Grazing on the commons: the emergence of Part 15

Purpose - This paper seeks to give an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Design meth...

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Veröffentlicht in:Info (Cambridge, England) England), 2009-08, Vol.11 (5), p.72-75
1. Verfasser: Goldberg, Henry
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description Purpose - This paper seeks to give an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Design methodology approach - The paper describes the aforementioned issue in detail.Findings - The paper has found that unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.Originality value - The paper presents an account of how unlicensed radio services moved from being a by-product of the ISM bands to a deliberate spectrum allocation, with clearly defined goals and objectives that could be achieved only by not subjecting the spectrum to licensing or auctions.
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2398-5046
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source Emerald Journals; PAIS Index
subjects Auctions
Byproducts
Communications networks
Computer industry
Frequencies
Incumbency
Information superhighway
Licenses
Licensing
Personal computers
Petitions
Spectrum allocation
Spread spectrum
Telecommunication services
Telecommunications
Telecommunications policy
Wireless networks
title Grazing on the commons: the emergence of Part 15
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