Google commits $4.6 billion to wireless-spectrum auction
Google wants to put its money where its mouth is...to the tune of at least $4.6 billion.
The search giant said Friday that it's willing to participate in the Federal Communications Commission's upcoming wireless spectrum 700MHz band auction and pay the minimum reserve of $4.6 billion.
But for Google to participate, there's a catch. It's requiring the FCC to adopt all four of its licensing recommendations, no matter who ultimately wins the bidding process.
Google has also been pressing the FCC to reserve a portion of that spectrum to be used primarily, or exclusively, for broadband communications. The Internet giant wants "open access" rules, fearing that without them, only a few powerful companies, such as telecommunications and cable providers, will become the permanent guardians of the airwaves.
Google wants the FCC to agree to its four "open" platform recommendations, which include: open applications for users; open devices that will work with whichever network provider customers choose; open services that would allow for third-party resellers to acquire wireless services on a wholesale basis; and open networks, which would allow third parties, such as Internet service providers, to interconnect at any feasible point within the 700MHz licensee's wireless network.
Google better bring a big bidder's paddle to the auction.
Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.
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called net neutrality is just another term for government
interference and we have ENOUGH of THAT in our lives! It is time
for Google to stand up for freedom and not government
intervention. Ron Paul for President 2008! See Ron Paul at Google
HQ Q&A here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCM_wQy4YVg
So why would you want to tax a high-tech industry to the tune of billions when it is providing the infrastructure for a modern society?
It's nothing new. Governments have been auctioning lands for years.