Does OSS Make The FCC Irrelevant? 256
JordanL writes "Daniel Fisher over at Forbes.com wonders whether or not OSS makes the FCC irrelevant. From the article: 'The agency might have made sense in the 1920s, Moglen says, when it was formed to assign specific frequencies to broadcasters so they wouldnt try to drown each other out by cranking up the transmitter power. But a new generation of intelligent radios, combined with equally clever computer networks, is making it possible for anybody to use the airwaves without interfering with anybody else.'"
Argh! (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah right. If I go by your same logic and just for the sake of argument let us also assume that Napster was Open Source. Do you really think RIAA still wouldn't have crushed it? First Amendment my ass. Our "friendly" (and genius) lawmakers will find a loophole or make a law that First Amendment will violate. Yup the greenback has a voice, and it is fuckin' loud!
Re:Argh! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Argh! (Score:2)
Re:Argh! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Argh! (Score:5, Informative)
The FCC will never be irrelevant... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The FCC will never be irrelevant... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is not insightful, even though it includes the magic slashdot keywords "they" and "make money."
They FCC doesn't make money. They're a regulatory agency. They license the use of a finite natural resource, and enforce regs to make sure that someone feeling pa
Until I get the Spark Gap Generator turned on. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Until I get the Spark Gap Generator turned on. (Score:5, Insightful)
You see you're living in a world where if some code doesn't meet a standard, no one dies.
Jam a Public Safety frequency with some moronic radio design that doesn't work correctly and then sit around waiting for Ambulances and Fire Departments while some industry standard for not doing stupid things is arranged?
No thanks.
Re:Until I get the Spark Gap Generator turned on. (Score:5, Insightful)
No thanks.
Your example is totally appropriate, but let's take a step back and talk about something most Slashdotters should be able to easily understand.
I unfortunately was too late to this topic to get my snarky comment on the parent article in, but it would have gone something like "The FCC's irrelevant? Tell that to my upstairs neighbor on his 2.4ghz phone while I'm trying to use my wireless internet!"
If people think industries are just going to regulate themselves or that anyone's going to bother building devices smart enough not to trip over each other, they're just completely clueless. Manufacturers fail to do this now despite regulation - de-regulate things even further and we'd all be in for a world of hurt. Radio waves are a finite resource and if anyone was allowed to use whatever radio waves they wanted, it would literally be electronic anarchy and nobody would get anything done. Cell phones wouldn't work anywhere (because they could be legally jammed), wireless internet wouldn't work (because somebody else would be trying to use that spectrum), there'd be no digital OTA TV (because there'd be no impetus for it), and yes, there'd be chaos on the emergency radio bands.
You'd have no more FM radio because everybody could set up a station anywhere they wanted, blasting out 50,000 watts. You'd get nothing but overlapping signals coming mostly from peoples' apartments. Now, FM radio is pretty much dead to me, but a lot of people still listen to it in their cars and also rely on it for emergency broadcasts. (Again, it all comes back to that.)
There are two separate issues here. First, it's one thing to expect companies within the same industry to self-regulate - that's possible, and it happens with wi-fi and cellular stuff all the time. But it's not at all realistic to expect manufacturers to work together across all industries that create radio equipment. If you're a manufacturer of cell phones, is it even going to occur to you to work with a manufacturer of iPod radio tranceivers to make sure your stuff works together (let alone all of them, and every other manufacturer of such niche devices)? No.
This is the FCC's job.
Even if everybody did work together here, without any possibility of penalties you'd have less scrupulous companies overseas (or maybe even within our borders) creating devices specifically designed to overstep other manufacturers' devices. To "hack the network", so to speak. Why not? Without the FCC, who is going to create and enforce the rules that say not to? This is also the FCC's job.
The second issue is that the FCC regulates not just corporations, but individuals. They're the reason why you can't set up a pirate radio station in your house. Do away with the FCC and you'd not just open up the airwaves to corporations but to every 17 year old moron with a credit card. I'd love to see what happens the first time you get one of these kids onto the La Guardia Tower ATC frequency. Yeah, that'll be loads of fun.
I realize it's fashionable to bash the FCC around here because some of us apparently want to see Janet Jackson's ugly-ass ta-tas undisturbed, but it is an organization with a pretty important role.
Re:Until I get the Spark Gap Generator turned on. (Score:3, Insightful)
Ultimately, GNU radio is not a problem. If someone had developed a software driven car, would that make it legal to use it to trespass on someone's land because --hey, it's free speech software?
Hams have been building radios since the dawn of radio itself (receivers AND transmitters). It's not hard to do. The fact that someone has figured out how to make a radio do what he wants it to through software
Another "Forbes" story? (Score:2, Insightful)
Exactly where did Moglen say this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not quite there yet (Score:2, Insightful)
But we ain't there yet- and given my history with used radios and TVs, and the current hassle over HDTV broadcast, I'd say we're at least 40, perhaps 50 years away from this becoming nationwide reality; and at least
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:4, Interesting)
Do you really think so? I mean, when I bought my first computer 10 years ago, 56k was blazing fast. And wireless was unheard of (at least beyond 5 foot, PDA to PDA transmissions). Now Wireless is much more commonplace, and the bandwidth is rising rapidly. I doubt it'll take 50 years. Given the rate at which technology now moves, we could see enough bandwidth wirelessly all over major markets (read: big cities) within 15 years, and maybe 25 for it to go everywhere. Since the amount of bandwidth you need is roughly proportional to population, it's easier to cover rural areas adequately. With radio, signal strength needs to be based on terrain, since an area needs a certain amount of signal regardless of whether it is populated or not.
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:2)
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:2)
Most Public Safety systems are still analog trunking or single-channel repeaters in everything but large cities, digital is just barely deployed and seriously working in large population areas.
And even then, none of todays highest-end digital radio systems have ANY capability to be as frequency agile as the idiot at Forbes recommends.
Hell, if he'd ever seen the amount of work that goes into tuning filters and techniques to keep Intermodulation interference (
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:3, Insightful)
The biggest (by far) users of analog tech and bandwidth are broadcasters, and the biggest of those is TV. And the FCC's already asked them to move along... but the public isn't buying the technology yet, really.
So when everyone sees the digital nirvana that you have (The question they're asking is: "Why would I need a perfect TV picture in a new format at 4-10x the price, I honestly don't know -- doesn't my TV work and do its job just fine right now?"), the b
Re:Not quite there yet (Score:2)
Take an example out of this thread: 500k population, all snarfing voip and on-demand A/V for several hours per day... 500K times 100KBps, let's say.
Does anyone know Shannon-Hartley [wikipedia.org] well enough to see how large populations and high bandwidth numbers like these work out? If literally hundreds of thousands of devices are all running at a few gigahertz, even with promises of directional/positional streams via software defined radios, it seems the 'noise' they've generated r
No. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No. (Score:2)
Re:No. (Score:2)
The better question to ask is whether or not the FCC needs to b
No (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No (Score:2)
Re:No (Score:4, Interesting)
It would be totally possible to have some sort of digital packet broadcast system where stations need a specific frequency band, that would allow tens of thousands of radio stations in an area instead of 5 or 10. The primary purpose of the FCC regulation of radio nowadays is to maintain a limited amount of radio stations, thereby sustaining the profit model of radio. (After all, price is set by supply and demand. If you increase the supply of radio broadcasts, but the demand for radio broadcasts stays the same, the cost of advertising on radio will go down!)
Re:No (Score:2)
fixed
remember, there's a lot more spectrum the FCC regulates than just that.
Re:No (Score:2)
The point is, the FCC regulating the bandwidth so it is free for everyone to use is one thing, the FCC giving people a legal monopoly on bandwidth is another thing.
No one cares that the FCC says "this is the citizens band", or "this band is for cell phones". But the regulation of the FM and AM bands how they do now is simply corporate welfare.
Re:No (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No (Score:3, Insightful)
The FCC can perform the anti-asshole role without being nearly so overbearing.
Cops patrol the streets and make sure nobody is beating anyone up or shooting anyone. Cops are able to do this without dictating exactly where everyone is allowed to walk. There's no reason the FCC can't do this too.
Re:No (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone dictates that people walk along a pavement, and vehicles move on the correct side of the road. Removing this dictation is likely to end up with 18 wheelers hitting each other at 55mph. In countries with a sane speed limit, like the UK, this means 18 wheelers hitting each other at 70mph.
It's not just common sense, it's regulated for a reason. Radio spectrum is regulated for a similar reason - so that radio stations don't cla
Re:No (Score:3, Funny)
Your analogy is seriously screwed.
Re:No (Score:2)
Now you'll have some very short lived arguments with some of America's larger trucking companies... but you probably won't feel a thing.
Re:No (Score:2)
Because open-source software is so easy to modify and use
Yeah... that's why I've spent the last four days at my work simply documenting the include tree of Cacti so that I could write a script that can authenticate and crawl to grab an image.
OSS currently is absolutely hell to integrate, and the only thing that makes it easy to modify is that the source is free.
Sorry, my job has just been hell with this particular piece of OSS.
Uh... no. (Score:5, Insightful)
While better encodings might make it possible for multiple signals to exist without interference, that doesn't mean thatthe FCC isn't necessary. The day that we see megabroadcasters fire up a gigawatt transmiter that plasters a broadband range with religious TV broadcasting across the entire country, you'll understand the problem. Not everything can practically switch to frequency hopping. In particular, anything based on broadcast concepts cannot do so because otherwise clients can't reasonably locate it.
Moreover, even frequency hopping requires a fixed frequency starting point in at least one direction in order to get communication started in the first place. At the very least, the FCC is necessary in order to prevent those frequencies from getting trampled upon.
Re:Uh... no. (Score:2)
Absolutely! (Score:2, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
The answer is.....NO! (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually it might not be bad if you could walk/drive around with a cell phone jammer. Or even better a high frequency Ham radio that can cause that rolling speaker that pulled up next to you some serious interference directly into the speakers.
Just need enough power to permanetly damage his speakers with one ear shattering squelch!
There is no shortage of spectrum (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:There is no shortage of spectrum (Score:2)
Re:There is no shortage of spectrum (Score:2)
None of the "solutions" in the article, or so far on this discussion would work in practice.
Its possible to make use of some statistical tricks to apparently cram more into the same space, and its possible to take advantage of the piss-poor perception of the average human to inflict sub-standard audio and video on them -- and tell them its all wonderful "because its digital". But the fact remain
Yes there is (Score:3, Interesting)
We have at most 20-24 GHz of economically usable bandwidth. For some applications (point-to-multipoint broadcast), LOS restrictions and the difficulty of generating appreciable amounts of power at higher microwave frequencies limits us to far less than that.
Honestly, the only economical transceivers I know of that work above the 5.8 GHz ISM band are specialty devices not well suited to communications. (Gunn
Re:The answer is.....NO! (Score:2)
Moglen knows beans on this topic (Score:5, Interesting)
If we were a nation of boy scouts that might work, but experience in wireless band usage in the unlicensed ranges indicates this is not the case
Unlicensed wireless spectrum in Omaha, Nebraska, population 500k, is managed by a mixture of microwave design and troubleshooting, back stabbing, jamming with amateur gear, intrusions into ISP's networks, 'uncoordinated' adjustments of competitor's antennas and radios in shared facilities, lawsuits, character assassination, 'testing' of heavily amplified frequency hopping products, and occasional play on the part of aircrews on RC-135 Rivet Joints flying out of Offutt AFB.
Never in a million billion zillion years would the licensed band network operators here tolerate that sort of conduct. Eben needs to stick to software licenses and leave radio physics alone
Re:Moglen knows beans on this topic (Score:4, Insightful)
You are confusing regulation with enforcement. People using illegal transmitters should be prosecuted as they are not allowed to do that.
Moglen's point is that the FCC is currently in charge of allocation and that's the problem. Because the FCC is a government entity, spectrum control is, in fact, going to be driven by those with the most cash, and not for public benefit. Opening up spectrum to general use and placing very clear rules on transmitter power in a meaningful way, i.e. limits on antenna gain and spectral density , pretty much solves the problem.
Opening up the spectrum and then ENFORCING the rules is what should happen. The current spectral micromanagement by the FCC is in fact a bad thing.
Then there is the fact that they are not trying to enforce things like the broadcast flag which affect your RECEPTION of the airwaves. The fact that it is illegal to receive satellite broadcasts without "approved" hardware is insane, and yet it is currently the law.
We all share the roads, but that doesn't mean you get to do whatever you want.
It should be the same with spectrum.
Re:Moglen knows beans on this topic (Score:2)
Ahh but the key... (Score:2)
" Never in a million billion zillion years would the licensed band network operators here tolerate that sort of conduct. Eben needs to stick to software licenses and leave radio physics alone
I.E. the corporations who shelled out big bucks and have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo, as opposed to the startups or hacker in his garage who did not.
Solution: one set of rules for analog broadcast and a more open set of rules for packet broadcast. E.G. any type
Simple Answer: No (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can show me open source software, or closed source software for that matter, that can do ALL of the above, then I'll agree. Perhaps the FCC just needs to be reduced in size and scope, just like every other government organization.
Re:Simple Answer: No (Score:2)
I should have been more clear.
Re:Simple Answer: No (Score:2)
Ethics (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, that's possible. It's also possible that I want to set up a huge-ass transmitter and saturate the neighborhood with radio waves. The type of thinking that's expressed in the summary assumes that everybody -- not "most people", but everybody -- will act ethically, at least in a utilitarian or "common good" sense. I sa
keep dreaming... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:keep dreaming... (Score:3, Funny)
High Power Transmitters. adj.
1) Enough RF to cook your eyeballs while they are still inside your head.
2) Enough RF to make you smell like a cooked thanksgiving turkey.
Synonyms: Multi-Megawatt Transmitters. Gigawatt Transmitters.
Repeat after me: bandwidth is a scarce resource (Score:5, Insightful)
The current FCC strategy for allocating bandwidth is to let the natural background S/N dominate, and allocate pieces of frequency spectrum. The UWB strategy is to increase N over the entire frequency spectrum. They both consume bandwidth in the public airwaves. Remember, unless you're using angular encoding (like a camera) there is only one signal to be had: the voltage off an antenna, versus time. Traditional radio broadcasting uses the Fourier basis to describe that voltage signal and to cut up pieces of the signal for different people to use. CDMA, TDMA, and other WB strategies use different bases -- the effect is that their interference is spread over a LOT of Fourier space, so no one user affects any one channel more than infinitesimally.
But there's no free lunch. A zillion users, all degrading signal infinitesimally, are just as bad as a single doofus who's stomping on your allocated frequency band. Even worse, actually, because you can (usually) find and unplug the doofus's equipment -- but nothing short of a nuclear strike will stop the UWB interference once it gets bad.
There's more to this issue than just bandwidth (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:There's more to this issue than just bandwidth (Score:4, Insightful)
Huh? (Score:2)
So his argument is that because stations can send out information over the internet, TV is obsolete? There's at least one problem here. Aside from the necessary internet bandwidth required, not everyone has a computer/go
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Actually if people used PVR systems they would get used to the "downloading" or recording of shows and then watching them when they want where they want. Using a PVR (mythtv, tivo, freevo) system changes the way people watch TV. About the only type of shows that anyone would want to watch "real time" would be sporting events or space launches. Most everything else does not suffer anything by being watched at a later time.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
You can add some types of news into that list of yours. If there is a tornado, bli
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Maybe you do, but I don't. As the sibling post pointed out, this sort of notification is rather pointless -- you would know by looking out
FCC (Score:2, Insightful)
'broadcasting is unconstitutional' (Score:4, Funny)
Look dude, I just got a brand GNU radio!
Is he nuts? (Score:4, Interesting)
There is no way to mandate computer networked transmitters, or to enforce things from the transmitter side.
The fcc handles figuring out land topology, power, assignments, and a myriad other factors involved in assigning a frequency and maximum power- for the entire country's radio space over several ghz of spectrum.
What does open source really have to do with this anyway? Sure, open source could theoretically implement the system he talks about, but the post is more about the supposed irrelevance of the fcc and is using OSS as a buzzword to generate hype.
What's to stop him now? (Score:2)
Re:What's to stop him now? (Score:2)
Well, for one, this little agency called the FCC.
In the final analysis, bands have limits dictated by the laws of physics. And communications within these bands can be disabled by overrunning these limits. You'd still need the FCC to set emission limits (probably on a per band basis) and for enforcement against people whose transmitters were a bit too powerful or whose antennae were a bit too long (my apologies to any Martians in the neighborhood). Otherwise, anyone could s
Re:What's to stop him now? (Score:2)
Perhaps you're confused by what I meant by "stop". The FCC cannot necessarily stop a child from doing something like that beforehand. If the child is eager enough, he will find such a transmitter, with or without the FCC. Now, perhaps they could stop him later
Sharing the airwaves? (Score:2)
Legal Channel Still needed. (Score:2)
A. we are a long way from having adaptive radios in everything, it would cost sooo much to update all radios, even over the next 20 years - it wouldn't quite be as bad as the U.S. converting to metric, but someone has not thought this through entirely. Think the U.S. is going to
Grain of salt recommended (Score:4, Informative)
The GPL does not prohibit the sale of OSS - it prohibits hiding the source code from whomever the binaries are distributed to.
Looks like someone forgot to check at least one fact...
Re:Grain of salt recommended (Score:2)
===
Good show on pointing out one of the flaws, though!
Yeah! (Score:2)
That would rock!
Mod linked article -1, doofus (Score:2, Insightful)
Sure, it is possible to regulate radio equipment using OSS to use finer and finer pieces of spectrum. That's really irrelevant. If I decide I want to use 97.111 MHz for my open-source-audio-blog, and the local radio station wants to use 97.111 MHz for teeny-bop-around-the-clock and Motorola wants to use 97.111 MHz for emergency radios, who gets to use that frequency? The FCC's role is critical to keeping the
Re:Mod linked article -1, doofus (Score:2)
Re:Mod linked article -1, doofus (Score:2)
His VMSK scheme allows the transmission of arbitrary high bitrates in arbitrary small bandwidths... or so he claims.
FCC purpose (Score:2)
http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/0610ken.pdf [senate.gov]
Kennard maintained that the purpose of the FCC was to promote competition and UNiversal Access (both to telephone and internet).
So what happened to the FCC? Why does the FCC still want to regulate radio transmissions, when as TFA points out, there is no appreciable limit to transmission based on frequency?
Well, Kennard resigned i
What Moglen -actually- said... (Score:5, Insightful)
"My goal is to do all of the work it takes to be explaining to the Supreme Court in 2025 why broadcasting is unconstitutional," says Moglen, who speaks in perfect, rolling sentences. "We have a long march to do, we have a lot of education to do, society has to catch up with our vision of the future, but we are going someplace and the only question is timing and skill in driving."
Which first of all, implies he wants deregulation of broadcasting by 2025 and second of all implies that broadcasting is all he cares about, not, say, FCC regulations on interference caused by computer power supplies. Extremely hard to say with no context other than Forbes' interpretation.
There doesn't appear to be any source that puts his words in context. Other articles are appearing now on ZDnet, et al, but they only cite Forbes.
I don't think this is even remotely an accurate statement of Eben Moglen's ideas. Not to be an apologist; I think deregulation broadcasting is a stupid idea. I wouldn't mind seeing the airwaves repartioned to give more space over to public use, etc., but simple deregulation I wouldn't support. However, I strongly suspect Forbes of putting words in Moglen's mouth with its interpretation of whatever he actually said.
Sorry, no (Score:2)
Seriously. If you think the FCC's role is not an important one, you don't understand some combination of: human nature, radio communications, electronics, telecommunications history, etc. I'm sure others can come up with more broad areas believing that shows a lack of understanding in.
And trying to pass off the "OSS means freedom" argument really sends things into left
Over on Groklaw (Score:2)
article doesn't make sense (Score:2)
Unregulate and they will come... (Score:2)
You see, without regulation there would be no power limits. Without power limits it would be a short race to see who could have the biggest gun, er, transmitter. You would be able to pick up their transmissions on your cell phone, your car radio, your TV, your wired telephone and just
What a crock (Score:2)
Sorry, kids, but we're talking about a finite resource here. Frequencies aren't virtual, there is no magic multiplexer that will let everyone share the same bandwidth. Just imagine if someone wrote an Ethernet card driver that didn't respect the Ethernet protocol: that one card would mon
They are totally fucked (Forbes.com) (Score:2)
There is nothing in the GPL that prohibits people from charging money for GPL software. See Red Hat, Novell, IBM, et al.
Fuck-up #2: Linking http://www.forbes.com/finance/mktguideapps/compinf o/CompanyTearsheet.jhtml?tkr=APA [forbes.com] to the Apache web server!
-Charles
Rose colored goggles. Check. (Score:2)
Except, of course, those who WANT to interfere for negative purposes.
You can flood a bandwidth with noise, and make it unusable. I don't care how much coding you use. There is no magical way to have infinite bandwidth across any portion of the spectrum.
All you'll wind up with is rich script kiddies (ham kiddies?) with klystron transmitters in their attic that papa bought them with petty cash from the trust fund.
ask a silly question... (Score:2)
Longer answer: No, of course not.
Not really (Score:2)
Sometimes you don't NEED to read the article (Score:2)
And the fact that we have laws means we never need police.
I guess the author never heard a psycho CB operator talk about killing and raping everybody he meets (perhaps running a few hundred watts) or a schizo amateur operator running his VFO back and forth over people he disagrees with or somebody intentionally or unintentio
Doesn't matter anyway... (Score:2)
Kinda like the DEA: a complete and utter failure by every conceivable measure, yet they still suck bajillions of dollars out of the taxpayers' pockets.
FCC action ageinst interference sources helps (Score:5, Informative)
The FCC isn't that active in cracking down on annoying emitters, but they do try. This went out on August 24th:
"The Federal Communications Commission has been made aware that an electronic transformer manufactured by W.A.C. Lighting Company, model number EN-12PX-AR [homestead.com], located in a lighting circuit at your residence, is causing harmful radio interference to the AM Radio Broadcast Band as well as to a licensee in the Amateur Radio Service."
People tend to forget that a switching power supply is a high-powered RF generator. If it weren't for strict emissions regulations and type approval, the frequencies below a few megahertz would be full of power supply hash and not much else.
Re:FCC action ageinst interference sources helps (Score:2, Interesting)
A few years back, we had a neighbor with a ham radio who would crank it up whenever he thought nobody was paying attention. It was strong enough to actually hear his voice coming out of the home theater audio system in our house. Did he care to re
FCC isn't irrelevant, and never will be (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me explain: the reason we are getting technology to make ever-more-efficient use of available radio spectrum, is in part due to the fact that the FCC, the ITU, and all the counterpart communications agencies of governments around the world recognized the need to regulate the radio spectrum, to slice it up for use by many different 'users'. Part of the FCC's job is to make sure the USA abides by the international radio-spectrum treaties, so that a resource that is fairly scarce, can have optimal usage.
These regulatory agencies, by the very work they do, encourage maximum usage of the available spectrum, and keep people from stepping on each other's signals. This is why we live in a world of wireless devices, wireless digital communications, cell phones, amateur radio, marine radio, military radio, tv, commercial radio, etc, etc and everyone can make use of the airwaves with minimal interference to each other. Once allocations have been made, you need someone to do enforcement (investigation and prosecutions of violations of the allotment), or else the allocations mean nothing.
If you got rid of the FCC, some people would stop playing nice with each other (even though the technology exists to co-exist). Some people would get frequency 'greedy'. And then the whole system would collapse. The sad thing about humans is, a certain percentage of the population always need 'police' to keep them honest (and some are crooked anyway, but at least you have a chance to stop them before they do too much damage, if you have police).
Another important thing to remember about radio frequency, is that different radio frequencies *behave differently*, and allocations need to take this into account (and currently, largely do). Shortwave radio allows worldwide communication with relatively low power output. But, because it is world-wide, it means you also have a truly global 'collision domain', to borrow a term from digital networking. So, if you just need to do local communications, you *don't* use these 'global' frequencies.
The FCC provides a truly useful service to the public (despite all the snarking about decency standards - something the FCC doesn't really want to be involved in, but is forced to by public demand, btw - remember, the FCC ultimately answers to politicians, whose chief concern is keeping the most people 'happy' so they can get re-elected). Let's give them a little respect.
Relevance is Irrelevant (Score:2)
Likewise, there is still rent-control in New York City -- introduced as a temporary measure during World War II (to protect the families of the soldiers from "greedy landlords", you see).
The Spanish War took place more than a century ago, but we are still paying the tax introduced to finance it [taxfoundation.org].
Relevant my behind... FCC will stay w
It made sense to our federal overlords. (Score:2, Insightful)
That is one of the functions performed by the FCC, although other mechanisms certainly would have taken care of that if the FCC had not. The FCC's powers went far beyond that. Congress nationalized the spectrum and took upon itself the authority to grant revocable licenses that must be used "in the pub
Tell that to... (Score:2, Interesting)
Tell that to my microwave.
Re:Idiot. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Idiot. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Idiot. (Score:2)
Go figure.
Re:Idiot. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Like any government program/agency ever goes aw (Score:2)
Re:yeah... (Score:2)