One luxury of living or working in a big city is access to high-speed wireless Internet connections that may not be available in rural areas of the United States. But increased access to wireless networks may be just around the corner.Before the end of the year, the House is expected to consider a provision proposed by Representative Jay Inslee (D-Washington) that would force the Federal Communications Commission to decide whether “white spaces”–empty broadcast-TV channels–should be made available for use by unlicensed wireless networks.“[This provision] is a win for public safety and for consumer choice,” says a spokesperson for Inslee. “By freeing up the spectrum, we’re going to spur technological innovation and economic growth.”Digital TV Transition Opens Up Space With both the House and the Senate having recently passed bills requiring television broadcasts to switch from analog to digital sometime in early 2009, the 700-MHz band (channels 52 to 69) will be cleared of programming and moved to lower frequencies (channels 2 to 51). The 700-MHz band will be set aside for public-safety emergency transponders and for bidding by wireless networks.According to the New America Foundation, the average TV market in the United States uses approximately 7 high-power channels of the 67 that it is allocated. This leaves an abundance of free channels that could be used for wireless access. “The great propagation characteristics [of low frequencies], coupled with innovative antenna technology, could bring broadband to rural America,” says Mary L. Brown, senior telecommunications policy counsel for Cisco Technologies.The New America Foundation calls the current 2.4-GHz band used for Wi-Fi access “small and uneconomical.”Broadcasters Oppose PlanThe FCC has proposed a plan to allocate white space, but the broadcast industry is worried that propagation of unlicensed devices has not proved interference-free and may compromise communication among public-safety transponders.“This requires you to be extremely prescient as a regulator to get rules right in the first place, and it shifts the burden to entities already in the band,” says David Donovan, president of Maximum Service Television. “Public safety cannot be the guinea pig for this new technology.”The issue of white-space allocation has not been considered by the Senate. FCC Chair Kevin Martin states in the commission’s release on the issue, ET Docket No. 04-186: “While I am pleased that this proceeding has the potential to encourage new and innovative unlicensed services, I remain concerned about the proceeding’s impact on the broadcasters and their transition to digital television.” A PDF of Martin’s full statement is available. By Eric S. Crouch, PC World.com Related content opinion Website spoofing: risks, threats, and mitigation strategies for CIOs In this article, we take a look at how CIOs can tackle website spoofing attacks and the best ways to prevent them. By Yash Mehta Dec 01, 2023 5 mins CIO Cyberattacks Security brandpost Sponsored by Catchpoint Systems Inc. Gain full visibility across the Internet Stack with IPM (Internet Performance Monitoring) Today’s IT systems have more points of failure than ever before. Internet Performance Monitoring provides visibility over external networks and services to mitigate outages. By Neal Weinberg Dec 01, 2023 3 mins IT Operations brandpost Sponsored by Zscaler How customers can save money during periods of economic uncertainty Now is the time to overcome the challenges of perimeter-based architectures and reduce costs with zero trust. By Zscaler Dec 01, 2023 4 mins Security feature LexisNexis rises to the generative AI challenge With generative AI, the legal information services giant faces its most formidable disruptor yet. That’s why CTO Jeff Reihl is embracing and enhancing the technology swiftly to keep in front of the competition. By Paula Rooney Dec 01, 2023 6 mins Generative AI Digital Transformation Cloud Computing Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe