings.
Learn about forecasting →FCC filing support
Support customer FCC filings with attribution data that substantiates interference claims. Co-visibility analysis for license applications. Standardized documentation for spectrum coordination disputes.
See the platform →Marketplace governance
Regulator gates for eligibility verification at onboarding. Automated compliance checking during transactions. Required audit and disclosure outputs. Fair, non-discriminatory access with tamper-evident logging.
Explore the marketplace →Regulatory Tailwinds
FCC opening satellite spectrum
Single Network Future: Supplemental Coverage from Space (GN 23-65, Mar. 2024) creates new opportunities for dynamic spectrum sharing.
WRC-23 flexible use
World Radiocommunications Conference 2023 introduced new flexible ground station use rules, expanding how spectrum can be allocated and shared.
Software-defined satellites
100% software-defined satellites expected by 2040. Dynamic reconfiguration makes real-time spectrum coordination not just possible but essential.