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PUNE, India, April 29, 2021 /PRNewswire/ ReportsnReports added The Shared & Unlicensed Spectrum LTE/5G Network Ecosystem: 2021 - 2030 - Opportunities, Challenges, Strategies & Forecasts Report to its online research library.
As the 5G era advances, the cellular communications industry is undergoing a revolutionary paradigm shift, driven by technological innovations, liberal regulatory policies and disruptive business models. One important aspect of this radical transformation is the growing adoption of shared and unlicensed spectrum – frequencies that are not exclusively licensed to a single mobile operator.
Telecommunications regulatory authorities across the globe have launched innovative frameworks to facilitate the coordinated sharing of licensed spectrum, most notably the United States three-tiered CBRS scheme for dynamic sharing of 3.5 GHz spectrum, Germany s 3.7-3.8 GHz licenses for private 5G networks, the United Kingdom s shared
The Polish company persuades to use open 5G. It will launch the first such network
After Polish mobile operators who have decided to launch services in 5G technology, the Polish company IS-Wireless intends to launch the fifth generation network. It convinces the market to create open solutions that are to counterbalance the networks built by global giants. Meanwhile, the date of the first 5G frequency auction, postponed from last year, is not known all the time, but it is possible that the process will not start until the middle of the year.
5G technology will allow millions of smart devices to be connected to the network, which can improve many areas of our daily life. How will it be possible? First of all, the 5G network allows up to 40 times faster data transfer than in today’s 4G or LTE networks. The second advantage of the fifth generation technology is greater capacity, i.e. the ability to connect many more devices than in the case of 4G. The third issue is latency – whil
Poland Threatens Hefty Fines for Social Media Companies That Censor Legal Speech
RT, December 21, 2020
Social media companies that remove posts whose content is legal can be fined up to €1.8 million under a new Polish bill. Users have welcomed its introduction as an antidote to other countries’ growing censorship demands.
Any social media company that removes content or blocks accounts that do not violate Polish law can be fined under the new legislation, announced in a press conference on Thursday by Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro. The bill also creates a special Court for the Protection of Freedom of Speech within one of the district courts.
New Polish Law Aims to Block Big Tech Censorship newsbusters.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsbusters.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.