NAB Asks FCC To Suspend White Spaces Database
The National Association of Broadcasters wants the Federal Communications Commission to suspend operations of its TV white spaces database until it can correct "serious design flaws." The database is supposed to identify channels in use by TV stations and others so that unlicensed devices using those so-called white spaces do not cause interference. The NAB asked for a rulemaking to correct the flaws, and filed an emergency petition at the FCC to suspend operation of the database.
"NAB conducted multiple analyses of the database system over the past year and found unlicensed device users provided inaccurate information in all nine of the required fields of the database," NAB said, "including invalid FCC IDs, fake serial numbers and false contact information. Most problematically, the analyses found that more than one-third of fixed TV white space devices in the database listed erroneous, and occasionally wildly inaccurate, location data." NAB says the database design allows, and may even encourage, TV band device users (TVBD) to falsify information required for the database, including location information, which is key in preventing interference. NAB said the problems with the database are actual, not theoretical. "Experience now shows that, when left to their own devices [pun likely intended], many TVBD users routinely enter false location information, either through error or mischief.
NAB Asks FCC To Suspend White Spaces Database