Flexible Spectrum Markets Would Improve The Wireless Marketplace
from the spectrum-for-sale dept
Mathew Ingram notes that Google is continuing its campaign to use television "white spaces" for Internet connectivity, a promising concept that hasn't panned out so far. I think the most interesting tidbit in Ingram's post comes from an interview with Richard Wiley, the guy who chaired the committee that developed what became the current digital television standard. Ingram says Wiley told him that one of the broadcasters' criteria for the new standard is that it use as much spectrum as possible. That sounds backwards, but it made sense for the broadcasters, because they knew they'd have to give back any spectrum they didn't use. And it's consistent with past experience; we've written before about the broadcasters' spectrum-hoarding tendencies.
Perverse incentives like this are an inevitable consequence of the FCC's Soviet-style process for assigning spectrum usage. As long as the uses for spectrum are decided by fiat by the FCC, current licensees are going to play these kinds of games to ensure they get the biggest slice they can, even if they waste spectrum in the process. A better way to handle the transition (and still a good idea today, for that matter) would have been to give the broadcasters a fixed spectrum allocation and then allowed them broad flexibility on how to use it—including the right to lease or sell unused portions to third parties. That way, if they found a way to transmit television signals with less spectrum, they would have been able to lease out the unusued portions to third parties who could put it to more productive use.
In addition to promoting more efficient spectrum use in the short run, putting more spectrum on the market (as they're doing in the UK) would have positive effects on the overall telecom market. By driving down the price of spectrum it would make it easier for new firms to get into the wireless market. So far, the relatively small number of licenses that have been put on the market has allowed incumbents to snapped them up and keep out new entrants. Putting more spectrum on the market would make this strategy a lot more difficult to pull off.
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Auctioning spectrum isn't enough!
The government should financially aid new carriers setup their networks. Old networks had help in the past, so should the new. In terms of the google's FREE ALL SPECTRUM, SO THE GPHONE CAN RULE plan, i think that's too extreme and it just isn't economical or practical. Who is going to keep up the infrastructure? Sounds like another one of google's wet dreams.
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Secondary Markets Exist
But I don't agree that TV broadcasters would lease out or sell off their spectrum "if allowed". Incumbents have a tendency to buy spectrum just to squat on it and prevent new entrants.
The TV broadcasters are spectrum hogs, and I've written about that many times, but I don't agree with you that it is necessarily malicious that the broadcasters specified "use as much spectrum as possible". If more spectrum means a richer broadcast, with more picsels, more features, better sound, more interactive services, then naturally the broadcasters would say "use every MHz we have at our disposal". Sure, they could use more compact and more lossy compression and fit in a smaller channel, but instead they chose to compress less and use everything they've got. Why on earth would they say any different? This isn't a perverse abuse of spectrum, it's just companies saying: "utilize all our resources".
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Re: Secondary Markets Exist
There is also a company called Spectrum Bridge which has ways to disaggregate, aggregate and time share unused spectrum on theiw website. Spectrum Bridge is relatively new on the scene but has some good info online.
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But it's not a free market...
A very small percentage of people subscribed to the cable system, with the main HD signal ruined for hundreds of thousands of people with absolutely no recourse.
This idea was already a massive failure.
There is an understanding that good 1080i HD requires at least 18 Mbps and that is why (with audio) the networks were given 19.2. Many people argue that "good" HD actually takes around 24-28, so it is already a little bit tight. HD-DVD actually tops out at 30 and Blu-Ray at 40, so that should give you some idea that they really are not "wasting spectrum" by giving them 19.2.
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