After years of claims that in-cabin wireless use would risk calamity, the airlines now want the public to believe any wireless access regulation--and the
failure to make timely deregulation-- results from government inflexibility and
inertia. Why the change of strategy?
The airlines want to "monetize" wireless access making it another profit center along with checked baggage and snacks. But to fully do so they need to undo several decades of claims that wireless handset use would cause--or at least risk--harmful interference with air traffic control communications and other essential avionics.
The airlines want to "monetize" wireless access making it another profit center along with checked baggage and snacks. But to fully do so they need to undo several decades of claims that wireless handset use would cause--or at least risk--harmful interference with air traffic control communications and other essential avionics.
The restrictive FAA/FCC regulations resulted from active
airline participation with a different rent seeking strategy. The airlines' motivation did not solely
stem from concern about consumer welfare. Instead they wanted to protect their
Airfone monopoly deal with GTE and later BellAtlantic/Verizon.
Over time wireless has migrated from voice/text only to a vast array of
data and applications. The airlines now need to refute the avionics harm rationale they
vigorously advocated in the first place. True to form, sponsored engineers and
now economists are retained to claim the need for immediate deregulation of "job
killing" regulations. These researchers join with more clearly defined
stakeholders to vilify regulatory inertia, etc.
So now the avionics harm risk does not exist, if it ever did.
Smartphones always have had the ability to reduce transmission power to the
lowest wattage needed making it highly unlikely that in cabin interference could
result. Also the airlines now have a transmission routing scheme, albeit overly
costly, that eliminates the avionics risk by locating the necessary higher
wattage link to an outside the cabin antenna for ground tower, or satellite
access.
My takeaway from this case study: it's easy to blame government
regulators as inflexible. But the political process forces these regulators to
accommodate well-financed stakeholders like the airlines. Belatedly the
airlines have come to understand that wireless can become a lucrative, new
revenue center. So they launch a "public interest" campaign to persuade the
FAA/FCC to remove now unnecessary, inefficient and costly regulations
they helped create. Sadly the true public interest has
suffered for the decades of unnecessary handset restrictions.
Also consider this irony: back on earth the wireless carriers have
spent billions convincing Congress and the FCC that subscribers should not
have certain access freedoms, including the "right" to unblock a fully paid for
handset. The wireless carriers claim that subscribers have no legal right to
use a handset to access a competitor even if the subscriber no longer is bound
by a service agreement and even after the carrier has recouped any handset
subsidy it offered the subscriber. Some subscribers have resorted to "illegal"
self-help strategies instead of asserting their right of ownership.
I marvel at how wireless carriers can regulate and constrict individual
economic freedoms, including the right to control fully owned property like
handsets, including ones bought on an installment basis during a two year
subscription term. The FCC has a longstanding Carterfone policy that
would prohibit such consumer restraints on corded handsets. Sadly the FCC has
bought bogus concerns about radio spectrum harm raised by the wireless carriers
who benefit from the restrictions they impose in subscription agreements.
1 comment:
Do you trust a sponsored engineer more than a sponsored economist?
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