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Cartoon Guide to Federal Spectrum Policy

js7a writes "The New America Foundation has published The Cartoon Guide to Federal Spectrum Policy (pdf). An excellent 14 page guide that everyone should print a few copies of to have handy in the backpack or car. Learn what would happen if the government regulated speech the same way they regulate airwaves. Learn the truth about microbroadcasting, smart radio, and so-called intererence (all previously covered on Slashdot.) Learn more creative ways to tell Congress to stop giving away public resources to private corporations. Make the most of your rights to use unlicensed wireless, before it's too late."

6 of 237 comments (clear)

  1. Cartoon rights guides == great by jb.hl.com · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This sort of thing is the best way to get something through to the public. What's more likely to get people interested: pages of plain text or a comic strip?

    Norml have some excellent comics which do exactly the same thing: put across an issue in an interesting way.

    --
    By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
  2. How about Italy? by eric76 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I read an article a few years ago that said that Italy allows anyone to open a radio or tv station that wishes to do so.

    According to the article the results were pretty interesting. An enormous choice of things to listen to, some with really limited interest to most of us. One example the article gave was a 24 hour Hare Krishna station broadcasting nothing but chanting 24 hours a day.

    I've long wished that the same rights were available in the U.S. If the law was changed tomorrow, I'd be in the market tomorrow for the equipment to set up my own radio station. If it could reach 20 miles, I'd be happy.

  3. Re:license? no! own! by LPetrazickis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't reform the FCC. Auction off frequencies, with permanent ownership rights, to the public!

    Oh, for fuck's sake, do we have to apply the property meme to every fucking thing humanity discovers?

    Shiny rock? Mine! Sexy mate? Mine! Territory? Mine! Land between fences? Mine! Prisoners of War? Mine! Novel? Mine! Audio recording? Mine! Right to build a telephone? Mine and mine alone!

    OBEY, proles. I own all.

    Et cetera.

    "The line must be drawn here!"
    - Captain Jean-Luc Picard

    Abolishment of private property might be a bit extreme, but can we please stop inventing new forms of it? It's not benefitting anyone.

    None of the great innovations, discoveries, or achievements in human history were made for material gain.

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  4. Re:Ok well by nick0909 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually it is quite rare for people to go to jail for intentionall jamming. There have been two cases this year that I recall, and the involved multiple (30+) cases of jamming local law enforcement frequencies before they took action. One guy in LA is notorious for doing it, has even been to jail for it once, and continues.

    In my jurisdictional area we have a guy that jams amateur frequencies any time they are being used to assist in emergencies. The amateurs working these situations are Disaster Service Workers under CA Office of Emergency Services and are either ARES or RACES affiliated, and he jams the nets. Our local law enforcement wanted to act, but it is a federal issue, so we gave it to Riley Hollingsworth at the FCC. After months of proof being sent in for review, swore statements by multiple officers that witnessed the crime, Riley sent a letter and told him to stop. Nothing ever came of it, it was a waste of time for everyone.

    I wish people would actually go to jail for these things, but they normally don't. So go ahead, jam anyone you want, apparently the FCC only cares about getting money for the bands they can and never spending it on enforcement.

    Nick
    Butte County Sheriff Communications
    [not presumed to be a statement of my employing agency]

  5. Who is the "New America Foundation"? by CaptainCheese · · Score: 4, Interesting

    from their site "The Foundation invests in outstanding individuals and policy ideas that transcend the conventional political spectrum."
    and they're funded by "public intellectuals, civic leaders, and business executives." Although if these "intellectuals, civic leaders, and business executives." are so public, why don't they want to publicly put their names to this organisation.

    It seems to me that they're a professional political lobbyists - guns for hire, if you will - but who pays their wages? I don't like the idea of raising the profile of an organisation without knowing exactly who they are... ...after all, for all we know, next month they'll get hired by neo-nazis and start promoting death camps and slavery!

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    -- .sigs are a waste of data...turn them off...
  6. Re:Ok well by Micro$will · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Never underestimate the power of those little Radio Shack walkie talkies. Place one of them close enough to the recieving point and all of the victim's "CQs" will be for nothing. You can have all the power in the world to transmit, but if there's a 400mw transmitter deadkeyed on your home channel half a block away, you aren't recieving anything. It takes only a few minutes to change the TX crystal, and with a few D cell batteries the damn thing will be on for a week or more.

    Then there was the guy that just went and cut about 18" off the other guy's RG-8. That stuff is a pain to splice.