This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2001/1210bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Will the bits ever make
it home?
By
Scott Bradner
Network World, 12/10/01
The
Computer Science and Telecommunications Board of the National Academies of
Science has produced a careful study of the promises and difficulties inherent
in the pursuit of widespread broadband deployment. The board concluded that
such deployment would be good to have, but it won't be easy to get there.
Like
the board's previous endeavors, "Broadband: Bringing Home the Bits"
is on the Web.
The committee didn't have an easy time, in no small
part because the telecommunications world changed so much during the course of
the year and a half that it worked on the study. The telecom world was a lot
sunnier when the board started than when it finished.
The
committee compiled a number of key questions that needed to be addressed,
including:
* What
is broadband?
* Why
do people need it?
* How
much demand is there?
* How
important and urgent is the development of broadband?
* What
is the likely shape of broadband development in the coming years?
* Is
the pace of development reasonable and adequate, or are there failures that
necessitate intervention?
* How
will deployment be paid for?
* How
might the present policy regime for broadband be made more effective?
The
board provided answers to these questions.
In what I have read of the
report so far, the board seems to be just as puzzled as I've been about how a
company can actually make money as an ISP. The board warns that one tact ISPs
could take - getting into the content business and providing restricted
semi-Internet services - would be counter to the aim of the flexibility inherent
in today's Internet service.
One theme the report comes back to more
than once is that whenever regulations are felt to be needed - we can disagree
when they are actually needed - the regulations should be service-based, not
transport technology-based. What difference does it matter how Enhanced 911
(emergency phone service that reports the caller location) is done as long as
it provides the appropriate information, and why should regulations for coaxial
cables be different just because they are coaxial?
The board makes
seven specific recommendations, some of which have subrecommendations. I will
not go through all of them, but a few are worth highlighting.
In spite
of all the furor in Washington, D.C., the board writes it is too early to work
on a universal service plan for broadband. It's better to wait until we at
least know what broadband is. In a recommendation that is bound to be
controversial, the board says cable and phone infrastructures should be
regulated in the same way and not by forced unbundling.
All in all,
the report is an interesting piece of work. It would be good if the people who
asked for it (such as the U.S. government) actually follow its guidance.
Disclaimer:
The U.S. government does not even follow Harvard's guidance and the above book
report is my own rambling
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