In a message written on Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 08:31:21AM -1000, Paul Graydon wrote:
I'm curious how the feeling is on NANOG about shifting such provision towards municipal instead of corporations? I guess a rough summary of the competing views I've heard so far are:
If you look at the services going into most homes, what you find are monopolies. Some are government run, some are regulated monopolies, and there are now lots of hybrid models. The funamental issue is that it is not cost effective to anyone (governments, corporations, or citizens) to build multiple gas, water, sewer, electrical, telephone or television distribution systems to every home. Remember that when these services were invisioned and first deployed telephone and television did not compete. It is only in very recent times that we have been able to overlay Internet on both cable and television, and to have television competition via satellite. To that end, I think the US would be much better off with fiber to the home on a single distribution infrastructure. That could be owned and operated by the municipality (like the water system) or owned and operated by a corporation granted an exclusive right to service an area (think telephone, at least pre CLEC). Where you immediately run into a snag is the next layer up. Should the government provide IP services, if the fiber is government owned? Should private companies be required to offer competitors access to provide IP services if the fiber is privately owned? There's a lot of space inside these questions for different models, and I think there are at least a half dozen in play in different communities. Having looked around the world I personally believe most communities would be best served if the government provided layer-1 distribution, possibly with some layer 2 switching, but then allowed any commercial entity to come in and offer layer 3 services. For simplicity of argument I like people to envision the local government fiber agency (like your water authority) dropping off a 1 port fiber 4 port copper switch in your basement. On that device they can create a layer 2 VLAN/VPN/Tunnel from any of the copper ports to any provider in the town CO. You could buy video from one, voice from one, and internet from another, on three different ports. You could buy everything from one provider. The actual deployments are a bit more complex, but I actually think if in new construction we could drop telephone and coax in the neighborhoods, and deploy fiber to the home it would be cheaper to construct, cheaper to operate in the long term, and would end up giving consumers a lot more choice. It is for all those reasons I expect any established business to be firmly against it. -- Leo Bicknell - bicknell@ufp.org - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/