By
Andrew Donoghue
Monday, April 21 2008 08:40 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,62040392,00.htm
The US telecoms giant AT&T has claimed that, without investment,
the Internet's current network architecture will reach the limits of its
capacity by 2010.
Speaking at a Westminster eForum on Web 2.0 this week in London, Jim
Cicconi, vice president of legislative affairs for AT&T, warned that the
current systems that constitute the internet will not be able to cope with
the increasing amounts of video and user-generated content being
uploaded.
"The surge in online content is at the center of the most dramatic changes
affecting the Internet today," he said. "In three years' time, 20 typical
households will generate more traffic than the entire Internet today."
Cicconi, who was speaking at the event as part of a wider series of meetings
with U.K. government officials, said that at least US$55 billion worth of
investment was needed in new infrastructure in the next three years in the United States
alone, with the figure rising to US$130 billion to improve the network worldwide. "We
are going to be butting up against the physical capacity of the Internet by
2010," he said.
He claimed that the "unprecedented new wave of broadband traffic" would
increase fifty-fold by 2015 and that AT&T was investing US$19 billion to
maintain its network and upgrade its backbone network.
Cicconi added that more demand for high-definition (HD) video will put
increasing strain on the Internet infrastructure.
He said: "Eight hours of video is
loaded onto YouTube every minute. Everything will become HD very soon and HD is
seven to 10 times more bandwidth-hungry than typical video today. Video will be
80 percent of all traffic by 2010, up from 30 percent today."
The AT&T executive pointed out that the Internet only exists thanks to
the infrastructure provided by a group of mostly private companies. "There is
nothing magic or ethereal about the Internet--it is no more ethereal than the
highway system. It is not created by an act of God but upgraded and maintained
by private investors," he said.
Although Cicconi's speech did not explicitly refer to the term "net
neutrality", some audience members tackled him on the issue in a
question-and-answer session, asking whether the subtext of his speech was really
around prioritizing some kinds of traffic. Cicconi responded by saying he
believed government intervention in the Internet was fundamentally wrong.
"I think people agree why the Internet is successful. My personal view is
that government has widely chosen to...keep a light touch and let innovators
develop it," he said. "The reason I resist using the term 'net neutrality' is
that I don't think government intervention is the right way to do this kind of
thing. I don't think government can anticipate these kinds of technical
problems. Right now I think net neutrality is a solution in search of a
problem."
Net neutrality refers to an ongoing campaign calling for governments to
legislate to prevent internet service providers (ISPs) from charging
content providers for prioritization of their traffic. The debate is more heated
in the United States than in the United Kingdom because there is less competition between ISPs in the
United States.
Content creators argue that net neutrality should be legislated for in order
to protect consumers and keep all Internet traffic equal. Network operators and
service providers argue that the Internet is already unequal and certain types
of traffic, VoIP for example, require prioritization by default.
"However well-intentioned, regulatory restraints can inefficiently skew
investment, delay innovation and diminish consumer welfare, and there is reason
to believe that the kinds of broad marketplace restrictions proposed in the name
of 'neutrality' would do just that with respect to the Internet," the U.S.
Department of Justice said in a statement last year.
The BBC has come under fire from service providers, such as Tiscali, which
claim that its iPlayer online-TV service is becoming a major drain on network
bandwidth. In
a recent posting on his BBC blog, Ashley Highfield, the corporation's
director of future media and technology, defended the iPlayer: "I
would not suggest that ISPs start to try and charge content providers. They are
already charging their customers for broadband to receive any content they
want."