In Washington, there's always one kind of alleged war or another against some group or idea -- the war on women, the war on religion and the war on the Second Amendment come quickly to mind.
This week, many of us became aware of another supposed conflict we had never heard of, essentially a war on WiFi.
Thanks to a Washington Post story that attracted much attention because it was widely interpreted as reporting that the federal government had a new proposal to make free WiFi available across the nation, the war on WiFi made news. (Full disclosure: NPR's Morning Editioninterviewed the reporter behind the piece.)
According to the story, a Federal Communications Commission proposal to make available for so-called unlicensed uses some of the broadcast spectrum could lead to free WiFi for millions across the U.S. (By contrast, cellular service providers and TV and radio broadcasters have licenses that allow them to broadcast over the radio spectrum.)
Furthermore, the story pits one group of corporate giants and their lobbyists, a group including Google and Microsoft who reportedly support the FCC proposal, against another group, the wireless phone industry, who reportedly oppose it as a competitive threat.
That certainly sounds like a war on WiFi, though in fairness to The Washington Post, they never used that lively phrase.
Alas, people who closely follow developments in the digital world have been pouring cold water on the free-WiFi-for-all fire ever since the story went viral. Examples from some of the kill joys are here, here, here, here and here.
Basically, there is no new FCC plan that will in the relatively near future lead to an explosion of free WiFi. Rather the story pulls together various pieces of FCC policy that have been around in some form for years. And their details are much more technical and less eye-popping than suggested.
An FCC spokesperson didn't return a call for comment.
"The article gave one the impression you're going to have all these new wireless competitors popping up," said Gigi Sohn, a telecommunications policy expert. "A lot needs to happen before that takes place." Sohn is president of Public Knowledge, a nonprofit that advocates for consumers' digital rights.
Sohn added in an interview: "It's a long way from where we are today or where we might even be if the FCC set aside a nice chunk of the spectrum for unlicensed use, to a full-blown, gigabit (per second), competitive service." Translation: We're not close to much faster and cheaper, if not free, broadband and WiFi.
As Sohn pointed out, it would be hugely counterproductive for the cellular phone service providers to make war on WiFi since they count on the technology to move the voice and data traffic that exceeds what phone-network technology alone can handle.
"The Verizons and AT&Ts desperately need WiFi because it allows them to offload traffic from their otherwise congested networks," said Sohn. "It makes me laugh to have this debate drawn as between the telcos and the tech companies because the telcos need the WiFi world as much as the tech companies do."
So, OK, does that mean that there's no war on WiFi?
Well, actually there apparently is something of a war because the FCC chairman said as much in a speech last October. At the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, Julius Genachowski, the FCC chair, spoke of a "nascent war on WiFi."
What he was talking about is a disagreement that is partly partisan and partly about companies trying to gain or keep their competitive advantage.
Without getting too technical, Genachowski, an Obama appointee, and some congressional Democrats want to make more spectrum available on an unlicensed basis since that would allow innovators to experiment and invent new products and services.
We got baby monitors and wireless mics after the FCC did something similar in 1985. In fact, we also got WiFi from that spectrum emancipation.
Some congressional Republicans have suggested that Genachowski wants to make too much spectrum available for unlicensed purposes. That would reduce the amount of spectrum that could be sold to licensed users like cell phone service providers, money that would go to the federal treasury.
Rep. Greg Walden, an Oregon Republican who chairs a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee with FCC oversight, said at a December hearing:
"Let me make it clear. I support the use of unlicensed spectrum to foster innovation and to provide much needed offload for congested mobile broadband networks. ... What I cannot support is the unnecessary expansion of unlicensed spectrum ... that are actually needed for licensed services, especially at the expense of public safety."
Besides that partisan divide is the competitive divide between the phone sector and the high-tech sector. Innovations made possible by the availability of more unlicensed spectrum, the Skypes of the future, could threaten some of the phone company revenue streams.
The phone companies don't make this argument, of course, which might seem a little too overtly self-serving. Instead, they couch many of their concerns about the creation of more unlicensed spectrum as technical or legal in nature.
Meanwhile, high-tech companies like Google and Microsoft, with their disruptive technologies, see plenty of upside in making the Internet more ubiquitous.
This is why Genachowski warned against a war on WiFi. In his October speech he said:
"Earlier this year, there was an effort in Congress to prohibit the FCC from designating any TV band spectrum repurposed through the incentive auction for unlicensed use.
"And just last week, one of my colleagues at the Commission suggested that the FCC significantly limit unlicensed opportunities in the spectrum freed up by incentive auctions, including questioning whether the FCC had to auction and license every megahertz of repurposed spectrum instead of making some of it available for entirely unlicensed use...
"Why oppose balanced spectrum policy ideas that include more spectrum for both licensed and unlicensed use? Why launch a war on WiFi?
"I see things differently. I believe clearing and auctioning spectrum for exclusive licensed use must remain a core component of spectrum policy, and that we should also pursue next-generation ideas like spectrum sharing and expanded unlicensed use. Let's not just talk about a forward-thinking FCC. ... Launching a war on the kinds of ideas that gave us WiFi would be a self-inflicted wound to U.S. innovation and economic leadership."
So while the FCC doesn't really have a plan that likely will lead to public and free WiFi across the nation, the controversial story did at least give many people a chance to stumble into a national policy debate that, to most folks, had been as invisible as radio waves.
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