A technical framework for light-handed regulation of cognitive radios

  • Authors:
  • Anant Sahai;Kristen Ann Woyach;George Atia;Venkatesh Saligrama

  • Affiliations:
  • University of California, Berkeley;University of California, Berkeley;Boston University;Boston University

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Communications Magazine
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

Light-handed regulation is discussed often in policy circles, but what it should mean technically has always been a bit vague. For cognitive radios to succeed in reducing the regulatory overhead, this has to change. For us, light-handed regulation means minimizing the mandates to be met at radio certification and relying instead on incentives to deter bad behavior. We put forth a specific technical framework in which the certification mandates are minimal - radios must modulate their transmitted waveform to embed an identity fingerprint, and radios must obey certain go-to-jail commands directed toward their identities. More specifically, the identity is represented by a temporal profile of taboo time slots in which transmission is impossible. The fraction of taboo slots represents the overhead of this approach and determines how reliably harmful interference can be attributed to the culprit(s) responsible. Meanwhile, the fraction of time that innocent radios spend in jail is the overhead for the punishment system. The analysis is carried out in the context of a real-time spectrum market, but is also applicable to opportunistic use.