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February 23, 2006

Two new bills aim to allow US wireless broadband operators unlicensed use of so-called "white spaces" in the analog television spectrum within months, report CNET and Ars Technica. Stations don't transmit in this spectrum, and it can be found in even the most dense urban locations. The National Association of Broadcasters has fought an FCC push on this front since 2004, concerned with interference potential. The bills:

  • The American Broadband for Communities Act, sponsored by Senator Ted Stevens (R-AK) urges the FCC to open "any unused broadcast television spectrum in the band between 72 and 698 megaHertz, inclusive, other than spectrum in the band between 608 and 614 megaHertz, inclusive."

  • The Wireless Innovation Act, sponsored by Senators George Allen (R-VA) and John Kerry (D-MA), pushes the FCC to create rules enabling unlicensed use of the spectrum between 54Mhz and 698Mhz by year's end.

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