I'd like my mobile phone to work all round the world, as it does. It takes more than one band, but only a few. And that took international regulation, not just cross-border issues. And I'd like no one to spill interference into the GPS band. And ... It really isn't as simple as you suggest. Yes, of course it's national governments that sell off 3G spectrum, but only after international agreements established that they could do so. -- Christopher Dearlove Senior Principal Engineer, Communications Group Communications, Networks and Image Analysis Capability BAE Systems Advanced Technology Centre West Hanningfield Road, Great Baddow, Chelmsford, CM2 8HN, UK Tel: +44 1245 242194 | Fax: +44 1245 242124 chris.dearlove@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx | http://www.baesystems.com BAE Systems (Operations) Limited Registered Office: Warwick House, PO Box 87, Farnborough Aerospace Centre, Farnborough, Hants, GU14 6YU, UK Registered in England & Wales No: 1996687 -----Original Message----- From: Carlos M. Martinez [mailto:carlosm3011@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: 03 January 2013 12:52 To: Dearlove, Christopher (UK) Cc: Phillip Hallam-Baker; IETF Discussion Mailing List Subject: Re: WCIT outcome? ----------------------! WARNING ! ---------------------- This message originates from outside our organisation, either from an external partner or from the internet. Keep this in mind if you answer this message. Follow the 'Report Suspicious Emails' link on IT matters for instructions on reporting suspicious email messages. -------------------------------------------------------- My point was not about the need (or lack thereof) of spectrum management, but rather the need (or lack thereof) of an international office for handling spectrum slots. The kind of allocation management you mention is an easier one to tackle. Radio allocation for mobile networks is distance-restricted, it only has to deal with local frequencies unless your are installing mobile antennas in border towns. If countries can be good neighbors you don't need an elephantine international bureaucracy to manage these type of spectrum allocation. Where I live this has been the case, all cross-border frequency issues were fixed through peer to peer negotiation between operators. As for spectrum sales, well, again it's not the ITU who's doing it, the regulators are. Large-scale, global, spectrum management remains an issue (i'm thinking about talk radio, marine/aircraft/satellite communications, navigation aids and similar applications), but, IMO, is a less demanding/critical task than it used to be, and thus the workload for the ITU-R should be less than it used to be. cheers! ~Carlos On 1/2/13 3:34 PM, Dearlove, Christopher (UK) wrote: > Carlos M. Martinez >> Radio spectrum allocation was a critical task at the time (it still is, >> although the world doesn't depend that much on it anymore), > > Given the ever increasing number of mobile devices, one could argue that the world > has never been more dependent on radio spectrum allocation. It's still not that long since > the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer made over £20 billion from selling spectrum, something > possible since international treaties had agreed on its purpose for 3G communications. > ******************************************************************** This email and any attachments are confidential to the intended recipient and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it from your system and notify the sender. You should not copy it or use it for any purpose nor disclose or distribute its contents to any other person. ********************************************************************