NNSquad - Network Neutrality Squad

NNSquad Home Page

NNSquad Mailing List Information

 


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

[ NNSquad ] Consumer Federation of America says public use of unlicensed spectrum removes barriers to wireless communication



----- Forwarded message from Dave Farber <dave@farber.net> -----

Date: Mon, 6 Feb 2012 12:44:23 -0500
From: Dave Farber <dave@farber.net>
Subject: [IP] Consumer Federation of America says public use of unlicensed
	spectrum removes barriers to wireless communication
Reply-To: dave@farber.net
To: ip <ip@listbox.com>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@warpspeed.com>
Date: Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 10:15 AM
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Consumer Federation of America says public use of
unlicensed spectrum removes barriers to wireless communication
To: Multiple recipients of Dewayne-Net <dewayne-net@warpspeed.com>


[Note:  This item comes from friend Tim Pozar.  DLH]

From: Tim Pozar <pozar@lns.com>
Subject: Consumer Federation of America says public use of unlicensed
spectrum removes barriers to wireless communication
Date: February 6, 2012 6:58:50 AM PST
To: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@warpspeed.com>

The critical paragraph below ...

Ironically, Cooper said, the FCC has never studied his results in detail.
“Without a proper appreciation for the vital importance of unlicensed to
the success of wireless broadband communications, some policy
makers are proposing a short-sighted spectrum policy that would strangle
the future growth of the unlicensed model, by refusing to set aside
additional
spectrum for unlicensed use,” he said. “This would be a huge mistake.”

Tim
---
<
http://blog.broadcastengineering.com/blog-opinions/2012/02/03/consumer-federation-of-america-says-public-use-of-unlicensed-spectrum-removes-barriers-to-wireless-communication/
>

Consumer Federation of America says public use of unlicensed spectrum
removes barriers to wireless communication
by Michael Grotticelli
February 3rd, 2012

During a speech at the SuperWiFi Conference in Miami, the director of
research at the Consumer Federation of America said allowing the public to
use radio spectrum with having a license removes barriers to ubiquitous
wireless communications.

“Correcting a 100-year old public policy mistake unleashed a torrent of
entrepreneurial activity, innovation and investment,” said the CFA’s Mark
Cooper. “My analysis shows that by every measure of economic
performance—device shipments, users, usage, efficiency, value and
innovation—the unlicensed model has equaled or exceeded the exclusive
licensed model in the past decade.”

Cooper, in a speech hosted by the Wireless Innovation Alliance (WIA) and
the White Space Alliance (WSA), said without access to unlicensed spectrum,
wireless broadband service would be much more costly and far less valuable.
“Consumers would buy less of it resulting in fewer jobs and less tax
revenue,” he said.

By the end of 2010, he noted, there were thousands more devices certified
for use in the unlicensed spectrum than in licensed spectrum. The number of
users of unlicensed spectrum in the United States exceeded the number of
users of exclusive licensed spectrum for broadband data purposes by 30
percent.

Cellular broadband providers offloaded over one-third of their traffic into
the unlicensed spectrum, with the expectation that that figure would grow
dramatically. Avoiding the construction of over 100,000 cell sites, they
avoided incurring annual capital and operating costs of over $25 billion.
Instead the initial hop to the Internet was provided by WiFi networks at
less than one-tenth the cost.

Counting standards, network technologies, devices and applications, Cooper
said he found substantially more innovation in the unlicensed space than
the exclusive licensed.

“The unlicensed model succeeded because it is not free but allowed
entrepreneurs to invest in products and services that people value,” he
said.

The unlicensed model succeeded, he said, because removing the spectrum
barrier to entry decentralized decision making, deconcentrated investment,
promoted an end-user focus, allowed user innovation and lowered transaction
costs.

Ironically, Cooper said, the FCC has never studied his results in detail.
“Without a proper appreciation for the vital importance of unlicensed to
the success of wireless broadband communications, some policy makers are
proposing a short-sighted spectrum policy that would strangle the future
growth of the unlicensed model, by refusing to set aside additional
spectrum for unlicensed use,” he said. “This would be a huge mistake.”

[snip]

Dewayne-Net RSS Feed: <http://www.warpspeed.com/wordpress>



-------------------------------------------

----- End forwarded message -----
_______________________________________________
nnsquad mailing list
http://lists.nnsquad.org/mailman/listinfo/nnsquad