Registration interfaces were created by the Bell System under a
Federal Communications Commission order for the standard
interconnection between telephone company equipment and
customer premises equipment. These interfaces used newly standardized jacks and plugs, primarily based on miniature
modular connectors. The wired communications provider (telephone company) is responsible for delivery of services to a minimum (or main) point of entry (
MPOE). The MPOE is a utility box, usually containing surge protective circuitry, which connects the wiring on the customer's property to the communication provider's network. Customers are responsible for all jacks, wiring, and equipment on their side of the MPOE. The intent was to establish a universal standard for wiring and interfaces, and to separate ownership of in-home (or in-office) telephone wiring from the wiring owned by the service provider. In the
Bell System, following the
Communications Act of 1934, the telephone companies owned all telecommunications equipment and they did not allow
interconnection of third-party equipment. Telephones were generally hardwired, but may have been installed with Bell System connectors to permit portability. The legal case
Hush-A-Phone v. United States (1956) and the
Federal Communications Commission's (FCC)
Carterfone (1968) decision brought changes to this policy, and required the Bell System to allow some interconnection, culminating in the development of registered interfaces using new types of miniature connectors. Registered jacks replaced the use of protective couplers provided exclusively by the telephone company. The new modular connectors were much smaller and cheaper to produce than the earlier, bulkier connectors that were used in the Bell System since the 1930s. The Bell System issued specifications for the modular connectors and their wiring as
Universal Service Order Codes (USOC), which were the only standards at the time. Large customers of telephone services commonly use the USOC to specify the interconnection type and, when necessary, pin assignments, when placing service orders with a network provider. When the U.S. telephone industry was reformed to foster competition in the 1980s, the connection specifications became federal law, ordered by the
FCC and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),
Title 47 CFR Part 68, Subpart F, superseded by T1.TR5-1999. For this delegation, the FCC removed Subpart F from the CFR and added Subpart G. The ACTA derives its recommendations for terminal attachments from the standards published by the engineering committees of the
Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA). ACTA and TIA jointly published the standard TIA/EIA-IS-968, replacing the CFR information. TIA-968-A, the current version of that standard, by reference. With the publication of TIA-968-B, the connector descriptions have been moved to TIA-1096-A. A registered jack name, such as RJ11, still identifies both the physical connectors and the wiring (pinout) for each application. ==Types==