The
FCC today voted on rules for use of the 700 MHz spectrum which will come up
for auction next year. Early reports from the meeting indicate Chairman Kevin
Martin's proposal for open access will be a condition on about one-third of the
lots - winners of those airwaves will have to allow any non-threatening devices
and software to run on their networks. The FCC did not approve Google's request
that winners be forced to sell access to their networks on a wholesale basis.
The 700MHz range -- which is being vacated by television broadcasters going
digital -- is desirable because of its ability to travel long distances and
easily penetrate walls, and Martin feels it could provide a "third pipe" to US
homes, circumventing the established stranglehold cable and telephone companies
have on bandwidth. A total of 60 megahertz will be auctioned off, with
twenty-two of them "open," and another 10 set aside for a "national public
safety" network. The auctioning off of the frequency is expected to raise as
much as $15 billion for the federal treasury.