Double Talk - a new meaning for Full Duplex
I have commented before on the raging INTERnet-neutrality debate and
how closely allied it is to the issue of LOCAL net neutrality - the
focus of the OPLAN Foundation.
Well last week I was reminded
again of just how much double talk some of the major vested interests
in the telecoms and cable sector are engaged in on this issue.
We
already know the totally warped "let the market be free" argument of
the likes of AT&T and Verizon who want to charge service providers
and the likes of Yahoo and Google for use of the Internet on a
differential basis - i.e. destroy 'net neutrality'. The fallacy
of their 'free-market argument' being that these major corporations
would never exist as they do today, as vertically integrated behemoths,
had they not been created as such through a century of state
intervention, nationalisation and more recently, arbitrary
sector-specific regulation. Had the market been allowed to deploy
the digital technologies of abundance free from state intervention and
vested interest protection - then the likes of AT&T, Verizon,
France Telecom and BT would have left the stage long ago.
Anyway,
as we all know, given the fact that they are still with us, it is not
surprising that large companies such as Google, Yahoo and Microsoft
having been denied the power of the free market to ensure the continued
neutrality of the internet - feel forced to turn to legislators to
prevent the artifically long-lived dinosaurs from messing it up.
"Foul" cry the dinosaurs - "...government stay out of this - let the
market decide!". Some market, I say!...
- Category(s)
- Regulatory & Legal
- Internet
Bull in a China Shop
An interesting telecoms news story broke last week which touches on the very heart of the OPLAN issue. It concerned PCCW
- Hong Kong's incumbent telecoms company. Like all such beasts,
in its home territory, PCCW is a vertically integrated business
comprising the local network infrastructure and a bag full of service
offerings ranging from plain old telephony through to broadband
internet and TV for the residential market and 'you name it' for the
corporate market.
Richard Li (younger son of legendry Li
Ka-shing, No 10 on the Forbes billionaire list) who put together PCCW
in the conventional vertically integrated mould, found that the company
never really took off and neither did its shares. So it was not
surprising that eagle-eyed private equity players (Australia's
Macquarie Bank and America's TPG-Newbridge) could see unrealised
shareholder value to the extent that they made an offer of HK$60
billion for all the assets - including the local network infrastructure.
Then
enter stage left, China Network Communications Group (China Netcom)
which owns 20% of PCCW and expresses concern at the possible deal which
would involve Chinese telecom infrastructure falling into foreign
hands. On July 10th, Francis Leung, a local tycoon, pops up with
an offer to purchase Richard Li's 23% stake in PCCW for HK$9.2 billion
($1.2 billion). China Netcom welcomed this with the
statement, "We think Francis Leung's participation can help PCCW
develop in a sustainable and healthy manner"....
- Category(s)
- General
'OPEN' as in 'OPEN' - or 'OPEN' as in 'CLOSED'?
Back in September last year when BT (British Telecom - the UK incumbent telecoms operator) announced that having reached agreement with Ofcom, the UK regulator, on the establishment of a separate infrastructure division, it would be called OpenReach, I thought, "Here we go again!"
Nobody is more masterful at redefining the English language than British Telecom and I take my hat off to them. Back in the early 1980s when the UK led the world in public policy aimed at fostering the development of ‘next genus’ broadband networks – the term ‘broadband’ was universally used to denote a minimum of 2 M/bits symmetrical capacity. Thanks to the drip, drip, drip persistence of BT (and the rest of the global telecoms cartel)and their remarkable success in influencing public policy and regulatory frameworks to shape the tempo and form by which the disruptive digital technologies of abundance are to be deployed, they have managed totally to redefine the term 'broadband' over the past two decades. It now means something that suits 'them' with their outdated copper local networks and not 'us' as end users. Broadband now equates to ADSL which offers (in whatever flavour) a mere fraction of the upstream capacity of that regarded twenty years ago as constituting 'broadband'.
ADSL is no more ‘broadband’ than their newly created access division is “OPEN”! There is a growing understanding and appetite for truly ‘open public local access networks’(OPLANs). Communities of all shapes and sizes around the world are beginning to plan and build OPLANs offering outrageously abundant bandwidth – access to and control of which, is not confined to the telecoms sector but is ‘open’ to all. If BT’s plans were to develop a truly ‘open access’ network – then the UK would lead the world but we all knew that was not their intention with either OpenReach or their 21st century network - which will do wonders for their shareholders and very little for users.
...
- Category(s)
- General
- Commercial & Financial
Bacon and Eggs
Three things engaged my attention yesterday. The most important was the informal gathering
of the working group on Broadband within the EUROCITIES Knowledge Society Forum -TeleCities,
to which I had been invited. Meeting
in Brussels it
was one of, if not the only, euro-gathering where the heat of the room
temperature outstripped the heat of the discussion! Indeed, it was a remarkably common-minded
gathering of officials from towns and cities across the EU who were united in
their desire to see their citizens benefit from an open public local access network or in some cases, were already
deriving the benefits of such an OPLAN.The
focus of the meeting was the European Commission’s Review of the
Regulatory Framework for Electronic Communications and the input to the
consultation on this which the TeleCities group and its constituent
members would in due course be making. The aim of such a
submission being to persuade the Commission of the immense potential
benefit to EU citizens of an open access strategy and the
‘unforeseeable’ social and economic benefit which such an approach
might yield.
The meeting had the benefit of a senior EU
official attending for part of the time, to outline the process and
principles behind this major review. Two things struck me about
this. Firstly, the very ‘framework’ itself is crafted and drafted
and embedded in the old paradigm - heavily influenced by listening to
powerful vested interests and incumbents. The EU Commission
constantly stresses that it is big on listening. Any
institution with such big ears – needs to find big voices to fill
them. And the telecoms and cable TV sector sure have big
voices! Secondly, the framework explicitly states that it will
pursue an ‘evolutionary rather than revolutionary’ approach – despite
also claiming that it is ‘technology neutral’. If that
isn’t a case of trying to make omelettes without cracking eggs – I
don’t know what is!...
- Category(s)
- General
- Regulatory & Legal



