jabba17 said:
Sure, AT&T/Verizon/T-Mobile/Sprint would rather you do it on a cell phone or cell network device. But they also know that the government wants someone to do wireless broadband, so they know better than to stand in the way.
Government wifi is dead in Philly and San Francisco, the only two cities I know of that proposed it. The feds are a trillion dollars in debt, and telecom isn't going to spend their money on something the government can't fund. This is DOA. There will be lots of Pandora radios in cars that no one will be able to hear, except in their own garage.
jabba17 said:
One other thing about Internet radio--it puts both the big players and the little players on equal footing. That means a little guy can hit the big time from his living room. But it also means that the "theaters in garages" will have to compete with the "Broadways" from out of town, where they didn't before.
Oh come on. You're believing your own PR. Name one internet radio show that has any impact on anything that happens nationally. Especially from a living room. Darryl Hall's webcast, "Live From Darryl's House," reached 498 people last month. Wow! As I said, NoShoesRadio, funded by multi-platinum act Kenny Chesney gets 5K hits a week. That's not equal footing with anyone. He plays in front of more people on his club tour. There are too many internet radio stations for any of them to have an impact. More voices isn't better. It means fewer listeners for everyone.
Here's the dirty secret: The music industry built a time bomb in their royalty deals. IF internet radio becomes successful, even higher royalty rates kick in, that will require those more popular operations to either charge monthly subscription prices to cover the bill similar to satellite), or increase advertising to the point where it's about the same as terrestrial radio. This is a big problem that no one is addressing.