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TATT considers OTT…again

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Above: Dr John Prince speaking at the TATT forum on OTT services on November 14, 2017. Photo by Mark Lyndersay. Click to enlarge.

BitDepth#1122 for December 07, 2017

In mid-November, the Telecommunications Authority of Trinidad and Tobago held another consultation on over the top (OTT) services, the technologies that ride on an open Internet and provide value for the digital channels that users pay for.

Among service providers operating locally, Digicel has been the most vocal in articulating a position that such services, particularly those which compete with the core telecommunications package, should pay a fee for their use of the bandwidth and infrastructure built out by providers.

At the core of these discussions is the issue of net neutrality, which has been overturned in the US by the FCC, prompting a not particularly restrained chorus of cheers over at Digicel.

CTO Secretary-General Shola Taylor speaks at the TATT forum on OTT. Photo by Mark Lyndersay.

The TATT discussion was convened under Chatham House rules by CTO Secretary General Shola Taylor, which is annoying if you happen to be an invited journalist.

In December 2014, TATT held consultations on the buyout of Columbus Communications by Cable and Wireless under Chatham rules as well, which allow attendees to make use of the information while not attributing it to a source.

Immediately afterward, Digicel released the speech given by Denis O’Brien at the event to the media, which was a bolder dance around the restrictions than I’d managed.

The conversations were managed across a range of topics, specifically the issues of licensing obligations, quality of service, taxes and jurisdiction, data protection and privacy, net neutrality, infrastructure investment, local content, emergency services and the provision of a Universal Service Fund.

Such divisions are a chimera. All of these issues emerge from the core principle of net neutrality, which pits the providers of the Internet’s hardware against the developers of its software and services.

Simon Fraser, representing the T&T Computer Society, was livid at both the tone of the conversations, which dominantly favoured provisions that fly in the face of net neutrality as well as the calmly dismissive tone that his objections were met with.

Fraser shared his speaking notes with me after the event.

He argues that in these discussions at the highest levels, there is no decisive statement of what constitutes an OTT service and the description has shifted from phone call replacements like Viber and Skype to include services like Facebook, Uber and Google.

Fraser worries that the scope will eventually encompass all services carried over the Internet and the chilling effect that will have on development and innovation.

“When a bunch of undergraduates can download a code base from GITHUB,” he said, “spend a few hundred hours and launch what is basically a global telecommunication company from their dorm room, the status quo is disrupted. And the genie is never going back into the bottle.”

“Balanced against these losses we must not forget the incalculable – and in my opinion far more significant benefits. I am thinking of Khan Academy. YouTube has more educational material than the top 1,000 universities.”

“Zero rating allows incumbents to privilege themselves and large partners. Let’s say that we allowed zero rating in 2003. Microsoft was the 800 pound gorilla at the time and could afford to pay for zero rating. If this happened would we still be using MSN Messenger?”
“Failure to support net neutrality can kill future innovations that we can’t yet imagine.”

Pricing according to Internet services by Portugal’s Meo. Click to enlarge.

Ro Kanna recently tweeted about Portugal’s Meo, a service provider that seems to be drifting in the worst case direction for Internet packages in a world unrestrained by the commons principles of Net Neutrality, Internet service packages that bundle OTT services for a fee.

Dr John Prince, CEO of TATT, gave opening remarks, but did not speak during the discussions, but in his speech, he offered a window into his thinking on the matters to be debated.

“We can’t stop them by regulation, so [Internet service] providers must respond by competing with the popular OTT providers,” Prince said.

“Clearly, OTT services are of great value to a wide cross section of the community. We cannot get involved in activities like blocking OTT. Block what? I am hoping that we will get assistance from the learned members of the CTO.”

These quotes come from my notes and do not appear in the official transcript of Prince’s planned speech for the evening.

There is need for rebalancing of pricing to meet revenue expectations and to pay for the cost of infrastructure maintenance and updates. TATT estimates the loss of revenue to OTT voice services between 2009 and 2020 to be as much as 90 per cent.

Fraser argues that while voice revenue is dying, data consumption is growing exponentially.

“Telecoms providers have mispriced their fast growing service with all you can eat pricing,” he notes.

“This causes a mismatch between revenue and capital expenditure that must be addressed.”

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Taran Rampersad
Taran Rampersad
6 years ago

The NICT plan calls for broadband penetration. In the spirit of that, I don’t think that they’re talking about making information unavailable – but rather, that it should be more widely available.

Sounds like the conversation once more is getting lost in the weeds. And also, that the real stakeholders aren’t getting a say – you know, people who use the Internet.

Us.

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