Bob -
This is a great question.
In many cases there are situations where regulators are reverse engineering current
regulatory schema to allow new entrants, new alternative networks. They often do this
carefully. In order to not upset the current market situation, but to push competition
and more neutral access...Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, India to some extent are doing this.
It really does not matter what the tech or spectrum band may be...on purpose...
Best,
Jane
Internet Society |
www.internetsociety.org
Skype: janercoffin
Mobile/WhatsApp: +1.202.247.8429
On 12/19/18, 4:21 PM, "dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net on behalf of
dc3(a)bob.ma" <dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net on behalf of dc3(a)bob.ma> wrote:
Great news.
I do want to better understand when one does and does not have to license a network.
If you used WiFi to monitor crops I presume you don’t need a license? If you let your
neighbors share your router? When does licensing come into play?
Bob Frankston
http://Frankston.com
-----Original Message-----
From: dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net <dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net> On
Behalf Of Nicolás Echániz
Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2018 15:34
To: Dynamic Coalition on Community Connectivity <dc3(a)listas.altermundi.net>
Subject: [DC3] AlterMundi receives operator licence
Hi all,
I just wanted to share that we have finally been granted operator licence in
Argentina. This is the first licence for community networks in our country.
Here's the licence:
http://blog.altermundi.net/media/uploads/licenciaaltermundi-1895-18_resol.p…
And this is the resolution that made it possible:
http://servicios.infoleg.gob.ar/infolegInternet/anexos/310000-314999/313590…
On another note, LibreRouter has been trending (top 10) in Hacker News all day:
https://news.ycombinator.com/
come share some love :)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18715230
Cheers!
NicoEchániz
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