Google, Microsoft Keep Trying to Seize Channels That Actually Aren’t Vacant

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By Alison Neplokh, NAB Vice President of Spectrum Policy

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As the broadcast TV spectrum incentive auction inches closer to its conclusion, Google’s so-called “vacant channel” (although more properly known as “Google channel”) proposal has once again crept out of the shadows. The proposal, for those who may have let this debacle fade from their memories, is that before thousands of low-power television stations and TV translators (we’ll just say LPTVs for simplicity) displaced by the incentive auction are allowed to find new channels to continue serving viewers, they must ensure there would be at least one channel available for unlicensed – or Google’s free – use. This time, the Open Technology Institute (OTI), Microsoft and Public Knowledge are carrying Google’s water. Perhaps inspired by the fall broadcast television lineup, Google and Microsoft are angling for “Designated Survivor” status.

“Don’t worry,” they say, “our Google channel proposal won’t actually take LPTV stations off the air, as there is plenty of spectrum to go around. And besides, what is more important, television or internet?” Let’s unpack that argument a little. 

Plenty of spectrum to go around? If that were actually true, Google and Microsoft wouldn’t need a policy change; they could simply use the available space under the FCC’s existing TV white spaces rules. They know, however, that the incentive auction will send many LPTVs scrambling for new homes and that some markets are going to have such scarce spectrum availability that, even without finding homes for all of the LPTV stations, there will not be enough room for unlicensed operation in the TV band. To try to get around this unfortunate reality, in March, Google submitted a heavily flawed study that assumed the FCC would need to buy nearly twice as many stations as it must in reality to reach a conclusion that the impact would be minimal. Sure, if the government spends extra tens of billions of dollars to purchase spectrum, Google and Microsoft could get access to a little more “free” spectrum. And, of course, Google is conspicuously not bidding in the auction, either. Again, if Google was right – that it was a cost-free proposal – then what would be the point? Unlicensed devices can operate in the TV bands already where space is available. The Google channel proposal is really about turning away existing LPTV stations to make room for unlicensed Google devices.

January 9, 2017

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