> On Sep 17, 2020, at 9:24 AM, Mark Tinka <mark.ti...@seacom.com> wrote:
> 
>> For operators already offering FR/ATM services, it was a replacement, using 
>> the same principles of traffic separation over a common infrastructure, 
>> without encryption as part of the service. So from that perspective only, it 
>> was not much of a change for *existing* enterprise customers.
> 
> Indeed. But the difference with Frame Relay and ATM was that telco's never 
> called it a (V)PN. At worst, it was a leased line.

Private line was a common term for leased lines. Leased lines were not 
encrypted by the operator, AFAIK. This terminology morphed to virtual private 
line, Ethernet Private Line, virtual private LAN service (VPLS), etc.

"In telecommunication, a private line is typically a telephone company service 
that uses a dedicated, usually unswitched point-to-point circuit, but it may 
involve private switchingarrangements, or predefined transmission physical or 
virtual paths.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_line 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_line>

https://www.business.att.com/products/dedicated-internet/#/ 
<https://www.business.att.com/products/dedicated-internet/#/>

http://etler.com/docs/AT&T%20Pub/TR54077.pdf 
<http://etler.com/docs/AT&T%20Pub/TR54077.pdf>

https://business.comcast.com/enterprise/products-services/data-networking/ethernet-virtual-private-line
 
<https://business.comcast.com/enterprise/products-services/data-networking/ethernet-virtual-private-line>

VPN is a terminology consistent with past practices. It is P in all the ways 
discussed on this thread, and historically consistent (at least from a 
marketing perspective). Whether it is P enough is a reasonable discussion, 
everyone in I(C)T is going to be facing a wave of voter concern about privacy, 
IMO.

> Or someone else who might "capture" the operator, and thus, be able to 
> intercept it.

Good point.

> If gubbermints mandate that l2vpn's and l3vpn's be encrypted, the cloud bags 
> will simply take over (not that they haven't, already).

Torn between two lovers: Growing voter concern about privacy & longheld, and 
arguably increasing, desire to intercept criminal / terrorist communication. 
I’d actually be curious if any operators have received public sector pushback 
when they tried to implement encryption.

> 
> Mark.

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