FCC hits brakes on in-flight calling (for now)
The seemingly never-ending "will they or won't they" saga involving the FCC, the FAA, airlines, mobile carriers, and the extraordinarily annoying plane passenger sitting next to you has taken another unexpected turn this week. On the heels of a CTIA study suggesting that so-called "picocells" placed on planes to communicate with phones won't completely eliminate paralyzing interference with ground towers, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin suggesting that the feds should hold off on lifting the in-flight calling ban. Apparently, the big issue revolves around phones operating on bands that aren't supported by the installed picocell; in the absence of that local communication, the handset goes right back to mussin' and fussin' with the traditional towers several miles below -- potentially with disastrous effects to the network and other users, never mind the fact that no one's managed to conclusively prove that aircraft systems won't be affected. For what it's worth, the chairman's suggestion is just that -- a suggestion -- and doesn't prevent the agency's commissioners from approving the move anyway. While we're the first to agree that the thought of a couple hundred passengers yakking away in tight quarters is a starkly frightening one, we're not sure it's the FCC's place to be legislating away annoyances -- let the feds do their technical due diligence, we say. Word has it the picocells can be tweaked to fix the CTIA's concerns, and if that holds up, airlines will decide individually whether to let customers dial (or, at the very least, access data services) mid-flight. From there, we'll all be voting with our dollars.[Via Techdirt]












Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Falcom @ Mar 23rd 2007 12:29PM
good. I hope phones are permanently banned on planes. Last thing i want to hear while i'm traveling anywhere, be it LA to Vegas, or LA to NY, is some dip$#!+ yapping away the whole flight. Thats a good way to incite domestic terrorism by making passengers hate each other an just get into fights over someone trying to sleep, and @$$tard trying to close his sales deal at midnight.
Jay @ Mar 24th 2007 11:21AM
That's just what we need Falcom, more pointless rules and regulations.
Maybe if people would stand up for themselves and tell people to shut up for once, everybody would be better off. Instead, you push it aside and let everybody else attempt to fix your problems while making things much more inconvenient for everybody else.
Fredster @ Mar 24th 2007 1:51PM
I'm definitely with you Falcom on this, it's already enough with people talking on the bus, train, metro, tram, library, classroom, auditorium, movies you name it! And good luck Jay to tell all those people off and to stfu, you'll be a pop person to have around. That's why rules are for, so you don't have to do it, it's there already! Pointless rule? Whatever...