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copyright 2005 by Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction,
as long as attribution is given and this notice is included.
Misunderstanding the
fundamentals
By Scott Bradner
In mid-September the US House Energy and Commerce Commission
took its first shot at trying to set the ground rules for telecommunications
reform. The House Commission was
apparently trying to produce a more balanced starting point than the strongly
pro-carrier bill proposed by US Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.). (See Making Verizon
giddy http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2005/080805bradner.html) The bipartisan House effort was
spearheaded by three Republicans and two Democrats and does, in my opinion,
succeed in being a bit less of a ILEC rescue plan than Ensign's proposal but
since it gets some of the basics wrong it far too soon to tell if something
helpful will come out of it.
The new document
(http://energycommerce.house.gov/108/News/09152005_staff_disc.pdf) is a staff
discussion draft and, I hope, will undergo significant modification before it
gets formally introduced. This
draft proposes federal regulation of broadband data and video providers and of
VoIP providers that would preempt any state or local regulations. But the definitions in the draft are
somewhat funny.
According to the draft,
"broadband Internet transmission service" (BITS) is a service that
offers "the transmission of information in a packet-based protocol,
including TCP/IP protocol or a successor protocol, regardless of facilities
used." Likewise, a
"broadband video service" is a service that offers a "two-way,
interactive service" offered, with or without fee, to the public
"regardless of the facilities used" and "integrates, on a real
-time and subscriber customizable basis, a video programming package" and
"integrates the capability to access Internet content of the subscriber's
choosing. The draft also defines a
"VOIP service" to be a "packet-switched voice communications service
... effectively available directly to the public, regardless of the facilities
used; and enables a subscriber to send or receive voice communications ... over
a broadband transmission service to or from any subscriber with a telephone
number ... or other identification method as designated by the
commission."
The draft would require all BITS,
broadband video and VOIP service providers to register with the government
before they could offer service (there is a grace period for those providers
already in business).
What's wrong with this
picture? Note that none of the
definitions require a facilities-based service provider. All of these services can be offered
over any infrastructure that supports IP.
In theory, they could all be provided by service providers anywhere in
the world, as long as there is sufficient bandwidth in the communications
path. The draft does not seem to
understand this basic feature of the Internet. Also, the US has never required registration of Internet-based
service providers and such a move would have a big, and negative, impact on
service innovation. Based on the
current wording, Apple would have to register in order to provide iChat
service.
The draft does have good words
about BITS providers not getting in the way of subscribers use of the Internet
and to not "block, impair, or interfere with the offering of, access to,
or use of" Internet content or services and specifically permits
governments to offer these services to the public as long as they follow the
same rules as commercial providers have to.
If the House staff ever figures out how the Internet actually works and redoes the draft to separate regulation of physical plant from regulating, where actually required, services that use that physical plant we might be getting somewhere.
disclaimer: Harvard has schools who debate the need or non-need for regulations but I did not ask them about this article so the above separation plea is my own.