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Wireless Networking Government United States

FCC Takes Spectrum From Auto Industry In Plan To 'Supersize' Wi-Fi (arstechnica.com) 49

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Are Technica: The Federal Communications Commission today voted to add 45MHz of spectrum to Wi-Fi in a slightly controversial decision that takes the spectrum away from a little-used automobile-safety technology. The spectrum from 5.850GHz to 5.925GHz has, for about 20 years, been set aside for Dedicated Short Range Communications (DSRC), a vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications service that's supposed to warn drivers of dangers on the road. But as FCC Chairman Ajit Pai today said, "99.9943 percent of the 274 million registered vehicles on the road in the United States still don't have DSRC on-board units." Only 15,506 vehicles have been equipped with the technology, he said.

In today's decision, the FCC split the spectrum band and reallocated part of it to Wi-Fi and part of it to a newer vehicle technology. The lower 45MHz from 5.850GHz to 5.895GHz will be allocated to Wi-Fi and other unlicensed services. "This spectrum's impact will be further amplified by the fact that it is adjacent to an existing Wi-Fi band which, when combined with the 45MHz made available today, will support cutting-edge broadband applications," the FCC said. "These high-throughput channels -- up to 160 megahertz wide -- will enable gigabit Wi-Fi connectivity for schools, hospitals, small businesses, and other consumers." "Full-power indoor unlicensed operations" are authorized immediately, while "outdoor unlicensed use" will be allowed "on a coordinated basis under certain circumstances," the FCC said. The FCC ordered DSRC services to vacate the lower 45MHz within one year.

The other 30MHz currently allocated to DSRC is being set aside for a newer vehicle-safety technology called Cellular Vehicle-to-Everything (C-V2X). "Today's action therefore begins the transition away from DSRC services -- which are incompatible with C-V2X -- to hasten the actual deployment of ITS [Intelligent Transportation Systems] services that will improve automotive safety," the FCC said. The FCC still has to finalize technical rules for outdoor unlicensed operations on the lower 45MHz and for how to transition the upper 30MHz from DSRC to C-V2X.
Freeing up 45MHz "will supersize Wi-Fi, a technology so many of us are relying on like never before," said FCC Democrat Jessica Rosenworcel. Meanwhile, FCC Democrat Geoffrey Starks called the spectrum reassignment an important step toward reducing congestion "and ensuring that we realize the full potential of our broadband connections."

In addition to improving home Wi-Fi, the extra 45MHz will benefit public Wi-Fi networks that are relied upon by many people without good Internet access at home, he said.
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FCC Takes Spectrum From Auto Industry In Plan To 'Supersize' Wi-Fi

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  • Wifi 6e+? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by crow ( 16139 ) on Wednesday November 18, 2020 @06:46PM (#60740512) Homepage Journal

    So they came out with WiFi 6, quickly followed by Wifi 6e that uses the newly allocated 6GHz frequency. Now what will they call it with the use of this new range? Will it be WiFi 6e+? The new naming using WiFi 6 instead of 802.11ax was supposed to simplify things, but of course immediately the simple becomes complex. At least it's nothing like the the mess of USB branding.

    In any case, I'm not clear on how much better than 6e this will be, but there's a new bar to hit to have the latest and greatest. Hopefully this new frequency will be within range of existing hardware, so it should just be a firmware upgrade as opposed to requiring new hardware.

    • by zshXx ( 7123425 )
      Keep Dreaming, the netgear's of this world will force you to buy a new router instead of enabling this via firmware upgrade.
      • Re:Wifi 6e+? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday November 18, 2020 @06:55PM (#60740566)

        You don't need to upgrade to benefit.

        If your neighbor upgrades, you benefit because there is less congestion on the original bands.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Could be interesting for other countries too. For a long time 2.4GHz band 13 was supposed to be Japan only but you could enable it on most devices with a bit of hacking, and it was nice and clear with a very low probability of anything bad happening as a result of using it.

          Even if other countries don't free up the same spectrum, given the low range of 6GHz signals it is probably safe to use in your home and nobody will notice.

          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            Could be interesting for other countries too. For a long time 2.4GHz band 13 was supposed to be Japan only but you could enable it on most devices with a bit of hacking, and it was nice and clear with a very low probability of anything bad happening as a result of using it.

            Even if other countries don't free up the same spectrum, given the low range of 6GHz signals it is probably safe to use in your home and nobody will notice.

            The use of channel 13 is what led to the FCC to force manufacturers to restrict ac

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Not sure about the firmware upgrades. If it requires any re-certification they might not bother for older products and instead release new ones.

  • Hurry up. The net is slow here.

  • Since Pai is soon to be looking for a job I think any companies depending on his lame duck actions should probably wait to see who Biden appoints and what their view is. We happen to be entering the era of self driving cars, so spectrum will be needed soon and auto manufacturers are powerful lobbyists. My guess is that Pai is packing his parachute with this one knowing full well it is going to be overturned.
    • Since Pai is soon to be looking for a job ...

      Pai's term began in 2017 and lasts for 5 years. So he has the job until 2022.

      • by RickyRay ( 73033 ) *

        Nope. In January he's still on the committee, but is no longer the head, and three of the five (including the new head) will be Democrats. Pai's relevance to any decisions is mostly done.

    • by spitzak ( 4019 )

      If you paid the slightest attention you would know that this was approved by many members of the board, not just Pal. Including Democrats.

    • It seems like a reasonable plan to me though.

      Allocating more bandwidth to wifi seems reasonable, and the auto industry hasn't really used it. I suspect the new protocol has more data rate more reliably with less of the spectrum than the unused one it's replacing too.
      • the auto industry hasn't really used it.

        My car connects to the Internet using standard WiFi.

        So shutting down DSCR and transferring the spectrum to WiFi should be good for cars.

        • I'm surprised it uses wifi and not cellular for internet access.
          • I'm surprised it uses wifi and not cellular for internet access.

            It uses both. WiFi if available. Cellular if not.

            OTA software updates require WiFi. They only happen when the car is in the garage and connected to my home WiFi.

        • This bit of spectrum wasn't used for connection to the Internet. It was for inter-vehicle communication for warning about road conditions ahead. And it wasn't used, like, at all. 15,000 cars out of the millions on US roads have hardware for this, which means there are probably zero non-car radios out there to use for seeding the messages.

          It's a defunct technology that was never adopted, and it's time to give that spectrum back.

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      I doubt a 20 year old technology that has only been implemented on 15k vehicles total would be very useful for self-driving cars. Vehicles can probably do a lot more with the new standard on 30MHz than they could with that old standard in 75Mhz (75Mhz based techs 20 years ago might have given a couple hundred mbit/s, a 30mhz tech today achieves about 1.5 gbit/s)

  • by djgl ( 6202552 )

    Maybe, just maybe, there is so little use of this spectrum for DSRC because automated driving has not yet taken off?

    I don't know what exactly is communicated over DSRC, but I imagine it to be something like "Hi, I'm this 40t truck in your vicinity and I stepped on the brake hard 2ms ago" or "Hey, slow down, there is the tail of a traffic jam around the next corner". Stuff like that significantly improves safety by reducing the reliance on image recognition.

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Assuming the facts in the summary are straightforwardly presented, DSRC doesn't sound like it would be a relevant technology.

      It was carved out 20 years ago and only seen 15k installations. Looks like it had a data rate of 27 Mb/s. It's an old technology that was speculatively carved out around the turn of the century and then pretty well abandoned.

      Even without being sunset, it appears the C-V2X would be preferred anyway. Couldn't find throughput numbers, but other contemporary technology could deliver ove

    • by Myself ( 57572 )

      DSRC and C-V2X are both in their infancy. Allocations were made in the 90s when ITS infrastructure was just taking off, but autonomous vehicles took longer than expected. Note that Pai parrots the talking point about DSRC's low deployment, but never cites numbers about how C-V2X is even less deployed. It's bald-faced, but journalists don't seem to be calling it out.

      To put it very simply: DSRC is a peer-to-peer technology, and inherently allows more individual privacy, since you're only communicating with ve

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