FCC Postpones Spectrum Auction Until 2016 31
An anonymous reader writes: 2014 was supposed to be the year broadcasters would be allowed to sell off their unused spectrum to mobile carriers. That got pushed back to 2015 in December, and now the Federal Communications Commission has bumped it to 2016 in the face of a lawsuit from the National Association of Broadcasters. The FCC says the legal briefs aren't even due until January 2015, and it will take them until the middle of the year to review the documents and respond in court. The delay is just fine with the NAB, but probably bad news for anyone hoping that spectrum would help to improve mobile communications in the U.S. any time soon.
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Who is this Bennett you speak of?
Why is it a 'sale' ? (Score:2)
As spectrum so important, why are they sold at all? Shouldn't they be leased out, so it can be revoked if it's not being used for a given number of years, to put it in the hands of companies that aren't just going to sit on them to keep it out of the hands of their competitors, or other actions not in the public interest?
And as they mention IRS tax issues (I assume for capital gains), why aren't they at least subject to property taxes? (although, that probably just gives companies more incentive to set up
Re:Why is it a 'sale' ? (Score:4)
I don't get your point. A spectrum auction is where the FCC sells licenses to use bands of spectrum. I don't know where you got the false notion that these companies owned the spectrum itself.
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I don't get your point. A spectrum auction is where the FCC sells licenses to use bands of spectrum. I don't know where you got the false notion that these companies owned the spectrum itself.
From the opening sentence: "2014 was supposed to be the year broadcasters would be allowed to sell off their unused spectrum to mobile carriers." The use of "their" suggests that "broadcasters" possess and will be allowed to sell off unused spectrum.
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Yes, they possess the license to exclusively use the spectrum. This sale was about broadcasters selling rights to use the unused parts of their licensed spectrum.
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As the OP asked, why shouldn't licensees return unused spectrum to the actual owners
If the choice was to keep the license for the spectrum and pretend to need it, or magnanimously give up the license for no benefit, they would do the first not the second.
I dont understand why you willingly and intentionally refuse to understand this.
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Re:Why is it a 'sale' ? (Score:4, Interesting)
The licenses are transferable, and give the right to use the spectrum. How is that different than the spectrum itself? It's a fiction so of course it's a license and not the 'physical' aether.
The problem for me is, instead of a lease going back to the state, which then leases the spectrum to someone else... some firm profits handsomely from selling a license for a fictional monopoly on a common good. That's kinda fucked.
I absolutely understand the need for licensing, else there would be mayhem. But it could be done in a better way. I guess it's the same idea as $1M taxi medallions. Those should be leased and non-transferable too.
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The point of the auction is that private transactions of spectrum licenses are just infeasible. Otherwise people would just trade and that's it. The government has nothing to do with it except facilitating transfer and giving the spectrum to who really makes the best use of it.
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Spectrum auction (Score:2)
That's okay, plenty more on eBay.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/48K-... [ebay.co.uk]
Bad news for OTA folks (Score:4, Insightful)
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Which side of your agreement are wired providers on?
Do you intend to subsidize the old folks in getting a wireless plan and converter to replace the DTV converter we just subsidized?
Come back when you have thought this through.
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The problem is that both OTA TV and mobile communications are good - but not great - uses of limited wireless spectrum, so you have to weigh the pros and cons of each rather than having one or another that's an obvious better use.
OTA is a one-to-many transmission, making efficient use of th
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I wonder if that means we will lose OTA TV eventually. :( OTA rocks!
It doesn't really matter. (Score:1)
AT&T and Verizon would have just bought it all up and squatted on it so that nobody else would be able to use it and drain business away from their duopoly.
This is also a way to reduce broadcast diversity (Score:2)
The smaller Low power stations will likely lose their license or be forced to move to another frequency with no financial compensation. As far as the Low Power stations are concerned this auction is a very bad idea.
Its the LP stations that provide minority content.
The LP I engineer for provides Spanish and Haitian content to our communities, many LP stations around the country provide similar content.
As for cell phone users this is not that much spectrum and will make little difference.
This is just a big l