The promise to make the “Public Safety Trust” the real licensee and Cyren Call “only” a contractor is supposed to address this objection by leaving the “public safety community” the ones “in control.” But again, anyone with experience in telecom knows how that game works. Cyren Call, as the party most intimately involved with the proposal, will have huge influence over how the Public Safety Trust gets structured and who gets appointed to it first. Then it will get a bunch of favorable contracts signed that lock in Cyren Call as the company that actually runs things. The Public Safety Trust will have as much authority over Cyren Call as Queen Elizabeth II has over “her” Prime Minister Tony Blair.
JohnMc:
I think you're missing the point. If the auction was gamed from the start, then there is no way that it can go forward, without some sort of “restoring the faith” move by the FCC or Congress.
At the very least, FCC should investigate these allegations that Cyren Call broke the law. Not that I have much faith in the FCC actually doing any investigating, but hey, the laws are on the books. Might as well use them.
Harold: Your Wetmachine piece has slightly different html from your Public Knowledge piece. I don't think this was intentional, but I believe that you are missing a “</a>” after the “47 U.S.C. § 309(j)(4)(E)” here on wetmachine. As of now, it looks like the US Code section and “Representative Waxman” all link to the same site. That's all I got.
Keep plugging away, Harold. This is fascinating from someone who's managed to stay far, far away from Washington politics.
The reality-distortion field around Washington puts Steve Jobs' to shame.
Shun:
Thanks both for the kind words and for the editing pointer.
I admit I am conflicted on balancing holding up the entire auction with just pulling D Block. There are arguments on all sides. I think that the blocks are sufficiently interrelated that you would really need to reset everything and start again if it turned out there was funny business going on (remember, all we have are allegations, that's why we need an investigation).
Harold:
These are troubling allegations, for sure, but I don't think we have enough solid facts yet to stop the auction. Maybe some investigation of the allegations will change my opinion of the matter, though. Sounds like O'Brien was out of line, but until it is proved, I think the auction should proceed. More at http://ikeelliott.typepad.c...
Harold,
The PSST may be one of the biggest scams in American history. Public safety is being used by Morgan O’Brien, who was stuck with a multi-billion dollar tab when he owned Nextel in re-banding, when Nextel cellular was interfering with public safety communications.
The consultant who straitened this out for O’Brien was none other than Harlin McEwen, who is not a public safety official. McEwen is a consultant with a public safety background. McEwen has become a confidence man, convincing and controlling the PSST process. The real trick is that he is the chair of the PSST and the commercial provider is Cyren Call, largely owned by none other than Morgan O’Brien. If I read this right, this relationship is being investigated by Congressman Waxman's committee.
With McEwen lobbying the public safety community, supported by Police Chiefs, Fire Chiefs, Sheriffs and APCO, to believe that the PSST will force a hardened national broadband network, he has convinced the FCC go give the PSST and his closest friends, (the leadership of the PSST), control of $5-10 billion dollars worth of open-auction spectrum. With the requirements McEwen espouses for the build, the cost could be $20-40 billion to build, reducing the auction value to almost nothing. In fact it is this over engineering that helps McEwen’s perspective wind fall, driving out legitimate bidders and leaving only a company which knows that McEwen and the PSST will not hold them accountable. The difference is the perspective scam value.
The trick is that Harlin McEwen, O’Brien’s consultant, will be in control of the PSST and will be the one holding the winning bidder accountable. This leaves McEwen and company on the PSST to walk away when the actual Public Safety National Network ‘fails’ and is built to common commercial standards, making O’Brien and his friends billions and leaving first responders paying into an outdated Nextel era commercial backbone.
If anybody in public safety needs to use this national network and they think that the PSST is a good project, they might think again, or am I missing something?
Shun, to consider that some 200+ entrants are all in collusion for the auction(s) is very hard to believe. Or even a small subset. Conspiracy is a very hard thing to maintain in a 'prisoners dilema' scenario. To think that the 'D' block is tainted based on what Harold is relating is plausible. But I don't see that as the clarion call to stop the entire process.
Investigate the issue? Sure especially the 'D' block situation. If it is found that there was collusion or bad faith the FCC holds all the cards. They can rebid the whole thing and eject/refuse any rebids from the perpetrators.
I do have concerns with the 'D' block for the very nature it is an agent for the public good. But until something rises to the level of unimpeachable evidence, let the auctions continue. It is only one of many steps before licenses are issued. There is plenty of time to impale the guilty and reward the innocent.
JohnMc: It is not a question of collusion. It is a question of the interlinked bidding strategies. By that I mean that the startegies of any major bidder (such as a Google or a Verizon) are nested and interlinked with the various blocks. Eliminating one block thus — somewhat unfairly and to the detriment of the auction as a whole — throws off the bidding strategies of the major auction participants.
Nevertheless, I concede that it is a close call here on whether to stop the whole thing for a few weeks, pull D Block, or just issue some kind of warning. In a game as large, complex and important as this, we run into a very serious problem of not knowing which course of action is the most disruptive.
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Harold,
The FCC reserves the right reconsider the bids of any component of the auction that does not exceed the strike price right? With Frontier Wireless out of the 'D' block bidding the chances of a winner reaching strike place is pretty low.
If that is what occurs, then the FCC redoes that part of the auction. What am I missing here? Continue with the auction.