FCC ignores the lesson of Wi-Fi
Google proposal on wireless spectrum gets short shrift
'Net Insider
By
Scott Bradner
,
Network World
, 08/07/2007
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As just about everybody predicted, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission recently decided that only giant telephone companies
are smart enough to manage wireless spectrum. The FCC included a minuscule favor that it claimed might help the rest of us,
but whether it actually will is far from clear.
In making its decision, the FCC ignored the basic lesson that it should have learned from Wi-Fi, and rejected the most important
part of a forward-looking proposal from Google.
In 2005, Congress passed the Digital Television Transition and Public Safety Act, which mandated that all analog TV broadcasting be discontinued on Feb. 17, 2009, and that the freed-up spectrum be split
among public safety and other communications uses. The act requires that the FCC run an auction of the commercial part of the spectrum by Jan. 28, 2008. On July 31 the FCC announced a revised set of rules for that auction.
The FCC has decided on a public-private partnership to run the public safety part of the spectrum. The other option was a
government-run, national public safety network. I’m not sure the path the FCC wants to take will change the overall result.
Considering the unblemished history of such projects, I fully expect any useful network will be decades off — if it ever shows
up — and will produce vast windfalls for a few selected vendors at the taxpayer’s expense.
The FCC’s decision about the public safety network was quite predictable and sadly, so were its decisions about the rest of
the spectrum.
Anyone who has been paying attention at all knows that the most dynamic explosion in the uses of wireless has come in the
unlicensed, small chunks of spectrum where such technologies as Wi-Fi prosper. It would seem obvious that if the FCC’s goal
in deciding what to do with the to-be-released spectrum was — as the FCC press release states — "serving the public interest
and the American people,” at least part of the spectrum would have been added to these unlicensed bands. Communications companies,
however, do not spend billions of dollars (the FCC’s minimum bid for a part of the spectrum is $4.6 billion) to open up spectrum
for everyone to use, for free. FCC Chairman Kevin Martin noted in his statement accompanying the news release that the FCC had to produce “a fair return on this asset for the American people.” In focusing
on the auction return, the FCC ignores the proven value — far more than $4.6B — that more unlicensed spectrum would have returned
to the U.S. economy.
Comments (4)
RE: FCC ignores the lesson of Wi-FiBy Rusty on August 9, 2007, 12:01 pmWhat a misleading piece. First of all, setting aside 700 MHz as unlicensed would be worthless. There is already plenty of unlicensed frequency at 900 MHz, 2.4...
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AgreedBy nmeyer on August 9, 2007, 4:49 pm802.11 is not a cellular voice network or a cellular data network - and it cannot be compared to one. Part of 2.4 GHz's success comes from it's weakness. It propagates...
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Use of frequenciesBy Anonymous on August 9, 2007, 8:56 pmThe government is supposed to represent us, the people, not the commercial interests of business. The sale of these frequencies to the highest bidder is only valid...
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This seems like a missedBy jeff ward on August 10, 2007, 11:16 pmThis seems like a missed opportunity by the Fed to allow for some diversity in the dysfunctional American wireless provider scheme. I would love to see what Google...
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