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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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August
1, 2007
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Kristopher
Jones
202-429-5486
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FCC
TESTING REVEALS 'WHITE SPACE' INTERFERENCE
WASHINGTON
-- Late yesterday, the Federal Communications Commission's Office of Engineering
and Technology released the results of a highly
anticipated study which revealed that portable, unlicensed devices
cause interference to television broadcast signals, an assertion television
broadcasters, sports leagues, wireless microphone manufacturers, and others
have long made.
The FCC report concluded that "the sample prototype White Space Devices
submitted to the Commission for initial evaluation do not consistently
sense or detect TV broadcast or wireless microphone signals" and
that "the transmitter in the prototype device is capable of causing
interference to TV broadcasting and wireless microphones."
Commenting on the FCC testing results, NAB Executive Vice President Dennis
Wharton said, "We appreciate FCC Chairman Kevin Martin's leadership
and the thorough consideration of this important issue given by the FCC's
Office of Engineering and Technology. Yesterday's FCC testing results
confirm what NAB, MSTV and others have long contended: that
the portable, unlicensed devices proposed by high-tech firms can't make
the transition from theory to actuality without compromising interference-free
television reception."
About
NAB
The National Association of Broadcasters is a trade association that advocates
on behalf of more than 8,300 free, local radio and television stations
and also broadcast networks before Congress, the Federal Communications
Commission and the Courts. Information about NAB can be found at www.nab.org.
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