Bloosurf is the 99th largest FWA in the U.S.
The FWA company wants the FCC to order T-Mobile to stop transmitting its 5G signal and it wants to block T-Mobile from receiving the 7,156 licenses for the 2.5GHz spectrum it won at auction. Bloosurf, founded in 2009, first discovered in 2020 that T-Mobile‘s 5G signal might be interfering with its FWA operations. Bloosurf offers a 4G FWA network over 2.5GHz and 3.5GHz CBRS (Citizens Broadband Radio Service) spectrum across approximately 15 cell sites in Maryland.
Bloosurf tried working with T-Mobile to determine whether the latter’s signals were causing interference. But in the FCC filing, the fixed wireless firm said that T-Mobile tried to trick it into thinking that the nation’s second-largest wireless provider was not responsible for the interference.
“T-Mobile never revealed, either to the commission or Bloosurf, that it was transmitting on its 5G network from the sites near Bloosurf’s network,” Bloosurf wrote. “Rather, T-Mobile switched off its 4G transmissions but continued to operate its 5G network during the test. The interference to Bloosurf’s network continued unabated, misleading engineers to believe that the harmful interference to Bloosurf was not from T-Mobile‘s operations. The FCC should … stay the grant of T-Mobile‘s Auction 108 licenses due to T-Mobile‘s lack of candor regarding interference testing.”