FCC Rejects Free Wireless Service Proposal
Joelle Tessler, Mobile Tech Today, 9/3/2010
The FCC has rejected a plan proposed by M2Z Networks that would have allowed free nationwide wireless service. M2Z wanted the FCC to demand that the winner of an auction for the radio spectrum provide free Internet service to anyone who connects to it. M2Z’s plan had encountered resistance from T-Mobile USA and other wireless carriers.
Federal regulators have shot down a proposal by a startup called M2Z Networks Inc. to build a free, nationwide wireless broadband network using a spare slice of airwaves.
The Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday said it has rejected M2Z’s request that the agency demand that the winner of an auction for the radio spectrum provide free Internet service to anyone who connects to it.
That condition would have mirrored M2Z’s business model of offering free basic wireless broadband access — with speeds of up to 768 kilobits per second — that would be supported by advertising in addition to a faster, premium service.
“We gave careful and thorough consideration to the proposal, but ultimately determined that this was not the best policy outcome,” Ruth Milkman, head of the FCC’s wireless bureau, said in a statement. The FCC did not explain its rejection further.
M2Z’s plan had encountered resistance from T-Mobile USA and other big wireless carriers, which warned that it would interfere with their own services.
“A designer allocation auction that would be tailored for one company was not in the public’s interest, especially when that company was offering broadband service that is slow by even yesterday’s standards,” Steve Largent, head of industry trade group CTIA-The Wireless Association, said in a statement.
M2Z was founded in 2005 by John Muleta, a former FCC official who at one time also headed the agency’s wireless bureau, and Milo Medin, co-founder and chief technology officer of cable modem pioneer (At)Home. The company’s investors include several top Silicon Valley venture capital firms, including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Redpoint Ventures.
In a statement, Muleta said “the FCC’s decision to delay the use of this valuable spectrum forgoes the consumer welfare and economic stimulus that would result from putting new spectrum into the marketplace.”
The FCC is still studying possible uses of the spectrum.
Related posts:
- FCC considering spectrum for free wireless broadband Phil Goldstein, FierceWireless, 3/9/2010 The FCC may release spectrum for “free or very low-cost” wireless broadband service to boost wider...
- CTIA To FCC: Without More Wireless Spectrum, ‘Demand May Outpace Supply’ Tricia Duryee, MocoNews, 9/29/2009 With the FCC cracking down on net neutrality and re-evaluating the country’s broadband plans, the CTIA...
- The FCC Struggles to Meet Smartphone Wireless Spectrum Needs Jason Mick, Daily Tech, 1/13/2011 Spectrum demands are rapidly rising, but its as hard as ever to find free spectrum...
In: Mobile Technology · Tagged with: CTIA, FCC, T-Mobile

on September 3, 2010 at 6:34 pm
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