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Communications Government Network United States Technology

FCC Chairman Wants Public Auction To Repurpose Satellite Bands For 5G (engadget.com) 65

Chairman Ajit Pai is pressing for a public auction of wireless frequencies in the C-band spectrum (the 4GHz to 8GHz range often used by satellite companies) for the sake of 5G service. Engadget reports: This would help the FCC clear up "significant" frequency space in a quick fashion, generate money for the government and "ensure continued delivery" of existing services, Pai argued. He hoped to auction off a 280MHz slice while leaving the upper 200MHz available. An FCC official told the Wall Street Journal that the regulator hoped to bring the C-band auction up for a vote in 2020 and start the auction by the end of that year.

Satellite companies, however, might not be so happy. Industry giants like Intelsat and SES haven't been averse to selling their spectrum, but they've wanted a private auction to share the money they make and have claimed the FCC isn't allowed to take in-use spectrum without paying them. A public auction flies in the face of that. The C-Band Alliance, a group representing the satellite firms, has hinted at "protracted litigation" if the FCC pushes forward. Carriers are also of mixed opinions. AT&T, which owns DirecTV, has called C-band an "opportunity" but also wanted compensation and a "reasonable transition plan" to avoid disruptions. Verizon (Engadget's parent company and Pai's former employer) likewise wanted "appropriate incentives and protections" to ensure a quick process.

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FCC Chairman Wants Public Auction To Repurpose Satellite Bands For 5G

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  • Fuck no. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Narcocide ( 102829 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @10:29PM (#59433674) Homepage

    Arrest this guy. This has gone far enough.

  • Public Good? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by charlie merritt ( 4684639 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @10:32PM (#59433686)

    Wouldn't it be really cool if things like "The Public Good" were taken into account?

    • Wouldn't it be really cool if things like "The Public Good" were taken into account?

      Gotta be careful with that. The public good could also mean stripping wealthy of their money, or criminals of their organs. Freedom is precious.

      • Wouldn't it be really cool if things like "The Public Good" were taken into account?

        Gotta be careful with that. The public good could also mean stripping wealthy of their money, or criminals of their organs. Freedom is precious.

        You should also point out that "the wealthy" could easily be defined as anyone above the poverty level, and the definition of "criminal" could probably be broadened pretty easily as well.

        • Not sure why you're being downvoted. I actually read an article in USA Today a year or 2 ago that argued tax cuts only help the rich because if you don't pay taxes you don't benefit from tax cuts. Essentially, anyone paying taxes is rich by their standards.

          • Well, tax cuts not ONLY benefit the rich, but they are by definition those that benefit the most from them.

    • Wouldn't it be really cool if things like "The Public Good" were taken into account?

      Careful what you wish for.

      If the FCC is allowed to be Indian givers, then future auctions will likely be much less lucrative. Why bid high for something that can be taken on a whim?

      Legal property rights and enforceable contracts are the bedrock of capitalism.

      • Legal property rights and enforceable contracts are the bedrock of capitalism.

        Civil Asset Forfeiture, "Red flag" laws, Eminent Domain used to forcibly transfer property to another private entity to gain more tax revenue:

        Are we jokes to you?

        (not meant as a jibe at you)

        The Rule of Law is pretty much on life support at this point, although more and more regular people towards otherwise opposing political stands are starting to realize they're being lied to by both (D)s and (R)s and finding common ground, for example "Epstein didn't kill himself" is pretty bipartisan and near universal a

    • Hmm...

      How do you monetize that?

    • Wouldn't it be really cool if things like "The Public Good" were taken into account?

      The greater good...

  • Trumpski should move straight to 7G (induction antennas in the pavement) to make 16K movies on my smartphone possible.

  • On one hand, it seems sleazy to auction it off, and then auction it off again. On the other hand, if there is actually public interest, that should trump private interest. On the gripping hand, fuck Ajit Pai. If he wants to do something, it's probably bullshit.

    • Re:Ambivalence (Score:4, Informative)

      by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @11:16PM (#59433786)

      seems sleazy to auction it off, and then auction it off again

      Not really... When first auctioned off it was spectrum designated for a specific purpose. Having won the auction does Not allow the winner to use the resource for a different purpose or any other random purpose they want -- for example having won the license for Public broadcast does not authorize the capability to use the frequency for private 5G, etc. Any portion of spectrum not being in active use for the specific purpose can be taken back by the FCC at any time they wish.

    • If Ajit Pai supports it, it's probably crooked as fuck.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      On the other hand, if there is actually public interest, that should trump private interest.

      The amazing part is that at least SES is the satellite operator that provides, among other things, backhaul connectivity between remote cellular towers.

      You know how it sucks when a place can't get phone, dsl, cable, fiber, or any option other than cellular internet because of how far out the place is?

      The cellular towers providing such internet to those remote places are equally as remote and lacking fiber, coax, or other means to connect the thing to the rest of the network.
      Those towers use SES

      Taking away S

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Odd how every advance in the history of civilization, such as public sanitation, electrification, eradication of smallpox, widespread literacy, etc., came about by considering "the good of the whole to be supreme". Libertardianism is a wish to return to "the Good Old Days" that never actually existed in all of recorded history. Humanity only accomplishes forward motion as a whole, the Brownian Motion of individuals thrashing around alone leads to stagnation.

  • by passionplay ( 607862 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @11:39PM (#59433868)
    Last I checked, 5G generates large amounts of heat, requires many more antennae, and starts failing back to 4G in inclement weather. Why do we need this again? I'm not following the process. If you really want faster speeds which only seem to work in metro areas, why not have a public mesh instead?
    • "Why do we need this again?"

      To cause more cancer?

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        I assume you're referring to people working the the factories to make the equipment. No? You're part of the "any radiation whatsoever causes cancer" club? You folks have been looking for a link between radio waves and cancer since the 1960s with no success. Don't you think it's time to give up?

        • The Corporate Official Media told me that dangerous technology is completely safe! It's a FACT!!!

          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            The DEW line used to be the most powerful radar transmitters in the world, and the inner ring of stations were below the 45th parallel. My dad knew a farmer who sold a few acres to the military for one of the stations in Michigan. He and his wife lived just across the field to the north of the radar until it was decomm'd in the '80s. He farmed well into his 70s.

            I met people who lived just outside the fence surrounding a major antenna farm in the Seattle area. The antenna farm had been established in WWI

    • Oh, well, you just HAVE to have 5G, because otherwise you'll have fewer reasons to buy a new phone every year, and of course how are you going to justify the bigger and more expensive data plan from your wireless company without it?
    • You need 5G because we can't go around letting people use wifi for free.

    • To sell new cellphones. Duh.

  • WiFi (Score:5, Interesting)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Wednesday November 20, 2019 @01:30AM (#59434106)

    >"pressing for a public auction of wireless frequencies in the C-band spectrum (the 4GHz to 8GHz range often used by satellite companies) for the sake of 5G service"

    Can't we PLEASE get some additional bands for WiFi? That is something the public really need and could use- bandwidth that belongs to all of us, that we can all use. I thought we were supposed to get some by now, especially in the precious 1-2Ghz range.

    • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

      Nah it's the other way around man https://www.dslreports.com/sho... [dslreports.com]

      The poor companies don't have enough private spectrum so they are starting to use what little was allocated for public use.

      Why would the public be given any more?

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      The FCC is moving to open up a chuck of the 6GHz band for WiFi. Of course licensed users in those bands are pushing back but I think it's more of a when than an will issue at this point.
      • >"The FCC is moving to open up a chuck of the 6GHz band for WiFi. Of course licensed users in those bands are pushing back but I think it's more of a when than an will issue at this point."

        That band is way too high. It has no range or penetration power. I would much rather have 2Ghz. I thought we were going to get some of the TV band, which would have been great.

  • We need to stop auctioning this stuff off and just renting it....
  • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Wednesday November 20, 2019 @08:13AM (#59434648)
    Everyone knows satellites operate at 0 G. They can't run at 5 G.
  • The C-band spectrum of 4GHz to 8GHz can't be used for non line of sight applications. Who would want to use these frequencies for 5G deployments?

    • by bartle ( 447377 )

      These higher frequencies could be perhaps useful for selling stationary connectivity; basically home Internet for anyone who's willing to stick an antenna on the side of their house. Even then though, bad weather could easily disrupt service and force modems into a lower frequency range.

      I suppose, in that sense, the sale might be self correcting. That is, the FCC sells the frequencies, the cell companies buy them if only to keep them out of competitors' hands, and no one ever uses them because they're just

  • It seems reality is shaping up to a future heavy in satellites and some new fiber like ZBLAN fiber along with traditional silica based fiber. C band is important for more than just cell phones and makes a lot more sense than millimeter wave. Millimeter wave should be for satellites, not 5G as there are no obstructions between space and ground for much of your service area and millimeter usually makes it through the atmosphere, though around 24 GHz you interact with water molecules, which is bad, and compl

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