US | Google FCC Ruling to Test Google Power Techies’ lobbying tactics on wireless auction vex old guard By Heather McPherson Posted Jul 30, 2007 9:53 AM CDT Copied Two women walk past a Google sign at the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif., Tuesday, July 17, 2007. Google Inc. is expected to release quarterly earnings on Thursday, July 19, 2007. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) (Associated Press) The FCC will rule tomorrow on whether an upcoming airwaves auction will require its winner to build an open-access network, and the verdict will test Google’s lobbying prowess, the Washington Post reports. Google has been pushing the open network aggressively, to the chagrin of AT&T and Verizon, mustering support from public interest groups and consumer advocates. In its first major foray into the regulatory wars, Google offered to spend at least $4.6 billion at the auction for the airwaves to build the open network, if the FCC rules in its favor. The company spent only 3% of the lobbying dollars that AT&T dropped in 2006, but its unconventional strategy, deploying bloggers, engineers and even game theorists, seems to have scored with the FCC chairman. Read These Next An Amazon email goof dropped the bad news early. Man sprays bad-smelling substance at Ilhan Omar during town hall. Bari Weiss to CBS News staff: Without a pivot, 'we are toast.' Canada's Mark Carney is standing by his big Davos speech. Report an error