The MulteFire Alliance (MFA) has been rather quiet lately, since its core technology – which enabled LTE to run in unlicensed spectrum without an anchor network in a licensed band – failed to make much impact on the market. It was heavily targeted at private and enterprise networks, so the combination of rising demand for such platforms in the 5G era, and the roll-out of networks in the USA’s CBRS shared spectrum, may well give MFA a new lease of life. It has rebranded itself to reduce the association with MulteFire itself – though it will continue to support and certify the technology – and to reflect an expanded remit that covers 5G and enterprise licensed spectrum, not just shared…