(Bloomberg) -- Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Kevin Martin may fall short of his goal of spurring a
historic shakeup of the mobile-phone market when the U.S. sells
airwaves worth as much as $15 billion next year.
The FCC adopted rules this week that will let consumers use
any kind of phone or wireless-enabled laptop on some airwaves,
not just the devices approved by their phone company. People may
be able to take an iPhone for example, which now runs only on
AT&T Inc.'s network, and use it on this new spectrum regardless
of who wins the bidding.
Read more at Bloomberg Exclusive News
Chairman Kevin Martin may fall short of his goal of spurring a
historic shakeup of the mobile-phone market when the U.S. sells
airwaves worth as much as $15 billion next year.
The FCC adopted rules this week that will let consumers use
any kind of phone or wireless-enabled laptop on some airwaves,
not just the devices approved by their phone company. People may
be able to take an iPhone for example, which now runs only on
AT&T Inc.'s network, and use it on this new spectrum regardless
of who wins the bidding.
Read more at Bloomberg Exclusive News
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