Google Uses YouTube To Try To Rally Public Support For WiFi 2.0
The fate of an important chunk of wireless spectrum in the U.S. is being decided by the FCC, and Google wants to rally public support for turning this spectrum over to unlicensed uses, just like we do today with WiFi. The spectrum in question is the “white spaces” in the analog TV broadcast signal that will no longer be needed once all TV broadcasters shift to digital signals. The white spaces could form the basis for WiFi 2.0, a longer-range wireless technology that wouldn’t be owned by any one company.
Before that can happen, though, Google and other proponents of WiFi 2.0 must prove that they can get around some of the interference issues that may result if the spectrum in question is turned over to unlicensed use. So the FCC has been running some field tests to see what the impact may be. The biggest complainers are companies that make wireless microphones for live events such as concerts and football games.
Google doesn’t want to lose this policy debate to its opponents, who are positioning the proposal as something that will not only interfere with existing licensed wireless devices (something nobody really cares about), but will interfere with the officiating of football games. In other words, it would interfere with America itself.
Well, Google is having none of it. And it’s fighting back with something equally American: YouTube. In a





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