http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/
The Type Allocation Code (TAC) is the initial eight-digit portion of the 15-digit IMEI and 16-digit IMEISV codes used to uniquely identify wireless devices. (Wikipedia)
TAC numbers can be used to identify devices connected to networks. Complete TAC databases are hard to find and cost a furtune, as maintaining them and keeping them up to date is labour intensive due to the large amount of devices being released every day.
The dataset contains information about the devices' TAC number, manufacturer, model, aliases of the model, operating system, year of release and LTE compatibility.
Some devices may have multiple TAC numbers, as they are different subversions of the same hardware. This TAC database is nowhere near complete, and some of the data provided here could be incorrect, as even manufacturers sometimes share inaccurate information about their own devices. LTE capability is the worst offender in this case, as companies often release TAC information with contradictory stats about LTE compatibility.
This is a merged and cleaned dataset based on free TAC databases found on the internet, including:
https://www.mulliner.org/tacdb/feed/
This database is useful for anyone who works with telecommunication networks and wants to identify their users.
A list of over 162K TAC values. Covers models issued not later than 2018. If TacId is shorter than 8 digits, pad with 0 on the left. Type Allocation Code, the initial eight-digit portion of the 15-digit IMEI and 16-digit IMEISV codes. The first two digits:
Code Group/indication Origin
00 Test IMEI Nations with 2-digit CCs
01 PTCRB United States
02-09 Test IMEI Nations with 3-digit CCs
10 DECT devices
30 Iridium United States (satellite phones)
33 DGPT France
35 BABT United Kingdom
44 BABT United Kingdom
45 NTA Denmark
49 BZT / BAPT Germany
50 BZT ETS Germany
51 Cetecom ICT Germany
52 Cetecom Germany
53 TUV Germany
54 Phoenix Test Lab Germany
86 TAF China
91 MSAI India
98 BABT United Kingdom
99 GHA For multi RAT 3GPP2/3GPP
Free to use on your own risk.
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http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/http://opendatacommons.org/licenses/dbcl/1.0/
The Type Allocation Code (TAC) is the initial eight-digit portion of the 15-digit IMEI and 16-digit IMEISV codes used to uniquely identify wireless devices. (Wikipedia)
TAC numbers can be used to identify devices connected to networks. Complete TAC databases are hard to find and cost a furtune, as maintaining them and keeping them up to date is labour intensive due to the large amount of devices being released every day.
The dataset contains information about the devices' TAC number, manufacturer, model, aliases of the model, operating system, year of release and LTE compatibility.
Some devices may have multiple TAC numbers, as they are different subversions of the same hardware. This TAC database is nowhere near complete, and some of the data provided here could be incorrect, as even manufacturers sometimes share inaccurate information about their own devices. LTE capability is the worst offender in this case, as companies often release TAC information with contradictory stats about LTE compatibility.
This is a merged and cleaned dataset based on free TAC databases found on the internet, including:
https://www.mulliner.org/tacdb/feed/
This database is useful for anyone who works with telecommunication networks and wants to identify their users.