Angry Jesus writes:
A rare auction of valuable frequencies has sent the big four carriers on a lobbying spree that may determine who controls your cell phone. Verizon and AT&T want the FCC to remove restrictions that limit the amount of spectrum any one single buyer can purchase, making the size of the bid the only consideration, and they've surreptitiously commissioned academic research they can use to back-stop their claims of why that would be a good thing. T-Mobile and Sprint have hired their own set of think-tanks to do the same for the opposite position, but they don't have as much money as the two big companies have to spend on "useful idiots" who agree with their positions but not necessarily their goals.
Behind all of these machinations lies the larger question are spectrum auctions and the attendant spectrum oligopoly even in the public interest at all?
(Score: 3, Interesting) by MrGuy on Thursday March 27 2014, @05:59PM
To be slightly fair to broadcasters, as I understand it this was part of the deal when they were encouraged to switch technologies from analog to digital television broadcasting, which freed up much of the "new" spectrum to be reclaimed and re-used for this purpose. The incentive (supposedly) sped up the move to digital broadcasting by several years.