The modern world runs on an invisible resource: radio frequency (RF) spectrum. From cellphones to satellites, drones to defense systems, this unseen highway carries the data essential for our economy and national security. But this vital infrastructure is facing a growing crisis.
RF spectrum, the range of electromagnetic frequencies used for wireless communication, is a finite resource. Governments license slices of this spectrum, dictating who can transmit, where, and when. This system, managed by agencies like the FCC and NTIA, is struggling to keep pace with an explosion in demand.
The proliferation of autonomous systems—drones, self-driving cars, industrial robots—each requires reliable spectrum access. Current allocation systems, built for a different era, are becoming a significant bottleneck. This isn't an immediate collapse, but a gradual widening gap between what technology could achieve and what it actually can.
