Archive for January, 2009

Network Neutrality in Europe and the Ski Lift Line

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Source: WIK-Consult, photo courtesy of alexindigo, Flickr.com

Source: WIK-Consult, photo courtesy of alexindigo, Flickr.com

My study for the BNetzA (German telecoms regulator) on Network Neutrality in Europe has finally published.  (Don’t worry, it’s available in English).  In this study, we look at Network Neutrality – the catch-all phrase that emerged in the United States over the past decade to reflect a number of potential behaviors that some consider to be anticompetitive – and what the implications for European regulators might be.

The report reviews the economics that underlies the Network Neutrality debate, including price discrimination, network externalities, transaction costs, switching costs, two-sided markets, and the economics of vertical foreclosure. It also briefly reviews the technical aspects of quality differentiation for IP traffic (including packet delay, jitter and loss). It provides background on a number of alleged deviations in the U.S. (including Madison River and Comcast), and assesses the Network Neutrality concerns that have been raised in Europe (for example, by the BBC’s iPlayer). In the end, we conclude that Network Neutrality manifests itself very differently, and much less problematically, in Europe than it does in the United States.  The report also considers the ways in which the changes proposed to the European regulatory framework as part of the ongoing “2006 review” might strengthen the hand of European regulators, and at what cost.

Insight: Putting aside the regulatory analysis, I think that the two most important and far-reaching aspects of our analysis are the taxonomy of network relationships we created and the way we describe end-to-end latency in IP networks.  In order to describe the nature of relationships in an interconnected-multilateral-all-IP network world, we characterize relationships among network participants and service providers as being one three dimensions: vertical, horizontal, or diagonal. (See Section 2.3 in the report).  I am also very pleased with how we use ski lifts to explain of queuing and link delays in end-to-end latency. (See Figure 1 in the report).  It is my hope that these two approaches will make the debate more objective and approachable, and help to reduce the ever-present hyperbole.

Obama’s Inaugural Address and the Optimal Government

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

This past week, I watched, with great excitement the Inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President.  In the following days, a read and listened to many blogs and news accounts of his Inaugural Address, some touting it as an exemplary piece of oration and others calling it flat, especially in light of Mr. Obama’s skill.

There was, however, one passage which to my mind received too little attention:

The question we ask today is not whether our government is too big or too small, but whether it works, whether it helps families find jobs at a decent wage, care they can afford, a retirement that is dignified.

Where the answer is yes, we intend to move forward. Where the answer is no, programs will end.

And those of us who manage the public’s dollars will be held to account, to spend wisely, reform bad habits, and do our business in the light of day, because only then can we restore the vital trust between a people and their government.

Nor is the question before us whether the market is a force for good or ill. Its power to generate wealth and expand freedom is unmatched. (Source: NYT)

Insight: If Mr. Obama truly adopts this approach to government, then it represents a major step forward for the United States and the welfare of its people.  This efficiency frontier for government is something I have written about before in Cool Stuff (The Transition and Irish Broadband Forum).  Defining the contours of this efficiency frontier is the next generation of policy research and debate.  I commend Mr. Obama for taking a truly bipartisan approach to government (“I won” comments aside).

I wonder if this explains the hit I got on my blog from a Starbucks in Washington, DC.

One Year of Cool Stuff

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Today marks the first anniversary of Cool Stuff (in this incarnation).  In the past year, I have made 30 posts in 10 categories and 54 tags. There are a total of 41 comments.  Cool Stuff has garnered more than 1,600 hits, with the post on John McCain and Wi-Fi being far and away the most popular post.

Insight:  I have greatly enjoyed writing Cool Stuff and will try to devote a bit more time to it.  I get jazzed when I find that people are reading my blog and that it is helping to generate thinking about the next generation of issues in communications strategy, business, and policy.  I also think it is really cool when I get a Google search hit – especially when someone hits my blog when they were might not have exactly been looking for it.  To this end, I have created the Top Ten Google Hits on Cool Stuff (all of these are real search terms reported by the WordPress blog stats plug-in).  The Top Ten Google Hits on Cool Stuff are:

10.       “pusher prop airplane”

9.         ken carter aircraft

8.         hackintosh illegal

7.         ken carter’s wife

6.         unlicensed to kill: a brief history of t

5.         irish directions advice i wouldn’t start

4.         always be sincere, whether you mean it o

3.         cool shit for browning hi power

2.         fcc working paper science fiction

And the number one Google Hit on Cool Stuff is:

recommend stuff white people like.

One Word Oxymorons

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

We’re all familiar with the term oxymoron.  Oxymorons are a subset of the expressions called contradictions in terms. The definition of an oxymoron is a figure of speech that combines two normally contradictory terms. Oxymoron is a loanword from Greek oxy (‘sharp’) and moros (‘dull’); itself an oxymoron. In popular usage, the term oxymoron is sometimes used more loosely, in the sense of a simple contradiction in terms.

One of the most famous examples of colloquial oxymorons is jumbo shrimp.  The term Jumbo, coming from the name of P.T. Barnum’s enormous African Elephant, now synonymous with ‘large’ and shrimp has taken on the meaning of ‘small’.

Insight:  The other day I got to thinking whether is there a word so confused, so self-contradictory that it is its own oxymoron.  Well, I came up with two: naturalize and favorites.  Naturalize means literally, “to put into the state of nature;” however, to be in the state of nature means to be unaffected by human intervention.  The word favorite is itself a superlative, meaning something that one likes the best.  The word favorites is then a plural superlative, itself an oxymoron.