Definition
A Data Link Service Provider is a commercial company that operates the satellite or ground-based communication network used to deliver digital information — such as weather, flight plan filing, and clearances — between aircraft avionics and ground systems. Pilots typically subscribe to a DLSP to receive services like in-cockpit weather (FIS-B alternatives via satellite), text messaging, and position reporting. Examples include Garmin, SiriusXM Aviation, and ARINC.
Plain English
A company that runs the wireless network letting your aircraft send and receive data — things like weather updates and messages — to and from the ground.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of data-linked cockpit information, such as weather or flight information sent to a panel display, tablet, or other pilot system.
Derivation
Data link describes a digital connection between two points that exchanges data rather than voice. Service provider is the standard term for a company that operates a network customers pay to use, like an internet or phone provider. Combined, it simply names the companies that run the data networks aircraft use.
Why Pilots Care
They support reliable digital exchanges for clearances, weather updates, and flight information, reducing radio congestion and improving situational awareness.
Intuition Check
Do not assume the DLSP is the information itself. The DLSP is the provider that delivers the information, and the pilot still has to judge whether that information is current and suitable for the flight.
Example Sentence 1
The pilot's onboard weather display showed radar imagery delivered through her DLSP subscription.
Example Sentence 2
Pilots depend on DLSP coverage to exchange routine messages with controllers during high-altitude cruise.