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The Future Of The Internet: Toll Booths or Lanes
NEW YORK (AP) - On the Internet, the traffic cops are blind - they don’t
look at the data they’re directing, and they don’t give preferential
treatment.
That’s something operators of the Internet highway, the major U.S.
phone companies, want to change by effectively adding a toll lane: They want
to be
able to give priority treatment to those who pay to get through faster.
Naturally, consumer advocates and the Web companies that would be paying
the toll are calling it highway robbery.
“Allowing broadband carriers to control what people see and do online would
fundamentally undermine the principles that have made the Internet such a success,” Vinton
Cerf told a Senate committee recently. Cerf, who played a key role in building
the Internet, is now the “Chief Internet Evangelist” at Google
Inc.
On the Internet, information is carried in “packets,” small chunks
of data. An e-mail might be divided into several packets and travel different
routes to the destination, much like cars have multiple ways of getting somewhere.
The packets may arrive out of order, a few even late, but data can be reassembled
to reconstitute the e-mail.
This design grew out of the military’s desire for a network that was
both simple and reliable. And as the Internet became more widely available,
this equal
treatment of traffic was part of what made it attractive; individuals, startups
and big corporations were on the same footing.
Now, however, the Internet is being used for things the engineers of the
1960s and 70s couldn’t have envisioned, like video, telephone calls and
Internet games.
It doesn’t matter if an e-mail gets where it’s going half a second
late, but a half-second’s delay in a phone call is annoying, and a half-second’s
delay in a fast-moving game can mean a missed shot.
Thus, the telecommunications companies want to be able to provide “tiered
service,” guaranteeing that, for a price, some packets will get to their
destination on time.
The carriers are under “tremendous pressure” from customers to
provide more reliable service, said Shawn White, director of external operations
at Keynote
Systems, Inc., which tracks the performance of Web sites and the Internet.
Brief delays, for instance, could result in stuttering video, unacceptable
to advertisers, White notes.
Whether they tier their service or not, telecommunications companies need
to expand capacity. To do so costs money, and the telecoms argue that Internet
users will have to pay, one way or another. They say it’s preferable
that the money come from those who need and are willing to pay for better service,
rather
than spreading the cost out over all users.
“We do have to recover the cost for building the new capacity out there
that the content providers are expecting us to provide,” said Jim Cicconi,
AT&T Inc.’s senior executive vice president of external and legislative
affairs.
AT&T already provides connections between offices of the same company, or
between government offices, using AT&T’s own lines rather than the
public Internet. This allows AT&T to guarantee a certain quality level.
By prioritizing packets, At&T could extend that service to the connection
between a Web site and a surfer at home.
To the opponents, abandoning the “network neutrality” principle opens
up the prospect of the carriers blocking sites that don’t pay up or that
compete with the carriers’ own services - for instance, by providing
phone calls.
The carriers have stoked those fears with some hard-line rhetoric. John Thorne,
Verizon Communications Inc.’s senior vice president and deputy general
counsel, was quoted by The Washington Post as telling a conference that Google “is
enjoying a free lunch that should, by any rational account, be the lunch of
the facilities providers.”
Ed Whitacre, AT&T’s chief executive, has raised eyebrows with similar
statements to the effect that Google and Yahoo Inc. are freeloading on the
Internet, a remarkable assertion considering both companies pay millions of
dollars in
Internet access fees, and their visitors pay for Internet access as well.
Brasil Telecom SA, Brazil’s third-largest phone company, said in mid-February
it had installed the first system that can identify information by type - say,
a voice call - and bill the company providing it, addressing what the company
calls “revenue leakage.” The company would not give further details
on its plans.
U.S. carriers are careful to point out that they don’t intend to block
anyone’s Internet access or degrade service.
“None of the worst scenarios people have painted here can take place nor
are they taking place,” Cicconi said, adding that the government would
stop any such abuse, as the Federal Communications Commission did in one case
where a phone company that provides internet services blocked a competing voice-over-Internet
company.
Also, competition among carriers means they won’t want to block sites
for fear of losing customers, Cicconi said.
Opponents say that even if toll roads leave the rest of the Internet unimpeded,
it will stifle innovation.
“The next great idea, the next Google or eBay or Napster or whatever, won’t
have the capital to get themselves in the fast lanes right away,” said
Ben Scott at Free Press, a nonprofit that promotes freedom of speech. “The
reason the big e-companies were so successful were that they started on the
same level playing field as everyone else.”
Another objection to packet prioritization is technical.
The Internet2 association assumed that prioritization was the way to go when
it started building a super-fast next-generation network connecting universities.
However, engineers abandoned that notion after a few years, concluding that
it’s
more effective simply to expand the network’s capacity for all traffic
- adding lanes to the highway instead of a parallel toll road.
The FCC has supported net neutrality in somewhat hedged terms, leading to
calls in Congress for a stronger defense of the principle to be included in
a future
telecommunications bill.
The telephone and cable companies are arguing against any such law, pointing
to the traditionally very light regulation of the Internet.
“The hands-off policy has given us the flexibility to innovate and respond
to consumer demand,” said Kyle McSlarrow, chief executive of the National
Cable & Telecommunications Association.
For the carriers, part of the attraction of a tiered Internet is probably
that they would get away from being a “dumb pipe.” They’re the
messengers, with the unglamorous job of passing along the data that others
produce and consume.
With tiered service, the carrier would become more important, and perhaps have
more pricing power.
“It’s very rational behavior in the industry. I would do the same
thing if I was paid by my shareholders,” Free Press’ Scott said. “But
rational market behavior doesn’t necessarily mean good public service.”
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