This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2012/112712-bradner.html
The
non-Internet that never was but might be
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
November 27, 2012 09:45 AM ET
Network
World - The Internet as we know it might never have happened if the Comite
Consultatif International Telephonique et Telegraphique (CCITT) had not turned
down the offer of TCP/IP from Vint Cerf and other Internet pioneers about 35
years ago.
Now
we are about to find out if the CCITT's successor organization, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), will
succeed in what many people see as an attempt to do now what it refused to do
all those years ago.
Take,
for now, as an assumption that the IETF would not have come into being if the
CCITT had accepted TCP/IP. Take, as well, the assumption that CCITT had
developed IP-based applications
using the same philosophy that CCITT (and its fellow telecommunications
standards development organization, the International Organization for
Standardization) have followed since their creation. CCITT and ISO, as a
general rule, develop carrier-centric technologies. Their architectural
assumption is that networks are brought to customers by telecommunications
carriers, and that those carriers also provide whatever network-related
services the customer might need (and the carrier decides what the customer
needs, not the customer).
In
a carrier-centric architecture, telephone companies provide directory and email
services rather than enterprises or third parties. In a carrier-centric
architecture, telephone companies are the sources of innovation. Imagine, if
you will, Tim Berners-Lee attempting to persuade a telephone company that there
might be a business opportunity in enabling physicists to use a mouse rather
than a keyboard to access information on network servers, or, for that matter,
that there was a business in network servers that did something other than
place telephone calls.
You
might ask why I bring this history and imagined alternate universe up right
now. Well, unless you have been living off-net for the last year or so you will
know that the ITU is about to convene the self-anointed World Conference on
International Telecommunications (WCIT) in Dubai. Among the hundreds of
proposals to revise the ITU's governing treaties are too many that would move
the Internet's operations or standardization under the auspices of the ITU,
and, in many cases, make significant changes in the way things currently work.
I mentioned
one of the proposals in this column a few weeks ago.
The
Internet, to date, is the only major area of international commerce that has
largely escaped regulation. While some of us may think that this has been a
much-needed vacuum, many governments strongly disagree. So it is reasonable to
worry that the outcome of WCIT will not be something that will make the
Internet better for its users.
While
it is too late for anyone to fully unwind the decades of Internet-driven
innovation, some of the proposals, if enacted, would do material harm to the
Internet we currently know. See the Internet Society's WCIT coverage
for more information.
The
ITU says that the people of the Internet have nothing to fear -- the ITU is not
trying to take over the Internet nor will it adopt anything that a member state
(country) disagrees with (see "WCIT12 myth
busting presentation"). Very few people outside of the ITU accept at
face value its claims of benign intentions. A number of its assertions of the
lack of worrisome proposals have been shown to be premature or inaccurate.
In
any case, we will know in a few weeks what rules the ITU is given to work
under, but it will take a lot longer to find out what the ITU will think it can
do under those rules.
Disclaimer:
Many parts of Harvard expose students to rule sets, but it is up to the
students to operationalize them. The university has not provided an opinion on
appropriate rules for the ITU nor on the ITU's ability to live within rules, so
the above opinion on the first of these is my own. We will have to see over
time about the second.
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