Review of Submarine Cable Landing License Rules and Procedures to Assess Evolving National Security, Law Enforcement, Foreign Policy, and Trade Policy Risks
The FCC is reviewing submarine cable landing license rules to address national security, law enforcement, foreign policy, and trade policy risks. This does not directly affect private security licensing.
Aforeworn detected this change in the Private Security Licensing space on July 7, 2026 and published this briefing so affected operators are forewarned rather than caught off guard. It is rated Low urgency. Private security firms (guard-service, PPOs, in-house, armored transport) should confirm how it applies to their specific situation before acting. There is a time constraint attached: N/A. Acting after that point can mean penalties, a lapsed licence, or lost eligibility — exactly the kind of surprise Aforeworn exists to prevent. Aforeworn monitors Private Security Licensing continuously and turns every detected change into a plain-English briefing like this one, so you always know first. Forewarned is forearmed. Regulated niches like Private Security Licensing move faster than most operators can track by hand, which is why Aforeworn watches the official sources for you and flags every material change the moment it appears.
What changed
No change to private security regulations; this is a telecom rule review.
Who it affects
Private security firms (guard-service, PPOs, in-house, armored transport)
What you must do
No action required.
Deadline
N/A
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