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May 17, 2006

Tech Dirt has a funny post about the The Progress and Freedom Foundation, a Washington DC-based think tank. One of PFF pet causes is spectrum allocation.

Earlier this year, they came out with a report saying that unlicensed spectrum stunted innovation -- despite a variety of counter-examples of products (WiFi, cordless phones, etc.) that make use of unlicensed spectrum.

The folks at PFF are back beating this drum again, focusing on how the FCC shouldn't turn "white space" spectrum into open spectrum, but instead auction it off to the highest bidder. White space spectrum is (more or less) spectrum the TV broadcasters have been granted, but don't use, which the FCC is looking to get into the hands of those who might actually use it.

PFF supporters include big telcos, of course. But it's hard to imagine the world would be better off if cordless phones, WiFi and Bluetooth were replaced with a "licensed" operator (for a modest monthly fee). Let's not forget that broadcasters get their (licensed) spectrum free.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on May 17, 2006 at 09:58 PM