On February 3, 2026, the Open Technology Institute (OTI) report, titled “What 6G Should Be: Ubiquitous and Seamless Connectivity, Not Just Another ‘G’,” argues that the industry’s current obsession with raw speed—potentially reaching 1 Tbps—should take a backseat to achieving universal and frictionless interoperability.

According to OTI’s Director of the Wireless Future Project, Michael Calabrese, the true value of 6G lies in its ability to eliminate the “dead zones” and “not-spots” that still plague rural and indoor environments.
The OTI’s vision centers on a “Single Network Future” where devices automatically and intelligently switch between Wi-Fi, terrestrial cellular, and non-terrestrial (satellite) networks without requiring manual authentication or suffering from packet drops.
This level of convergence is increasingly vital as 6G applications such as wide-area mixed reality, autonomous mobility, and real-time AI health monitoring require a consistently strong signal that traditional siloed networks cannot provide.
The report specifically calls on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to act as a catalyst for this coordination by authorizing a multi-stakeholder group to standardize these seamless handoff protocols.
A key pillar of this ubiquitous coverage is the integration of Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites, which are transitioning from niche emergency services to essential infrastructure. This shift is mirrored in massive industry realignments, most notably SpaceX’s multi-billion dollar acquisition of wireless spectrum from EchoStar.
In late 2025, SpaceX secured a definitive deal worth approximately $19.6 billion for EchoStar’s AWS-3, AWS-4, and H-block spectrum licenses. This strategic move provides SpaceX with dedicated Mobile-Satellite Service (MSS) spectrum, allowing it to bypass many of the interference hurdles associated with sharing terrestrial cellular bands.
Building on this momentum, the FCC granted SpaceX a major authorization on January 9, 2026, to expand its second-generation Starlink constellation to 15,000 satellites. This approval is a “game-changer” that gives SpaceX the green light to deliver high-speed, low-latency broadband and direct-to-device (D2D) cellular service worldwide.
While the expansion has drawn opposition from rivals like Viasat and Globalstar due to concerns over orbital clutter and spectrum interference, the move solidifies a future where orbital and terrestrial networks function as a singular, invisible fabric for the global consumer.
