Interesting People mailing list archives

The sharks are circling


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Thu, 10 Apr 2008 03:45:30 -0700


________________________________________
From: Randall Webmail [rvh40 () insightbb com]
Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2008 6:35 AM
To: dewayne () warpspeed com; David Farber
Subject: The sharks are circling

          Wireless companies ramp up for ‘white spaces’ battle

           By Kevin Bogardus

    Posted: 04/09/08 06:02 PM [ET]

    Major wireless providers have joined the fight against an effort by high-tech
companies to convince policy makers to allow unlicensed electronic
devices to operate on unused parts of the television spectrum.

Sprint Nextel , T-Mobile  and CTIA-The Wireless Association
are pressing the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to require
that electronic devices get a license to operate on so-called “white
spaces.”

That way, the FCC would be better able to police the
spectrum and ensure the devices do not interfere with television
signals, they argue in filings with the FCC. But the push could hinder
high-tech companies that are developing devices to operate on white
spaces as a new pipeline for broadband Internet access.


“The way we look at it is there is a model that works, and continues to work,” said Paul Garnett, CTIA’s assistant vice 
president for regulatory affairs. “There is some potential there to use [white spaces] in a licensed way to allow 
incumbents or new entrants to provide new broadband access.”

CTIA’s proposal would also leave a small portion of white spaces open for the study of unlicensed devices.

Tech companies argue that devices now being tested by the FCC will enable Internet signals to use white spaces without 
breaching broadcast or other signals like wireless microphones. But requiring licensing could prove to be a regulatory 
morass, tech lobbyists argue.

“Auctioning and licensing this part of the spectrum is one of the messier ideas out there,” said Brian Peters, a 
spokesman for the Wireless Innovation Alliance (WIA). “It would result in significant regulatory and legal challenges, 
with a likely chance of litigation.”

The WIA consists of several tech companies that want to use white spaces to expand Internet use.

Peters described white spaces as “Swiss cheese,” because they occur at various points on the spectrum.

Up to this point, the white spaces battle has largely been between tech companies and broadcasters. The National 
Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has mounted a concerted lobbying campaign against tech’s plans, fearing that the 
Internet transmissions would damage picture quality on those sets that haven’t switched to digital TV.

White spaces were initially left unused on the analog spectrum to ensure that one channel’s signals would not interfere 
with another’s.

But the switch from analog to digital TV is opening the spectrum to new uses. Wireless providers and tech companies 
have quarreled before over another segment of the spectrum. The two sides clashed over a separate auction for the right 
to use the 700 megahertz (MHz) band of the analog spectrum. Verizon and AT&T outbid Google for large parts of the 
spectrum. Verizon spent $9.6 billion and AT&T $6.6 billion to use parts of the band. Google bid $4.6 billion.

Licensing white spaces could result in another auction that could also generate substantial revenue for the government, 
lobbyists said.

“There is an obvious demand for licensed spectrum,” said Garnett. Many companies would be interested in bidding on it 
as well.

“A lot of small wireless companies were left out [of the 700 MHz auction]. White spaces is a solution for them,” said 
Blair Levin, a Wall Street analyst at Stifel Nicolaus.

Levin said wireless companies waited to marshal their forces for the white spaces fight until after the 700 MHz auction 
was completed.

“No use of political capital on a policy before its time. Now is the time,” said Levin.

White space devices could be competitive with cell phones by providing mobile Internet access. It is a huge market: 
more than 255 million wireless users as of December 2007, according to a recent CTIA survey.

“Say someone has a 2 percent chance of being a big competitor. You will not be too upset about that, but you don’t want 
it either,” said Levin.

The FCC is still testing portable white space devices submitted by companies like Motorola and Philips. In gathering 
information on the devices, the FCC wants to make sure they do not interfere with other signals, according to Robert 
Kenny, a spokesman for the commission.

The FCC expects to announce a schedule for field-testing in the near future once the lab tests are completed.

Tech companies have been having problems of late with their white space devices. Microsoft withdrew its prototype after 
the device performed poorly in three tests.

<http://thehill.com/the-executive/wireless-companies-ramp-up-for-white-spaces-battle-2008-04-09.html>

http://tinyurl.com/3vggka

-------------------------------------------
Archives: http://www.listbox.com/member/archive/247/=now
RSS Feed: http://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/247/
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com


Current thread: