Wireless Auction Ends With Mixed Feelings 62
Macworld is reporting that the conclusion of the wireless auction has ended with many participants having mixed feelings. While bigger companies hailed it as a success, including Google who didn't actually bid to win but was able to get open access rules introduced, many smaller companies were left feeling that they were doomed from the start. "A former mail carrier, McBride has been trying his luck at FCC auctions since 1996. He said new rules for the auction favored large companies with deep pockets. For example, the FCC shortened the amount of time that the winners would have to build their networks. "All that did was prevent small businesses from coming in. They were scared of the build-out requirements," he said."
Reminds me... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I remember the US Army contract index had this little requirement for some filing cabinets to have "three letter names in the (can't recall) font" which of course limited the contracts to just IBM... until Commodore renamed itself Commodore Business Machines (CBM) and Digital became DEC.
That's pretty much how earmarks and appropriations work.
Instead of naming a specific contractor/company, the law is written to include requirements that exclude everyone but your intended recipient. It's one of the maneuvers that makes sorting through spending bills so difficult
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Sometimes, the tortoise gets hit by a car (Score:1)
In today's world, the hare is motorized and is about 1000 time larger than the tortoise.
If you're going to bet on one of them, bet on the hare. The FCC isn't stupid, they know who is going to do productive things with the airwaves
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Which is kind of a silly remark. The hares in the U.S. (i.e. the big cellular outfits) have done far less with the spectrum they have than their counterparts in other countries. The very last people I want in charge of our rate of progress are the goddamn Telcos, whose sole motivation is to squeeze any threatening innovators out of the market, and then squeeze their existing infrastructure (and us!) for every last drop
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If you're going to bet on one of them, bet on the hare. The FCC isn't stupid, they know who is going to do productive things with the airwaves
Well if the FCC, federal government really, wants productivity then they'd allow the airwaves to be open, homesteaded, instead of licensed. Prior to the creation of the Federal Radio Commission [wikipedia.org](FRC) in 1927, which became the Federal Communications Commission [wikipedia.org](FCC) in 1934, the airwaves were homesteaded, ie if someone in a given area started broadcasting on a spec
I didn't win either (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I didn't win either (Score:5, Funny)
I didn't win either (Score:2)
by heroine (1220) Alter Relationship on Friday March 21, @10:37AM (#22821638) Homepage
I didn't win but I wanted open access. Why isn't everyone who didn't win but wanted open access a hero?
They have a different word for female heros.
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Breaking News! (Score:5, Funny)
News at 11.
Who? (Score:3, Funny)
>A former mail carrier, McBride has been trying his luck at FCC auctions since 1996.
Darl, is that you?Re: (Score:2)
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>A former mail carrier, McBride has been trying his luck at FCC auctions since 1996.
Darl, is that you?
That was my first thought too.
Falconso? (Score:3, Interesting)
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a) Roll out to a truly miniscule coverage area, probably bankrupting themselves when they're overlooked in favour of one that isn't a hare-brained startup scheme
b) garnish themselves with parsley and those little chef-hats you always see on turkeys in cartoons, and hope that one of the big carriers will buy them out for a princely sum
c) Lie in wait like a patent troll, then threaten to sue someone for trespassin
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Who would want a small company to win a part of the spectrum? By definition, they wouldn't be able to use it universally for all Americans.
Except not all of the airwaves auctioned off were nationwide. Some of those auctions were for specific locations, like NYC.
FalconRe: (Score:1)
"What's good for General Motors is good for the country."
I can think of zillions of product ideas that a small company could develop and market that require spectrum allocation. And small companies are where true innovation comes from. Innovation breeds competition and competition benefits everyone. On the other hand, what benefits big companies largely benefits on
Do you think they will simply not use it? (Score:2)
But now that these spectrum have been sold to them, might they then be inclined to simply NOT use it? After all, they are not going to be able to use it in a way they want to. And they have succeeded in preventing their worst fears from coming to light. It would be rather typical of them to sit on their hands and do nothing now that they've
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But now that these spectrum have been sold to them, might they then be inclined to simply NOT use it?
I could see a lawsuit if they didn't use the airwaves. As an example if I were a stockholder in one of these companies and it didn't try to use the license they won to create a market then I'd be tempted to sue, instead of paying billions of dollars they could have paid me a dividend. Though not always shareholder activism [wikipedia.org] can get things done.
Falcon
Mixed feelings? (Score:2)
Let's see now. I kinda like Google better since they got those open-access rules in
Yep, mixed it is.
Aha (Score:1)
Who cares? (Score:1)
Really? (Score:2)
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Why pick on us? Like everything else in the world it's fixed to serve the rich, and will always be fixed to serve the rich. At least the Founders made more of an attempt to serve the citizen than most. But that time is over, I can agree to that.
Speculation (Score:2)
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Trying to avoid the Nextwave fiasco. (Score:3, Insightful)
The construction provisions are there to make sure that the spectrum actually gets used and not held as an investment. In addition, most S/W/DBE's that get involved in government doings are a fraud: 50.5% of the company is "owned" by a woman, who just happens to be the wife of the CEO and owner of the other 49.5%. Or construction "general contractors" who hire's a "prime subcontractors" - i.e the real general contractor - to do 100% of the scope. Their price to the government? The price that the GC bid plus 1%. So on a $10,000,000 Baltimore City school job, some guy sitting in an office made $100,000, never set foot on site, and never dealt with the city or the other subcontractors.
There is a Nextwave in existence now, but if the WiMax service they are
How long do the licenses last? (Score:2)
Anyhow, I've wondered, are spectrum auctions time-limited, or for posterity? If I were the government, I'd only auction spectrum for like 10 (well, maybe 15, because forcing companies to be in a situation where they must build a network, recover the costs, and make a profit in only 10 years might be a bit too short of a time) years at a time, then recover t
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Anyhow, I've wondered, are spectrum auctions time-limited, or for posterity? If I were the government, I'd only auction spectrum for like 10 (well, maybe 15, because forcing companies to be in a situation where they must build a network, recover the costs, and make a profit in only 10 years might be a bit too short of a time) years at a time, then recover the spectrum rights after that time to either re-auction, or potentially do something else with.
It's relatively easy to fix it so a company can make a
I will tell you something (Score:1)
Suggestion of a new way of auctioning spectrum (Score:2)
I doubt my idea will ever be heard by anyone in power, or if it were, taken seriously but. . . wireless spectrum is kind of a public resource. Because, of course, bandwidth is relatively limited, there does need to be some sort of regulation of the spectrum, and generally, I think the FCC has done a pretty good job of that. But, these spectrum auctions bother me somewhat. They basically come down to an agreement between the arbiter of monopoly power (the Government/FCC) and private par
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The obvious solution is to remove profit from the equation. As
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It's really simple actually, break it down by state. Then you collect the proposals, draw up some contracts. Maybe you could even have a vote (gasp!) about which ser
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I agree that the lowest bidder cannot be trusted, which is why you have to make a value judgment. I don't see what's wrong with having some sort knowledge before hand of what service the company plans on offering and at what price. Maybe you also factor in the amount of money they're willing to pay.
The original poster's main point was that by awarding to the highest bidder, you are pretty much ensuring that the service will be as expensive as possible and all you get in return is extra money in the federa
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I think it's a clever idea. JSBiff for FCC chairman.
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Since none of the companies would have to build the cost of a $6 billion bid into their pricing, they can offer a proposal that is $6 billion cheaper. There's still ro
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The obvious solution is to remove profit from the equation. As for how, well, that's the tricky part.
I can't say "obvious" because most haven't even thought of it but I believe the best solution is to go back to homesteading the airwaves.
Falcon