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by AnthonyMouse
1055 days ago
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> The why is simple: Power/frequency limits allow everybody to be able to use personal consumer devices without licensing and without preventing other people from using their devices. That explains why there are power/frequency limits, not why the device manufacturer should be deputized into responsibility for a sophisticated user's non-compliant device modifications. Anyone can make an arc gap transmitter for morse code out of $3 in bits from any hardware store that will interfere with anybody else's radio devices in the vicinity. Anyone can buy ham radio equipment or built it from parts and do all kinds of non-compliant things with it. Then the FCC comes after you, not the hardware store or the device OEM. Or more likely in the case of a WiFi device, comes after the person distributing custom firmware that purposely exposes a simple knob to allow unsophisticated users to exceed regulatory limits. And if DD-WRT did that, they should expect a visit from The Government. But what should that have anything to do with Linksys or Netgear? There aren't enough end users who know how to modify the firmware code themselves to matter, even if you make that "easy." |
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This is just a silly statement. Go to an apartment complex sometime and browse the available WiFi networks. You'll see a huge number of them because everyone has the output power on their router set to the max value. There's plenty of places the 2.4GHz band is simply unusable because the noise floor is so high from a hundred base stations blasting out at full power.
If WifiBoost.exe could in tease that output power enough people would do it that WiFi or Bluetooth in some places would be completely unusable.
Modern radio basebands are largely software defined. The modulation/keying, power output, and transmitted bands are all defined in software. In order to sell that silicon as a Part 15 compliant device to end users the firmware needs to be locked. It's the digital equivalent of a fixed function radio. A manufacturer of a fixed function radio couldn't get a Part 15 license if it had a potentiometer on the back allowing you to dial up the output power, even if that potentiometer was locked under the case most people wouldn't open.
With an SDR the hardware plus software is considered the "device" for licensing purposes. If it supported unlocked or modifiable firmware it couldn't be easily/at all sold as a Part 15 device. It would be a different class of device and would require the end user to have a license to operate it.