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Congress Wants FCC To Auction TV White Spaces

GovTechGuy writes "Things don't look good for Google, Microsoft and other companies hoping to experiment with super WiFi and other technologies in unused TV channels or 'White spaces'. Both House Republicans and Senate Commerce Chairman Jay Rockefeller are prodding the FCC to sell as much spectrum as possible at next year's incentive auction, which may not leave much for those hoping to advance the next generation of WiFi technology."

7 of 127 comments (clear)

  1. keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by k6mfw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    instead of those with the big bucks owning huge lots of spectrum, FCC should regulate it like public roads and airspace to be sure everyone has a fair share and still follow the rules. It seems few corporations will get big slices so they can do whatever they want with it, and everyone else get scraps like 2.4GHz which become useless (classic example of tragedy of the commons).

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
    1. Re:keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sad thing is that is what the FCC is supposed to be doing. Limited resource for the public good, but the current meme of 'private enterprise is the solution to all problems' has twisted their mandate into enforcing who gets exclusive lucrative access to what is essentially a shared resource.

    2. Re:keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      last thing we need is a weaponized FCC "enforcing fairness."

      You do realize that we already have exactly that for the ISM band, and it's sort of been a gigantic fucking success?

    3. Re:keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sad thing is that is what the FCC is supposed to be doing. Limited resource for the public good, but the current meme of 'private enterprise is the solution to all problems' has twisted their mandate into enforcing who gets exclusive lucrative access to what is essentially a shared resource.

      frankly, i prefer private enterprise to another bloated nanny department. did you know TSA has 54,000 employees? last thing we need is a weaponized FCC "enforcing fairness."

      What's the other option? Open the airwaves to all uses and forgo all regulation? Whoever radiates the most power wins? I don't see how there can be any rational use of airwaves if there's no organization to control and allocate bandwidth.

      Would you advocate abolishing all traffic laws and law enforcement on streets too? No speed limits, no stop signs, no DUI laws, anything goes. If someone runs you over in an 18 wheeler -- well, too bad, you should have had a bigger car - might means right in this lawless public resource and who needs weaponized law enforcement when private industry can sort it out through selling people bigger and bigger cars.

    4. Re:keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      frankly, i prefer private enterprise to another bloated nanny department.

      Then let "private enterprise" manage it. Why sell it? Do you have any idea what that bit of spectrum is going to be worth in 10 years? 20 years? Neither do I, so who do you trust to put a fair price on it?

      Plus, the government has a fair bit of experience owning and managing vast bits of infrastructure over a long period of time. Certainly more than Clear Channel or Comcast or any of the big telecoms.

      We've seen the ugly side of privatization here in Chicago, where the previous mayor sold off every street parking spot in the city to a company that has both jacked up the prices more than 1000% and done a terrible job managing it. But now it's too late. We're fucked and the low price that was paid can't be given back. We've lost the next 30 years of public revenue that was used to fix streets and traffic infrastructure.

      Maybe you can tell us which company you'd like to see own the "white space" part of the spectrum that is now a public trust? Who do you think is going to to a great job with it?

      last thing we need is a weaponized FCC "enforcing fairness."

      Now you know that's bullshit. If anything, the FCC has been going in exactly the opposite direction. We've got a handful of companies owning the entire radio spectrum, and there has been practically no regulatory oversight. The federal government managed the broadcast spectrum since before WWII, and a lot of people have been able to make great use of that spectrum for a lot of great things, including a lot of commerce and communication.

      I'd rather see the white space left as an open preserve than have it become the property of a multinational that owes no allegiance to this country or its people.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    5. Re:keep it and manage it like roads and airspace by hawguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a huge difference in safety regulations and laws, trying to compare something like traffic laws to something invisible that will bring no harm to anyone (physically) is overreaching.

      So is your argument that there's no public safety use for radio, or that there's no way that RF interference could get in the way of public safety use of radio? So if I, say, decided to run my "pirate" radio station on the same frequency that the local fire department uses (because I know those guys will want to hear my station!), there's no possible problem with that? I put "pirate" in quotes, because without the FCC, of course, there is no pirate radio stations, anyone anywhere can run a radio station on any frequency.

      The FCC, FDA, FAA, ect.. ect.. do NOTHING to make sure things are safe. This is what cracks me up about people in this country they do not trust government but have some false sense of faith in federal agencies or regulations, they wont buy a drug unless it has an FDA stamp, and they do nothing to test the drugs themselves

      The FCC sets exposure limits, among other things, and they type certify most devices to ensure that they are within legal limits for power and spectral purity among other things.

      and they "trust" the results from research and testing. The FAA has been caught numerous times not testing any of the equipment used in airliners, but they stand there to witness testing by the companies, and there is nothing wrong with that (like fixing the tests).

      If you want to vastly increase funding to the FAA so they can do their own testing, you should lobby for it -- I'm sure industry would be happy to be off the hook for the costs, and also to shield them from liabilty. If the FAA screw up the test and certifies something that shouldn't be certified, then it's the FAA's problem. BUt anyway, I'm not sure why you're talking about the FAA since they don't regulate airwaves.

  2. Easy fix by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you sell it like a fixed resource, you'll get high fees for access and discouraged use... like what we have now for phone and internet service (high monthly fees, data caps and rationed "minutes", kicking out high users, &c).

    If you owned a museum which was wildly popular (say, "Mecca" as a museum) you'd hike up the ticket prices as high as you could, and would be under no incentive to improve the experience. If, on the other hand you could only charge a fixed upper price per person, then you have incentive to push more people through the museum - you'd upgrade the infrastructure to handle more people.

    Change the model. If you have a fixed resource, sell it with the restriction that you can only charge for usage.

    If the spectrum was sold with the restriction that you could only charge $.02 per gigabyte or less, then companies could only make money by encouraging higher usage. Instead of high monthly fees and discouraged use, companies would encourage innovative new applications, home servers, and high bandwidth.

    The FCC could set the price equivalent to what is now charged under the fixed-resource model, so that companies wouldn't make any less than they do now.

    But the model will change: companies would have to compete for users by improving the experience and encouraging use.

    It's a Game Theory thing.