DirecTV misinterpreted an FCC rule regarding orbital slots.
By Jeffrey Krauss, President of Telecommunications and Technology Policy
It seems that DirecTV made a major blunder in interpreting an FCC technical rule, and as a result lost its place in line for a valuable broadcasting satellite slot.
I last wrote about the new 17 GHz DBS band in October 2007. At that time, the FCC had just adopted rules and decided Jeffrey Kraussto give the already-filed applications the top priority. Those applications were from DirecTV, EchoStar, Pegasus and Intelsat. Since then, a new applicant, Spectrum Five, arrived on the scene and challenged DirecTV for the valuable slot at 103 degrees – and won.
Read the rest at CAPITAL CURRENTS: Oops!
By Jeffrey Krauss, President of Telecommunications and Technology Policy
It seems that DirecTV made a major blunder in interpreting an FCC technical rule, and as a result lost its place in line for a valuable broadcasting satellite slot.
I last wrote about the new 17 GHz DBS band in October 2007. At that time, the FCC had just adopted rules and decided Jeffrey Kraussto give the already-filed applications the top priority. Those applications were from DirecTV, EchoStar, Pegasus and Intelsat. Since then, a new applicant, Spectrum Five, arrived on the scene and challenged DirecTV for the valuable slot at 103 degrees – and won.
Read the rest at CAPITAL CURRENTS: Oops!