The Society Spectrum: Self-Regulation of Cellular Network Markets
Patrick Zwickl, Ivan Gojmerac, Paul Fuxjaeger, Peter Reichl, Oliver, Holland

TL;DR
The paper proposes a self-regulating spectrum market regime called 'society spectrum' that aims to balance stakeholder interests automatically, reducing regulatory intervention and enhancing fairness in cellular networks.
Contribution
It introduces the 'society spectrum' concept, a novel self-regulating mechanism for cellular markets that ensures stakeholder balance and fairness without extensive regulation.
Findings
Introduces the society spectrum regulatory design
Elaborates mechanisms for stakeholder fairness
Contextualizes with radio access and cognitive radio technologies
Abstract
Today's cellular telecommunications markets require continuous monitoring and intervention by regulators in order to balance the interests of various stakeholders. In order to reduce the extent of regulatory involvements in the day-to-day business of cellular operators, the present paper proposes a "self-regulating" spectrum market regime named "society spectrum". This regime provides a market-inherent and automatic self-balancing of stakeholder powers, which at the same time provides a series of coordination and fairness assurance functions that clearly distinguish it from "spectrum as a commons" solutions. The present paper will introduce the fundamental regulatory design and will elaborate on mechanisms to assure fairness among stakeholders and individuals. This work further puts the society spectrum into the context of contemporary radio access technologies and cognitive radio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsICT Impact and Policies · Digital Platforms and Economics · Merger and Competition Analysis
