[opendtv] News: Hot Spectrum Draws Cash, and Ideals
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2007 08:52:51 -0400
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/26/technology/26spectrum.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
Hot Spectrum Draws Cash, and Ideals
By JOHN MARKOFF
Published: March 26, 2007
SAN FRANCISCO, March 25 - It is referred to as the last beachfront
property in the wireless world - a prized swath of spectrum that is
about to be sold at federal auction. And it has touched off an
intense lobbying effort pitting cellular companies against a variety
of new players interested in the potential of a next-generation
mobile Internet.
The Federal Communications Commission will set the rules for the
auction, possibly as soon as next month. Depending on that ruling,
the spectrum could be used for voice services for cellular carriers,
new frequencies for emergency responders, or a commercial high-speed
broadband multimedia network.
Among those trying to influence the outcome are three of the nation's
four largest cellular providers, rural and regional wireless
carriers, cable and satellite television companies and a range of
technology companies - including Google and Yahoo.
Along with other wireless technology proposals, the auction could
reshape the debate over who controls access to the networks that
deliver digital content to consumers. Opening the door to more
network competition nationally could have a tremendous economic
impact.
"This offers the potential for a real game changer in broadband
spectrum," said John M. R. Kneuer, assistant secretary for
communications and information at the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration, an arm of the Commerce Department. "It
can both generate new innovation and lower prices."
The airwaves in question are in the 700-megahertz band, a segment
used until now for UHF television but freed up by the move to digital
broadcasting. Unless Congress reverses itself, those frequencies are
scheduled to be reclaimed by the government and reallocated for
public safety and commercial broadband networks on Feb. 19, 2009.
Mr. Kneuer points out that because the new band is at a lower
frequency than today's cellular and digital wireless services, it has
a far greater range as well as the ability to penetrate the walls of
homes and office buildings more effectively.
That could enable a new entrant to build out a broadband service
dedicated to mobile devices - a sector considered to have greater
growth potential than conventional voice services. This could be done
quickly and relatively inexpensively with just a few transmission
towers and then filled in with additional capacity as new customers
join the network.
"This is the realization of a truly national wireless Internet," said
Reed E. Hundt, a former F.C.C. chairman.
Last month Mr. Hundt launched a Washington-based organization called
Frontline Wireless and filed a proposal with the F.C.C. to create an
"open access" network intended to support both public safety services
and the creation of a system to offer wholesale broadband network
service.
Unlike the current practice of American cellular companies, which
lock customers' handsets to a particular carrier, Mr. Hundt's network
envisions a system that would let a consumer connect a device like an
Apple iPhone or a Palm hand-held device upon purchasing the device at
a store like Best Buy.
Mr. Hundt said Frontline had begun building an investor group to take
part in the auction, which could begin as early as this summer.
Significantly, the company's first identified investor is K. Ram
Shriram, an early Google investor and current board member, and
managing partner of Sherpalo Ventures.
Earlier this month Google also helped create a lobbying group called
Alliance for 4-G America, with partners including Yahoo, EchoStar
Communications, DirecTV, Intel and Skype, in an effort to influence
the F.C.C.'s rule-making for the auction.
Several industry executives and analysts said it was unlikely that
Google or Yahoo would directly take part in bidding for the new
wireless spectrum, for fear of antagonizing communications companies
by competing directly with them. But both companies are intensely
interested in persuading the F.C.C. not to give advantages to the
wireless incumbents in the bidding process.
Google, Yahoo and other Internet companies are worried about the
ability of large cable and telephone companies to restrict certain
types of Internet traffic, or to give priority service to some
content providers over others, possibly for a fee. Companies like
AT&T and Verizon have responded that such measures might be necessary
to protect their investments in broadband networks.
Industry executives have said that Verizon Wireless or other cellular
companies might be willing to spend billions of dollars for the
spectrum simply to block competitors, or possibly for voice
applications intended to help the national cellular companies compete
more effectively against smaller regional and local cellular firms.
Several analysts cautioned that upstart bidders might be hard pressed
to compete against the incumbents, which have vast cash reserves.
"Silicon Valley bidders have deep pockets, but it would be very
outside-the-box and high-risk for them," said Kevin M. Roe, a
telecommunications analyst at Roe Equity Research in New York. "Not
only do you need the money to buy the spectrum, but you have to build
a network - and that would be a gargantuan task that would take years
with no guarantees they could catch up with the big four national
operators."
A Verizon spokesman said the company was interested in the potential
offered by the 700-megahertz frequencies but had not yet committed to
enter any auction for the spectrum. The company executive also noted
that it was still possible that legislation might emerge from
Congress that would again delay the digital television and set back
an auction date.
But because the auction could generate as much as $10 billion to $30
billion for the United States Treasury, some policy analysts said
they were concerned that the auction process might trump the broader
impact that new wireless services or technologies might have on the
economy.
"This spectrum could catalyze tremendous innovation," said Kevin
Werbach, assistant professor of legal studies at the Wharton School,
University of Pennsylvania. "However, if the auction process is
focused on raising the most amount of money for the government, it
might prove counterproductive for the larger economic interests of
the country."
That may be particularly true for a related proposal recently put
forward by a separate coalition also including Google, as well as
Microsoft, Intel, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and Royal Philips
Electronics. Earlier this month, the group gave a prototype device to
the F.C.C. that they said would be used to build a next-generation
wireless network that would have greater range and better performance
than the current generation of technology known as Wi-Fi.
The new service would fall within existing television bands, but
would use smart radio techniques to avoid interfering with local
television channels.
"We think this has the economic potential of the Wi-Fi industry or
even more," said Scott Blake Harris, a Washington lawyer who
represents the group.
The regulatory situation is clouded by competing proposals for the
use of the 700-megahertz band as well as a range of other
frequencies. For example, Morgan O'Brien, a founder of Nextel, last
year formed Cyren Call Communications, which petitioned the F.C.C.
for an alternative use for that band for public safety services.
While that proposal was rejected by the commission, Cyren Call is
still trying to win Congressional support for the idea.
Separately, last May, Silicon Valley-based M2Z Networks petitioned
the F.C.C. for spectrum to build a freely available nationwide
broadband network at the higher frequency of 2.155 gigahertz.
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