I've seen a lot of storm and fury on the list but little effective
discussion. Defending the status quo because it is what it is is not the
real discussion we need given the vast changes in technology and economics
over the past century or two.

I'm continuing to try to tease apart the issues. As with any decomposition
the choices come with an attitude but I'll try to be transparent so the
attitude can be challenged.


That Darn Internet.


First I'd like to know what we are talking about. What do people think "the
Internet" is and why do they think it has become so important?

In particular what policies will be more beneficial to society, the economy
and individuals and what policies are dysfunctional by these measures?

We do have a set of policies in place which date back to at least 1934 if
not a century before. Are policies applicable to analog communications and
telegraphy appropriate for today's digital technologies?

If there is agreement that the Internet is result of a dynamic set in motion
by freeing us to focus on the relationships between the end points and
telecom is all about the services defined in the middle and infrastructure
funded for the purposes of supporting those services then we have two
unrelated concepts. What does one have to do with the other? Why do we give
the 19th century approach gatekeeper control over the newer approach?

It would seem that a funding model for a services business limits the
Internet dynamic. I see this as similar to having a private road which
charges a very high toll for passage. What happens when the road owner's
policies threaten the economies of the towns along the road. This seems
analogous to today's situation. How should we resolve this conflict?


Business Models


As we've seen business models are not sacred. Sheet music gave way to
recorded music. The newspaper model is running into trouble. Charging
per-search for online searches no longer works - instead we use indirect
funding such as advertising.

Today's telecom is premised on funding by selling services. This model fails
if we no longer have to buy services but instead create them ourselves (or
buy them from third parties) using fungible bits. The capacity for carrying
bits using today's physical transport is very large and has been growing as
technology improves. Today that capacity is limited by business models that
take those raw materials and, in effect, converts it into a service.

Instead of copper which can carry gigabits for some distance and many
megabits over longer distances - we don't know the intrinsic limits - we
have DSL offerings at given low bits rates. Does it make sense to limit
ourselves to copper locked into the service model or should we have access
to the raw infrastructure? I've compared this with the idea of locking
computers into a service model rather than giving a third party software
business a chance to discover more value. Same for fiber and wireless.

What business models work for encouraging us to discover and take advantage
of the native capacity of the underlying physical infrastructure? (There is
also innovation in using bits but I'm trying to keep this simple).

What is the cost of path-dependent approaches as opposed to taking advantage
of any path available (as in running a fiber to an apartment vs using a
common bit transport0.

What models fail if we have a superabundance of capacity? What happens when
those dependent on the failing models have control of the capacity?

I've argued that we should have policies that give us the ability to
communicate with zero marginal cost. What are the barriers and/or benefits
to such policies?


Technology


If we do indeed go to an infrastructure model without QoS and the only
option is to add capacity rather than favoring any particular service what
problems does that cause? We've seen latency go down as capacity increased.
If the bit rate is much higher than necessary for a particular video service
then buffering would work very well. There would be no guarantees but then
the current system offers no guarantees either. In fact "best efforts" is
not entirely new - we can view statistical multiplexing as an early form.

What problems would arise if, by policy, we made such an infrastructure
available as a baseline at zero marginal cost?

We wouldn't prohibit companies from building their own but would very strong
favor using the common infrastructure. When/why would a company build and
maintain its own infrastructure (other than locally)?

For that matter do we need networks as such or will networks arise from our
ability to do our own networking using local facilities that interconnect
using common protocols without limiting ourselves to existing protocols?
Note that we don't need to use "bucket-brigade" approaches - we can have
spanning connections. If there aren't networks - just us using local
facilities, what kind of funding/business models are feasible?

http://frankston.com/public for answers to these and other exciting
questions.

 

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