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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
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September
10, 2007
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Dennis
Wharton, NAB
202-429-5350
David
Donovan, MSTV
202-966-1956
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BROADCASTERS,
SPORTS LEAGUES, TV SET MAKERS UNITE
IN OPPOSITION TO 'WHITE SPACE' INTERFERENCE ZONES
--
Ads opposing interference from unlicensed portable devices to run on DC
TV stations, in Hill papers --
-- Broadcasters announce support for fixed rural broadband --
WASHINGTON,
DC -- Executives from the broadcast television business, major sports
leagues and digital TV manufacturers unveiled a multi-industry effort
today to protect television viewers from interference caused by proposed
unlicensed personal-portable devices.
The
so-called "white space devices" operate in spectrum reserved
for television broadcasting. Last month, a
report by the FCC concluded that sample prototype white space devices
caused interference to TV broadcasting and wireless microphones.
During
the news conference, the Association for Maximum Service Television and
the National Association of Broadcasters unveiled
a
television advertisement that
began airing this morning and will continue to run on local television
stations in the Washington area throughout the week. The ad urges viewers
to "tell Congress not to allow unlicensed devices on digital TV channels."
Print
ads have also begun running in several Capitol Hill publications,
the groups said.
NAB
Television Board Chairman Alan Frank, president of Post-Newsweek Stations,
noted the importance of protecting viewers from interference.
"Interference
is not acceptable to our viewers. While our friends at Intel, Google and
Microsoft may find system errors, computer glitches and dropped calls
tolerable, broadcasters do not,"
said Frank. "Consumers know that computers unexpectedly shut down.
TVs don't. TVs work and people expect them to work."
Morgan
Murphy Media President Elizabeth Murphy Burns, who serves as chairman
of the MSTV and is a member of the NAB Television Board, noted that the
average American household watches television more than eight hours per
day.
"This
is about consumers. Over the next few years, consumers will spend billions
on digital television sets and government subsidized digital-to-analog
converter boxes. Broadcasters have already invested billions in an unprecedented
public-private partnership with government to bring the next generation
of TV to American consumers," said Burns. "The very future of
our business hinges on consumers' ability to receive interference-free
reception."
At
the news conference, NAB President and CEO David K. Rehr and MSTV President
David Donovan announced they will be sending a
letter to FCC Chairman Kevin Martin later today dispelling the claim
made by white space device supporters who suggest that broadcasters oppose
the rollout of rural broadband services.
"It
is disingenuous for companies like Microsoft and Intel to insinuate that
broadcasters oppose new technology," Rehr told reporters. "Broadcasters
support rural broadband through a fixed service. The issue is whether
these not-yet-invented devices should be deployed at the expense of broadcast
television. We think such a move would be wrongheaded."
Noting
a recent FCC report, Donovan explained: "The FCC's own Office of
Engineering and Technology has confirmed that the proposed prototype devices
supplied by white space supporters do not detect broadcast signals, and
in fact, cause interference to broadcast television reception," said
MSTV's Donovan.
"Even
if the devices worked as designed, they would not protect DTV sets from
devastating interference. Interference will occur over a vast area, from
the apartment next door or down the street. Data released by the FCC in
March showed an interference zone of 80 to 87 percent of a television
station's service area."
Broadcasters
were joined by representatives from the consumer electronics industry
and sports leagues, who also expressed opposition to the interference-causing
technology.
"At
a time when the FCC, Congress, consumer electronics manufacturers, broadcasters,
public interest groups and other stakeholders are doing their very best
to educate consumers on the digital transition, it would be a tragic mistake
for the Commission to open the DTV spectrum to new, unproven devices that
rely solely on 'spectrum sensing' - an approach demonstrated by the FCC's
own engineers to cause chronic interference," said John Taylor, vice
president of public affairs, LG Electronics USA, Inc.
Jeff
Willis, coordinating technical manager for ESPN Productions, warned of
the unintended consequences of allowing white space devices to operate
in TV spectrum. Representing the Sports Technology Alliance, a group whose
members include National Hockey League, PGA Tour, ESPN, Major League Baseball,
National Basketball Association, NCAA, and the National Football League,
Willis explained, "White space interference has no timeline, no boundaries.
It can occur in the bottom of the ninth with the bases loaded or as the
kicking team lines up to kick the game winning field goal. The interference
from these devices will render our use of wireless technology unreliable
for telecast."
Both
the Sports
Technology Alliance and Learfield
Sports, a company that produces sports broadcasts for 35 college athletic
programs, have expressed opposition to unlicensed device usage in television
spectrum.
A
contingent of more than 15 local and network broadcasters will be meeting
with members of the FCC today regarding this issue this afternoon.
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