You are on page 1of 62

IP Telephony in India: Cost, Pricing and Regulation

A Project report
Submitted to

 
          
 
on Sept 5, 2000 in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the course

Infrastructure Development and Finance

by
   

        


    

        


  

Acknowledgements

We hereby acknowledge the contribution of the following people and resources to our project.


Professors Rekha Jain, G.Raghuram and Sebastian Morris for laying a foundation in the conceptual issues of infrastructure.

Bhagabhati Maharana ,Infoscian and Ajith .A.Mascarenhas, Doctoral candidate at the University of North Carolina ,U.S.A for providing an understanding of the technical aspects of IP Telephony.

The

Internet Telephony Consortium at MIT, USA whose conferences, publications, and

research in the field of VoiP have aided us, especially in the field of regulatory and economic issues. -Amit Dhingra Deepak Rajan Manish K.Sarswat Mudit Gera S.Prashanth

Executive Summary

The advent of the Internet has set in motion a fundamental shift in the way telephony is viewed. Traditional telephony or POTS (Plain Old Telephone Services) viewed voice as a continous stream of electrical signals to be delivered uninterrupted (circuit switched) from one end to another. Voice was the result of modulation and demodulation at either end. What the Internet has achieved is to provide an alternate form of carrying these signals, albeit at a much cheaper and in a more efficient form. This is through packetization of these data streams. This technology has its drawbacks in that the Carrier views these packets as data packets and is liable to treat them as such, which implies lost or delayed data packets, resulting in poor quality of voice. New technologies are available today, which have brought down Jitter, echo and latency to a more tolerable level. Worldwide, VoiP has already been commercialized as part of convergence offerings. This project aims to look at the applicability of IP telephony as a viable offering in India. The delivery channels identified are ISPs (who offer dial up connections), Cable (for its vast penetration) and Phone to Phone (Incumbents like VSNL and MTNL). We feel that the latter two are viable means of VoiP entry in India. Cable because of Multi media and convergence offerings on broadband which would become possible in the near future and Phone to Phone, wherein we feel that existing players would have an advantage as they would have to only replace the backbone, and not the end instruments, which signify a captured market. The project takes a look at regulatory issues, drawing parallels from regulatory ruling in the USA, which currently is in the most advanced stage of implementation and usage of VoiP.The issue of pricing VoiP is a very contentious one, as in the era of convergence, all manner of packets, i.e data, voice, video will compete for access on the same network, unlike a circuit switched network. This throws up questions of priority before pricing occurs.The model identified for pricing is based on the concept of Smart Markets originally proposed by Hal Varian and Mackie-Mason in 1994. This employs a bidding mechanism based on a Vickrey Auction. The costs of implementing such a system in India have been worked out and it is found that it would cost on an average 25% cheaper than existing POTS. We feel that in the context of Infrastructure development, this technology with its price and technical advantage could drive higher accessibility and thus easier flow of information across the country.

Table of Contents
What Is Packet Telephony?.......................................................................................................... 6
Carrier Applications ............................................................................................................................. 6 Enterprise Applications ........................................................................................................................ 6

Voice Over Internet Quality of Service (QoS) Issues.................................................................... 7


QoS defined........................................................................................................................................... 7 Delay...................................................................................................................................................... 7 Accumulation Delay (Sometimes Called Algorithmic Delay) .............................................................. 8 Processing Delay ................................................................................................................................... 8 Network Delay ...................................................................................................................................... 8 Jitter ...................................................................................................................................................... 8 Lost-Packet Compensation................................................................................................................... 9 Echo Compensation ............................................................................................................................ 10 The Unique Demands of Voice Traffic............................................................................................... 10

Table 1. Characteristics of Packet and Circuit Switched Networks .................................................11


Engineering Around Delay and Packet Loss...................................................................................... 11 Is Overprovisioning of Bandwidth a Solution for QoS ? .................................................................. 12 MPLS- The Need for Traffic Engineering ......................................................................................... 12 Differentiated Services (DiffServ or DS) ............................................................................................ 13 IPv6 ..................................................................................................................................................... 14

Latest Developments on Ipv6 ...................................................................................................................15


Challenges of IP Telephony ................................................................................................................ 18

CABLE IP TELEPHONY .......................................................................................................... 20


Cable IP telephony- Architecture....................................................................................................... 20 Cable IP telephony - The evolution to come....................................................................................... 22

Long Distance Service for ISPs.................................................................................................. 27


Deploying VoIP in an ISPs Network ................................................................................................. 28

Components of a H.323 Network ............................................................................................................31


Service Description ............................................................................................................................. 32

How the Service WorksCall Processing ............................................................................................32 Facilities embedded in the network:- ......................................................................................................33 Regulation: Legal and Policy Issues .......................................................................................... 35
US Scenario ......................................................................................................................................... 35 The Petition......................................................................................................................................... 36 The Proceedings .................................................................................................................................. 36
4

The Ruling........................................................................................................................................... 36 FCCs Report to Congress.................................................................................................................. 37

Stance of European Commission .............................................................................................................38 Stance of other Government/Regulators ................................................................................................40 Interoperability of IP Telephone ..............................................................................................................40 INTERNET TELEPHONY IN INDIA....................................................................................... 42
MODES OF PROLIFERATION ....................................................................................................... 43

THE ISP SCENARIO IN INDIA ............................................................................................................43


How would the future Indian IP Telephony market look like? ......................................................... 47

Retail Segment .............................................................................................................................................47 Corporate Segment .....................................................................................................................................47


Current Legal and Policy Concerns In India..................................................................................... 47 What lies ahead for the Incumbents?................................................................................................. 48

PRICING OF IP TELEPHONY ........................................................................................ 50


Cost of IP Telephony in India............................................................................................................. 52

Key Assumptions ........................................................................................................................................52


Results ................................................................................................................................................. 53

How cheap is IP Telephony compared to traditional telephony? .....................................................54 Major Hurdles ..............................................................................................................................................54 Possible Answers ........................................................................................................................................54
Exhibit 1: Cost estimates for connection for IP Telephony ............................................................... 55
VSNL Cost.......................................................................................................................................................55

Exhibit 2: Prevailing STD and ISD rates in India ............................................................................. 56 Exhibit 3: Comparison of prices of IP Telephony (PC to Phone) with Traditional Telephony prices (US prices for overseas telephony) ..................................................................................................... 57

Bibliography............................................................................................................................... 61

What Is Packet Telephony? There is a lot of confusion regarding packet telephony in two specific areas. First, packet telephony is not Internet telephones. Internet telephones are software packages sold predominantly to place telephone calls over the Internet. They are generally awkward to use and offer poor voice quality. Packet or IP telephony is the simultaneous and joined delivery of voice and data communications over a single, unified communications fabric based upon the Internet Protocol (IP). Packet telephony traffic will be delivered within the enterprise over an organizations intranet and outside the enterprise initially over a circuit-switched fabric. Over time, as corporations develop extranets with their trading partners and as those partners install interoperable packet telephony systems, corporations will deliver packetized voice end-to-end outside of the enterprise.

  
  
In the carriers, packet telephony is emerging as a key bypass technology. A new class of carriers, Internet telephony service providers (ITSPs), is building packet-based WAN networks to carry voice traffic. Even some traditional long-distance carriers are experimenting with packet-based WANs, primarily for service outside their regulated markets.

   
  
In the enterprise, packet telephony will emerge in applications where the value proposition can be clearly articulated. This is likely to begin with specific applications in large organizations applications utilizing the joined delivery of data and voice over a single infrastructure. Examples include next-generation call centers, new voice logging systems, and unified messaging: the joined receipt of voice mail and e-mail. Because of its radical technological departure, packet telephony will emerge at the fringe of organizations in value-added applications, not in the core premises telephony fabric. Much of packet telephonys present deployment is for toll bypass over WANs. Organizations are purchasing VOIP gateways to combine their phone and data infrastructures (or at least selected links in their infrastructures) primarily to high-tariff countries. Domestically, organizations with large branch office systems (such as banks) and a capillary data infrastructure to reach those branches are also exploiting the WAN data network to carry voice. In an odd reversal of the metaphor that sold T1 multiplexers for years (voice pays for the circuit;
6

data rides for free), these customers have already installed and justified their data networks and are using spare capacity to carry intra-corporation voice traffic. Over time, as the business justification shifts to increased employee productivity and effectiveness, packet telephony will infiltrate the LAN fabric. Several events need to occur to effect this change. Much of the high cost of installing a LAN-based telephony system today lies in the infrastructure components (as opposed to telephone handsets or other client equipment).

Voice Over Internet Quality of Service (QoS) Issues

   
Quality of service can be interpreted as the ability of a user of a specific application to obtain service with predictable performance over some reasonable period of time that permits the application to operate in an acceptable manner. Latency and dropped packets from congested links make it extremely difficult to provide such a predictable performance. In general, delivering QoS over the Internet depends upon two primary components: 1. The use of an explicit bandwidth reservation tool for reserving network resources tailored to specific application flows. The expectation for QoS to exist in parallel with a best-effort Internet for those who are willing to pay a premium for more predictable service quality. Thus it is imperative for network operators to utilize management tools like admission control to restrict access to reserved and conformant traffic only. 2. The routers must maintain control mechanisms to enforce preferred access to network resources for priority flows. Some of the problems associated with VoIP are discussed below in greater detail..

 
Delay causes two problems: echo and talker overlap. Echo is caused by the signal reflections of the speaker's voice from the far-end telephone equipment back into the speaker's ear. Echo becomes a significant problem when the round-trip delay becomes greater than 50 milliseconds. As echo is perceived as a significant quality problem, voice-over-packet systems must address the need for echo control and implement some means of echo cancellation. Talker overlap (or the problem of one talker stepping on the other talker's speech) becomes significant if the one-way delay becomes greater than 250 milliseconds. The end-to-end delay budget is therefore the major constraint and driving requirement for reducing delay through a packet network.
7

The following are sources of delay in an end-to-end, voice-over-packet call:

             


 
This delay is caused by the need to collect a frame of voice samples to be processed by the voice coder. It is related to the type of voice coder used and varies from a single sample time (.125 microseconds) to many milliseconds. A representative list of standard voice coders and their frame times follows:


G.726 adaptive differential pulse-code modulation (ADPCM) (16, 24, 32, 40 kbps) 0.125 microseconds

G.723.1 Multirate Coder (5.3, 6.3 kbps)30 milliseconds


   
This delay is caused by the actual process of encoding and collecting the encoded samples into a packet for transmission over the packet network. The encoding delay is a function of both the processor execution time and the type of algorithm used. Often, multiple voice-coder frames will be collected in a single packet to reduce the packet network overhead. For example, three frames of G.729 code words, equaling 30 milliseconds of speech, may be collected and packed into a single packet.

    
This delay is caused by the physical medium and protocols used to transmit the voice data and by the buffers used to remove packet jitter on the receive side. Network delay is a function of the capacity of the links in the network and the processing that occurs as the packets transit the network. The jitter buffers add delay, which is used to remove the packet-delay variation to which each packet is subjected as it transits the packet network. This delay can be a significant part of the overall delay, as packet-delay variations can be as high as 70 to 100 milliseconds in some frame-relay and IP networks.

 
The delay problem is compounded by the need to remove jitter, a variable inter-packet timing caused by the network a packet traverses. Removing jitter requires collecting packets and holding them long enough to allow the slowest packets to arrive in time to be played in the correct sequence. This causes additional delay. The two conflicting goals of minimizing delay and removing jitter have engendered various schemes to adapt the jitter buffer size to match the time-varying requirements of network jitter removal. This adaptation has the explicit goal of minimizing the size and delay of the jitter buffer, while at the same time preventing buffer underflow caused by jitter.
8

Two approaches to adapting the jitter buffer size are detailed below. The approach selected will depend on the type of network the packets are traversing. The first approach is to measure the variation of packet level in the jitter buffer over a period of time and incrementally adapt the buffer size to match the calculated jitter. This approach works best with networks that provide a consistent jitter performance over time, such as ATM networks. The second approach is to count the number of packets that arrive late and create a ratio of these packets to the number of packets that are successfully processed. This ratio is then used to adjust the jitter buffer to target a predetermined, allowable late-packet ratio. This approach works best with the networks with highly variable packet-interarrival intervalssuch as IP networks. In addition to the techniques described, the network must be configured and managed to provide minimal delay and jitter, enabling a consistent QoS.

!  "
    
Lost packets can be an even more severe problem, depending on the type of packet network that is being used. Because IP networks do not guarantee service, they will usually exhibit a much higher incidence of lost voice packets than ATM networks. In current IP networks, all voice frames are treated like data. Under peak loads and congestion, voice frames will be dropped equally with data frames. The data frames, however, are not time sensitive, and dropped packets can be appropriately corrected through the process of retransmission. Lost voice packets, however, cannot be dealt with in this manner. Some schemes used by voice-over-packet software to address the problem of lost frames are as follows:


interpolate for lost speech packets by replaying the last packet received during the interval when the lost packet was supposed to be played out; this scheme is a simple method that fills the time between noncontiguous speech frames; it works well when the incidence of lost frames is infrequent; it does not work well if there are a number of lost packets in a row or a burst of lost packets.

send redundant information at the expense of bandwidth utilization; this basic approach replicates and sends the nth packet of voice information along with the (n+1)th packet; this method has the advantage of being able to correct for the lost packet exactly; however, this approach uses more bandwidth and also creates greater delay

use a hybrid approach with a much lower bandwidth voice coder to provide redundant information carried along in the (n+1)th packet; this reduces the problem of the extra bandwidth required but fails to solve the problem of delay


    
Echo in a telephone network is caused by signal reflections generated by the hybrid circuit that converts between a four-wire circuit (a separate transmit and receive pair) and a two-wire circuit (a single transmit and receive pair). These reflections of the speaker's voice are heard in the speaker's ear. Echo is present even in a conventional circuit-switched telephone network. However, it is acceptable because the round-trip delays through the network are smaller than 50 milliseconds and the echo is masked by the normal side tone every telephone generates. Echo becomes a problem in voice-over-packet networks because the round-trip delay through the network is almost always greater than 50 milliseconds. Thus, echo-cancellation techniques are always used. ITU standard G.165 defines performance requirements that are currently required for echo cancellers. The ITU is defining much more stringent performance requirements in the G.IEC specification. Echo is generated toward the packet network from the telephone network. The echo canceller compares the voice data received from the packet network with voice data being transmitted to the packet network. The echo from the telephone network hybrid is removed by a digital filter on the transmit path into the packet network. Without appropriate design, this can wreak havoc on a telephone conversation. A number of techniques have been developed to address this problem. One technique is to use jitter buffers to smooth out the ebb and flow of packets. However, jitter buffers, which store a string of packets, introduce additional absolute delay.

# $ %    & 


 #

The legacy PSTN was engineered to optimize the transport of predictable analog voice traffic. Its centralized, circuit switched nature is not suitable for meeting the demands of large volumes of data traffic. Instead, voice is migrating onto distributed, packet switched networks such as those running IP, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM), and Frame Relay technologies. Circuit and packet switched networks have distinct differences, as shown in Table 1.

10

Table 1. Characteristics of Packet and Circuit Switched Networks Packet Networks Architecture Transport Bandwidth Distributed Circuit Networks Centralized

Packet/statistical multiplexing Circuit/time-division multiplexing (TDM) Broadband Narrowband Voice

Optimum Application(s) Multi-service

           
 ! 
Voice quality is significantly impacted by one-way network delays of anywhere between 100 and 200 milliseconds (ms), depending on the tolerance level of the individual. Contributors to delay include normal processing in a network, the distance between two communicating points, network congestion, and packet loss and retransmission delays. To successfully deploy toll-quality voice services over packet infrastructures, service providers must engineer their networks in a way that ensures that latency does not exceed the 200 ms end-to-end, one-way maximum. To accommodate a wider scope of users, keeping latency below 100 ms is preferable. Packet loss should remain under 3 percent, with 1 percent packet discard preferable. Consistently achieving these metrics requires equipment with integrated Quality of Service (QoS) mechanisms for prioritizing, queuing, and reserving bandwidth for delay-sensitive traffic. Among these mechanisms are standards-based options such as DiffServ, Int-Serve, Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP), and Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS). These technologies enable service providers to enter into service level agreements (SLAs) with their customers to guarantee certain network metrics so that users are assured that their applications will perform well over the network. Some of them are discussed below in the study. Simply over-provisioning bandwidth to the point of eliminating any network congestion is another approach to controlling these metrics. The expense associated with this alternative, however, can negate the cost savings of deploying an integrated IP infrastructure. In addition, the extra bandwidth will only suffice until traffic volumes increase. Traffic engineering and performance monitoring provide a more economical option for controlling network performance.

11

' () )    *          +


The simplest and the most obvious solution to provide better service quality to meet the complex demands is to deploy ample bandwidth in the core to keep ahead of the demand curve. This motivation has necessitated the constant upgrading of backbone fiber links by core transit providers. However, this strategy of deploying an increased number of higher data rate channels over fibre has not satisfied the hunger for bandwidth- in fact the demand has grown so as to consume the bandwidth available. Overbuilding networks is a highly capital intensive solution that may not continue to scale in a world where the cost of bandwidth is declining more dramatically than the network transmission costs. Before companies can migrate to critical business applications on the internet, a new set of traffic management tools is required to align the bandwidth requirements of more varied traffic types with the physical resources that the network can provide. These requirements create the underpinnings for the emergence of traffic engineering and the QoS. While overprovisioning can relieve congested traffic arteries, it delivers no tightly encompassing mechanisms for guaranteed service level agreements (SLAs) encompassing delay intolerant applications.

,!" #    #


   
The IP was created as a connectionless network layer protocol that makes no attempt to discriminate the various application types. IP uses traditional interior gateway protocols to advertise and build a database of all active links within a routing domain. Successful operation of these networks depends upon the same distributed network state information being disseminated and consistently maintained by all routers within the same autonomous system. Each router uses the same global state information to independently develop its own forwarding table using the shortest path constraint based metrics. As a result, the traffic is concentrated on a small number of optimized data paths to the detriment of other links, which frequently remain underutilized. To accommodate highly interactive application flows with low delay and packet loss thresholds, there is a clear need to more efficiently utilize the available network topology. The process

12

whereby this is accomplished is known as traffic engineering and Multi Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) provides these capabilities. MPLS traffic engineering attempts to correct the inefficiencies of typical datagram routing protocols by more evenly spreading the flow of traffic across all available resources. Reengineering a conventional datagram network based solely on Layer 3 cost-based metrics can be both expensive and inefficient as network re-convergence times are higher and it means moving all data flowing across a link to an alternate path. In an MPLS traffic engineered path, when a more desired route becomes available, some labels associated with certain traffic classes may be assigned the optimal path while delay-intolerant service classes may remain behind on the original link. Through more precise balancing of various traffic engineering mechanisms, MPLS provides an extensive array of tools for more precise balancing of flows of different size and application priority across the most lightly loaded network links. The goal of traffic engineering is to increase through put across a network while concurrently decreasing congestion. As a result, the preferred paths in the new networks may not be synonymous with the shortest cost paths. Ina coat competitive market for bandwidth, MPLS provides an effective tool for increased network utilization and yields economies of scale and relative cost advantages for service provider.

   )
 )  
Differentiated Services (DiffServ, or DS) is a protocol for specifying and controlling network traffic by class so that certain types of traffic get precedence - for example, voice traffic, which requires a relatively uninterrupted flow of data, might get precedence over other kinds of traffic. Differentiated Services is the most advanced method for managing traffic in terms of what is called Class of Service (CoS). Unlike the earlier mechanisms of 802.1p tagging and Type of Service (ToS), Differentiated Services avoids simple priority tagging and depends on more complex policy or rule statements to determine how to forward a given network packet. An analogy is made to travel services, in which a person can choose among different modes of travel train, bus, airplane - degree of comfort, the number of stops on the route, standby status, the time of day or period of year for the trip, and so forth. For a given set of packet travel rules, a packet is given one of 64 possible forwarding behaviors known as per hop behaviors (PHBs). A six-bit field, known as the Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP), in the Internet Protocol (IP) header specifies the per hop behavior for a given flow of packets.

13

Differentiated Services and the Class of Service approach provide a way to control traffic that is both more flexible and more scalable than the Quality of Service approach.

')IPv6 (Internet Protocol Version 6) is the latest level of the Internet Protocol (Internet Protocol) and is now included as part of IP support in many products including the major computer operating system. IPv6 has also been called "IPng" (IP Next Generation). Formally, IPv6 is a set of specifications from the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). IPv6 was designed as an evolutionary set of improvements to the current IP Version 4. Network host and intermediate node with either IPv4 or IPv6 can handle packet formatted for either level of the Internet Protocol. Users and service providers can update to IPv6 independently without having to coordinate with each other. The most obvious improvement in IPv6 over the IPv4 is that IP addresses are lengthened from 32 bits to 128 bits. This extension anticipates considerable future growth of the Internet and provides relief for what was perceived as an impending shortage of network addresses. IPv6 describes rules for three types of addressing: uni-cast (one host to one other host), anycast (one host to the nearest of multiple hosts), and multi-cast (one host to multiple hosts). Additional advantages of IPv6 are:


Options are specified in an extension to the header that is examined only at the destination, thus speeding up overall network performance.

The introduction of an "anycast" address provides the possibility of sending a message to the nearest of several possible gateway hosts with the idea that any one of them can manage the forwarding of the packet to others. Anycast messages can be used to update routing tables along the line.

Packets can be identified as belonging to a particular "flow" so that packets that are part of a multimedia presentation that needs to arrive in "real time" can be provided a higher quality-of-service relative to other customers.

The IPv6 header now includes extensions that allow a packet to specify a mechanism for authenticating its origin, for ensuring data integrity, and for ensuring privacy.

14

Latest Developments on Ipv61

WorldCom Inc. is testing IPv6 within its own VBNS (very-high-performance Backbone Network Service). The company runs a nationwide native IPv6-over-asynchronous transfer mode section on the VBNS at speeds of 155M bps. Right now, the driving force toward IPv6 is increased addressing space, especially as Internet-enabled devices become prevalent. Under the IPv4 specification for Internet traffic, which uses a 32-bit addressing scheme, it is to run out of IP addresses eventually. The 128-bit addressing scheme of IPv6 is enough to dedicate many thousands of IP addresses for every square inch of the Earths surface. Sprint and the '6bone' network Sprint Corp., for its part, hopes to get an early jump on the move to IPv6 through experiments with the "6bone" network -- a network put in place by industry groups to run early versions of IP v6. The company operates its portion of the 6bone network running IPv6 traffic exclusively as a "tunnel" within its Internet backbone. Sprint currently provides IPv6 connections to about 70 research, government, academic and corporate entities. Sprint is also looking to IPv6 as the vehicle for far higher levels of service security and performance, he said. For instance, IPv6 was engineered to include built-in support of QOS, DiffServ (Differentiated Services) and IPSec (IP Security). IPv4 includes none of those functions as a uniform part of the standard. Despite the work being done with the specification, commercial availability of IPv6 software and services isnt expected until next year at the earliest, after networking companies such as Cisco Systems Inc. begin implementing the technology in core products.

Evolution of Market in the United States The market for Internet Telephony was largely created by VocalTec's Internet Phone, introduced in February 1995. These first-generation Internet Telephony products were characterized by the fact that users on both ends of the conversation are required to have Internet connected computers with compatible software to convert voice into data packets. To locate people on the Internet, most applications use an scaled down LDAP (lightweight directory access protocol) directory service that allows an e-mail address to be mapped to the users current IP
1

www.zdnet.com, July, 2000 15

address -- user must logon to the LDAP directory each time they connect to the Internet. Since that time, there has been a significant increase in offerings of Internet Telephony software from many vendors. VocalTec claims there have been over 600,000 downloads of its test software since its introduction. While these applications vary in sound quality, using 28.8 Kbps modems on both ends can provide sound quality comparable to a regular phone call most of the time, international calls tend to have lower quality. According to the research group Frost and Sullivan, the concept of IP Telephony has evolved from the initial use popularized by VocalTec into the following five areas: 1. Voicemail: Non-real-time audio communication where one person sends a voice message to another person. 2. Fax: Near real-time and store-and-forward data communication between two users. 3. Voice telephony: Real-time audio communication between two or more users. 4. Desktop videoconferencing: Real-time audio-visual communication between two or more users, where each user can see the others on a computer screen. 5. Application sharing and document sharing: The sharing of software applications and documents, in real time, by at least two users (application sharing); the sharing of documents, in real time, by at least two users (document sharing). Document sharing is different from application sharing in that no user can take control of someone else's application. Every participant can view and modify the document using his or her own application. (Network Computing, NC-C, NC-S, NetPC) As described above, the first three areas have been traditionally functions of voice networks and were services performed by PBX type telephone switches. The last two areas have been applications promoted as tools used by GroupWare electronic collaboration and real-time conferencing applications. Groupware and group collaboration products tend include IP Telephony features. Netscape Communicator and Microsoft's NetMeeting are freely available on the Internet; as end-users start experimenting with the applications, the Internet will see an increase in the use of IP Telephony. The FCC has decided that these first-generation PC based IP Telephony applications are enhanced service products, not subject to regulation. In 1996 VocalTec introduced the second generation of IP telephony products by marketing a gateways product that would allow for the translation of Internet domain IP addresses with voice network telephone numbers. The gateway products allow for a call originating on an Internet connected PC to be terminated at an analog based telephone; typically an integration of an Internet
16

based LDAP directory with the telephone system's SS72 call processing protocol. In 1997, the International Multimedia Teleconferencing Consortium adopted the H.3233 conferencing standard as the standard for Internet telephony. These second-generation products tend to revolve around PBX telephone systems that operate as gateways to the Internet with the Virtual IP network being treated as another long-distance carrier in terms of least-cost call routing. Gateways consist of three parts: 1. Codec -- software that typically runs on a dedicated PC and handles the packetization, compression, and decompression of voice calls. 2. Line Interface -- interconnects with either a company's PBX (Private Branch Exchange) or the PSTN (public switched telephone network.) 3. Session Management -- manages the connection between gateways In a corporate environment, when the user dials a number in another city, a setup message is sent to the local PBX, which in turn sends the message to the gateway. The local gateway consults a lookup table to locate the IP address of the remote PBX's gateway. The two gateways establish a session and the remote PBX is requested to complete the call. As the remote telephone rings, the gateways run voice traffic through the codec and sends voice packets to the appropriate gateway. Examples of Internet telephony gateway web sites: Lucent Technologies (http://www.lucent.com/) Internet Telephony Server RADvision Ltd. (http://www.radvision.com/l2w323.html) L2W-232 Vocaltec Ltd. (http://www.vocaltec.com/) Vocaltec Telephony Gateway One of the major problems of a public Internet telephony system is how to share costs between users and providers. Telecommunication carriers such as MCI Worldcom can purchase unbundled elements from Local Exchange Carriers and resell them to ISPs and other large customers through their UUNet service.

Third-generation IP Telephony products will provide Gatekeeper functionality that allows for transparent translation between IP addresses and International Direct Distance Dial (IDDD)

Traditional circuit-switched voice networks currently that typically use SS7 switching protocols.

H.323 is a comprehensive International Telecommunications Union (ITU) standard for multimedia communications (voice, video, and data) over connectionless networks that do not provide a guaranteed quality of service, such as IPbased networks and the Internet. It provides for call control, multimedia management, and bandwidth management for point-to-point and multipoint conferences

17

telephone numbers, as well as a settlement system that will allow revenues to be split between sending and receiving gateways. A computer connected to the Internet will be able to receive a voice telephone call, without a second telephone line and without the end-user disconnecting from the ISP. Because of efficiencies in the data network over the voice network, it is estimated that ISPs would be able to earn twice the profits from a voice call as from a data call and still be competitive with long-distance carriers. Several companies are providing gateway and gatekeeper services between. The Public Switched Network and the Internet and are: Delta Three (http://www.deltathree.com/) Net2phone (http://www.net2phone.com/english/) RSL Communications Delta Three service is available in 16 countries

(http://www.rslcom.com/)

    ' #  


Since IP packets carrying voice are treated just like IP packets carrying any other type of data, they are subjected to delays, loss, and retransmissions. This is especially true when the network is congested. The quality of service becomes very important issue. Losing every other words of the phone call can make the call essentially worthless. IP telephony is facing the following challenges:


Unpredictable service quality, which relates to quality of service and reliability. Real-time applications set high requirements on the reliability and quality of service capabilities of IP networks. Protocols and techniques to ensure this must be developed. Until these techniques are widely deployed and supported by most networks, over-provisioning or proprietary methods in private IP networks remain the only way to ensure the required QoS.

Datacom and telecom convergence related complex system integration, Network Management Systems (NMS) integration, Customer Care and Billing (CCB) systems integration, and diversity in the marketplace. IP telephony equipment consist of new network elements that need to be integrated into the corporate, and teleoperator's or service provider's network. Both physical and logical integration to the other network elements are required, as well as integration to the vital operation support systems such as maintenance, provisioning, and billing systems.

18

Lack of interoperability because a single waterproof standard does not exist. There are several competing or partially overlapping standard proposals. Current IP telephony standards only ensure interoperability within a single IP telephony subnetwork. The communication between gateways or gatekeepers from different vendors remains to be standardized.

Regulatory development will have a major impact on IP telephony. In most countries IP telephony is still unregulated but the regulatory authorities are monitoring the situation closely.

Inertia in the legacy networks, large investments tied in legacy technologies, and people are accustomed to the old services. There is inertia in the traditional telecom services.

19

CABLE IP TELEPHONY

.  '   " 


 

In cable networks, both circuit-switched and IP technologies are overlaid onto a hybrid fiber/coax (HFC) network, which uses optical fiber for signal distribution along trunks or between cable headends. Fiber's resistance to noise and low signal attenuation drove its acceptance as a preferred trunk medium in cable networks. As fiber became more prevalent, its costs decreased, which helped extend it further into the cable network. Today, a common configuration for larger service providers is a star-star-tree topology. In this design, fiber extends from the headend to hubs in the first star layer, and then from hubs to fiber nodes in a second star layer. The final layer begins with optical to electrical conversion at the fiber nodes and continues with sets of coax tree branches from the fiber node to the subscriber. Adding circuit-switched telephony to an HFC network requires three network elements: a telephony switch, a network interface unit (NIU) and a host digital terminal (HDT). Their placement in an HFC cable network is shown in Figure 1.
Video Signal Processing at headend NIU Fiber Public Network

Telephony Switch HDT

Coax
HDT: Host digital Terminal HFC: Hybrid Fiber Coax NIU : Network Interface Unit

Fiber Node

Optical-Electric Conversion

Fiber

Figure 1: HFC switched telephony Network

Information Source: Cable Datacom News, www.kineticstrategies.com

20

The functions of a telephony switch can be grouped into three categories: call processing, call routing and feature provisioning. Call processing and call routing set up a path through the public network between parties when a call is initiated. Enhanced capabilities such as call screening are provided from the digital switch through the HFC telephony network. Associating these feature capabilities with an originating line is an important part of the switch's function. Switch software can also provide call forwarding, call transfer, call waiting and call conferencing. In telephony, the NIU is the demarcation point between subscriber-owned equipment and equipment owned and maintained by the service provider. The NIU has outgrown its traditional role as a passive termination point. Although it still terminates the cable company's coax plant at the customer premises, it must also provide:
     

Twisted pair termination for telephony. Analog-to-digital conversion and vice versa for voice telephony. Packetization of digital information. RF modem. Diagnostics. Dial tone and ring generation.

As the interface between a cable distribution system and the telephony switch, the HDT acts as a digital multiplexer. It provides T-1/E-1 links to the telephony switch at 1.544 Mb/s and accepts 64 kb/s digital signals from lines on the subscriber side, usually in a T-1/E-1 format. Most vendors have designed the HDTs with an open interface to the telephony switch, allowing the service provider to choose different vendors for the switch and the HDT. On the subscriber side, however, the connection to the NIU is proprietary, requiring the cable operator to purchase both the HDTs and NIUs from the same vendor. Having an open interface to the switch also enables a cable operator to obtain telephony switching from another company through alliances or leasing agreements, so the operator doesn't need its own digital switch in the early stages of telephony offerings.

21

.  '    " # )  



Certainly, the existence of these technical issues does not mean that IP telephony will never reach dominance or that operators shouldn't implement it in the short term. To the contrary, visionary service providers can develop an IP telephony strategy that applies packet technology in parts of the network when and where it makes sense. One solution is to creatively locate gateways in an operator's network. For example, a gateway at the subscriber's location could be part of a long-term strategic deployment, based on the evolving standards previously discussed. On the other hand, gateways at the network side of a telephony switch make sense now. Such architecture enables a service provider to offer cost- and quality-based service options, using the switch to choose routes through either the public network or the Internet. As the feature servers are developed and installed, service providers could add gateway functionality at either the HDT or the NIU. The result will be an integrated IP/circuit-switched telephony architecture (Figure 2).

Gatekeeper 1

INTERNET Gatekeeper 1 Gateway Gateway Public DataNetwork

*
MCU HDT

*
HDT MCU

HFC

Digital Switch

Public Network

Digital Switch

HFC

Gateway

NIU

Gateway

NIU

POTS

VOIP

TV

Terminals

POTS

VOIP

TV

Policy Based Routers

Figure 2 : An integrated IP/circuit-switched telephony architecture

Information Source: Cable Datacom News, www.kineticstrategies.com

22

In fact, because the NIU can be remotely provisioned, vendors will likely build gateway functionality into the NIU. This will allow operators to select whether a subscriber line is provisioned to route via the IP network or the public network without a truck roll dispatch. This flexibility will allow cable service providers to offer circuit-switched service today and voice over IP when the supporting infrastructure is in place. Without a doubt, this evolutionary journey will bring creative and unique solutions to the networks of tomorrow.

Standards and their evolution There are predominantly two cable modem standards that operate in the cable industry. DOCSIS, which is the standard in North America and in other International markets, and DVB/DAVIC EuroModem, which is an emerging standard in Europe .Of these standards, DOCSIS is the standard used by a majority of cable modem vendors worldwide. The North American cable industry developed the DOCSIS standard to create a competitive consumer market for cable modem equipment. Seeking to capitalize on the most obvious service opportunity -- delivering high-speed Internet access -- the DOCSIS 1.0 standard was designed as a cheap consumer Web-surfing platform. While well-suited for its intended application, DOCSIS 1.0 does not provide all of the QoS and latency controls required to offer toll-quality IP voice services. A team at AT&T Labs identified three key items that must be added to DOCSIS 1.0 to support toll-quality telephone calls: upstream packet fragmentation and reassembly techniques, support for a national clock, and an advanced isochronous scheduling system. Because DOCSIS products employ an asymmetric architecture, offering 27 Mbps of downstream capacity and typically less than 1 Mbps upstream, packet fragmentation is required to avoid upstream congestion that impacts call quality. Specifically, the largest Ethernet packet size is 1500 bytes. Thus, sending this full-size packet upstream over a 768-Kbps cable modem would take about 15 milliseconds, straining the delay budget for a packet voice call. Using fragmentation techniques, these large data packets are broken into smaller ones to prevent unacceptable transmission delays.

23

The second item, a national clock, is necessary to properly synchronize transmissions between cable modems on the network. The final enhancement is adding a high-quality isochronous scheduler to headend-based DOCSIS cable modem termination system (CMTS) equipment. Because the DOCSIS 1.0 standard was designed as a consumer Internet access platform, system latency can run in the 50 to 70 millisecond range. While this window is fine for Web surfing, it seriously impacts packet telephone call quality. To support packet telephony, CMTS vendors must offer an isochronous scheduling solution closer to a two-millisecond time scale. In the proposed PacketCable architecture, a range of DOCSIS 1.1-based client devices will support IP telephone connections, including cable modems, digital set-tops and media terminal adapters (MTAs), standalone devices that link telephone handsets to the cable data network. All of these devices can be served in the same cable spectrum by a single DOCSIS CMTS. Vendors expect that the addition of IP telephony support will only increase the cost of a DOCSIS 1.1 cable modem by 20 to 30 percent. Thus, an integrated cable modem and PacketCable MTA could be priced as low as $250. Building DOCSIS 1.1 headend and client products with IP telephony support is not easy. But an even greater challenge, according to cable operators and vendors, is efficiently provisioning and managing the devices once they are installed on the network. Additionally, engineering disparate local cable data systems and backbone networks to offer high end-to-end IP voice quality is not trivial. This means voice packets need to be specially identified and given priority by the CMTS, routers and switches as they traverse the network. As a starting point, many cable operators favor initially deploying IP telephony merely as a localloop bypass service. In this scenario, voice packets would be transferred directly from the CMTS to an IP telephony gateway, and then onto the public switched telephone network (PSTN). This would enable cable IP telephony users to place and receive calls without using the incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC). The ultimate goal of many MSOs is to also offer long-distance IP telephony over their packet backbone networks. For example, a residential cable IP telephony customer served by Comcast in Philadelphia might call another cable IP telephony customer served by Time Warner in Los Angeles. The packet calls could be carried nationwide at very low cost without ever touching

24

a telephone company network. MSOs are currently evaluating options to enter into backbone interconnection arrangements that would make such a solution viable. Using IP, cable operators hope to create an integrated multi-service communications platform that operates on a lower cost structure than existing circuit-switched alternatives, enabling aggressive service price discounting without sacrificing margins. Besides undercutting competitors, MSOs hope the flexibility of IP networks will allow them to deliver a host of unique value-added features, such as integrated voice mail and e-mail messaging and the real-time provisioning of additional phone lines without rewiring a home

Players like AT&T Corp., after deciding to back a fast-track approach to cable industry protocols supporting IP telephony over cable networks, late last year signed off on a voice services expansion plan for their own cable systems that puts off the transition to IP well into next year, if not later. The reason they gave in making their decision public was that routers just werent ready for the job.4

Where the total per-customer cost of provisioning voice over a system provided by Arris, a joint venture between Antec Corp. and Nortel Networks , has been about $890 at the outset of the company's first voice service deployment in California, it is anticipated that the

cost will fall to about $590 by the quarter of this year. This is predicted in the context of new players, including Lucent Technologies Inc and Motorola Inc.

It is believed that one key reason that the IP solution will eventually prove more cost effective is that the premises-mounted network interface units that support IP voice over cable

will use the cable modem technology that is also used for high-speed data, thereby eliminating the cost of the separate modem that's required for current voice customers who want high-speed data.

One of the cable companies taking issue with AT&T as to how ready the IP platform is for commercial deployments is Comcast Corp. has begun testing VoIP services in New Jersey., using the PathStar access router/server supplied by Lucent. Comcast's trial is taking advantage of

www.soundingboardmag.com, June 2000 25

the PacketCable specifications to deliver multiple lines of toll-quality service, complete with all the features customers get from the telephone companies.

DiffServ and MPLS have emerged as the key to QoS in IP routing, with DiffServ used to identify traffic flows within pre-set classes so that bit streams are aggregated and treated

according to the class specs on a per-hop basis from router to router. MPLS is applied on a systems-wide basis using labels assigned at Layer 3 to create label-switched paths, thereby affording carriers a means of maximizing traffic flow efficiency across the network in accordance with the assigned priorities.

Further buttressing the case for router-based telephony is the emergence of terabit routers, which are designed to aggregate all forms of IP traffic across the backbone at speeds that are high enough to allow carriers to fully exploit the carrying capacity of optical networks. Avici is supplying terabit routers for testing by various carriers, including Deutsche Telekom AG, GST Telecommunications Inc. and MCI WorldCom Inc. with plans to begin delivering product for commercial deployment in the second quarter. The system is designed to scale from single modules operating at 2.5gbps to an array of multiple modules seamlessly interconnected to deliver aggregate throughput of up to 5.6 terabits per second.

Terabit routing will also play a fundamental role in expanding the efficiency of the cable industry's play in IP telephony. Once the zone-to-zone specifications for cable IP telephony are established in version 1.1 of the PacketCable standard, cable companies will be able to interoperate with each other's IP voice services directly across IP backbones, avoiding the intervening steps of converting signals to ATM or switched circuit formats.

26

Long Distance Service for ISPs Increasing competition and worldwide deregulation are opening up new opportunities for Internet service providers (ISPs) to enter the lucrative voice market. Killen and Associates has estimated the worldwide voice over IP (VoIP) long distance services market to be worth $9.4 billion by 2002. ISPs can leverage their existing data infrastructure and subscriber bases to deliver carrier-class long distance voice services over low-cost Internet Protocol (IP) networks. With minimal upgrades to their existing IP networks, ISPs can carry voice traffic over packet networks, opening the door to a variety of new services. ISPs can use a voice-enabled Cisco access server as the VoIP gateway to offer carrier-class domestic and international phone calls and real-time fax transmissions. Subscribers can make long distance calls from home or office using their regular telephone or fax machine, or they can call from other locations by entering an account number or password. An ISP can gain the following advantages by offering long distance service: Provide a new service beyond Internet access. Increase revenue from existing points of presence. Expand their customer base. Bundle voice and data services for greater differentiation. Leverage lower-cost IP infrastructure with voice compression and silence suppression to offer various competitively priced voice services. After the IP infrastructure has been enabled for voice, ISPs can begin to offer value-added services such as voice mail, unified messaging, Internet call waiting (alerting users to incoming voice calls while on line) and virtual second line (ability to make and receive voice calls from the users PC). These services can greatly increase the ISPs revenue streams from Internet access subscribers. The specific service described is a retail voice and fax offering to an ISPs residential and business subscribers. Off-net calls are handed off to a traditional long distance provider at discounted rates. Billing is usage based. Many other service variations are possible. ISPs can handle off-net traffic by exchanging traffic with other ISPs by partnering, joining a consortium, or going through a settlements company. They can offer wholesale VoIP services to other carriers. Managed VoIP service for multi-location enterprises is yet another service model.

27

   & '   '/   


ISPs are well positioned to deploy VoIP because of their existing IP infrastructure. The equipment and software needed to implement VoIP can be added incrementally. ISPs already have Internet POPs that connect to local exchange carrier (LEC) or public telecommunications operator (PTO) central offices. Figures 3 (a) & (b) show before and after views of a POP being equipped for long distance service. ISPs can add individual voice-enabled access server gateways equipped with additional T1 or E1 interfaces to the PSTN. Additional WAN bandwidth may be needed to support the extra voice traffic. One or more gatekeepers are added to serve multiple gateways. Existing RADIUS servers can be used for AAA as well as existing routers and Ethernet switches located in their POPs. The ISP may need to add a billing server for voice services. With this equipment in place, the ISP can either place connections to long distance carriers for offnet calls at local POPs or choose to centralize such connections at a single POP location. Deciding factors include traffic expectations and the geographic distribution of POPs. It may be more costeffective to choose one high-bandwidth connection in order to get better bulk rates from the long distance provider. To expand its service coverage, an individual ISP might choose to partner with ISPs in other regions or join a consortium to provide widespread coverage. Settlement firms allow ISPs to provide national coverage by exchanging voice traffic with other ISPs. Finally, the ISP can use a centralized service node equipped with programmable switches to add support for such value-added services as debit cards and calling cards.

28

Billing Servers

Radius Server

PSTN

WAN


Servers

Figure 3 (a) Dial POP , before

29

Voice

Data

Radius Server Billing Servers

PSTN Router

WAN

H-323 Gateway

H-323 Gatekeeper

Figure 3 (b): After Deployment of H-323 for VoiP in the long distance Network

30

Components of a H.323 Network The H.323 is an ITU standard that provides a common foundation of data, audio and video and communications across IP networks. The elements required in a H.323 network are as follows:1. H.323 gateway 2. H.323 gatekeeper 3. RADIUS server
4.

Billing server

1.H.323 gateway The H.323 gateway is the gateway between the PSTN and the H.323 packet-switched network. It provides standard interfaces to the PSTN, processes the voice and fax signals using coders/decoders (CODECs) to convert between circuit-switched and packet formats, and works with the gatekeeper through the Registration Admission Status (RAS) protocol to route calls through the network. Cisco has numerous VoIP gateway platforms. With a voice/fax feature card and a T1 or E1 interface card, it can be deployed as the gateway in a local point of presence (POP). 2. H.323 Gatekeeper The VoIP gatekeeper in the network is the Multimedia Conference Manager, an H.323-compliant program implemented as part of the Cisco IOS software. The Multimedia Conference Manager software can run on Cisco 2500 and 3600 routers. The use of gatekeepers makes the network more scalable by centralizing routing and numbering plan information to facilitate growth and changes. The gatekeeper resolves addresses, finding the IP address for the gateway configured for that call destination. It also manages bandwidth and quality-of-service (QoS) requirements. Each gatekeeper has a zone of administrative control, which can control multiple gateways. Such zones are normally set up to correspond to geographic zones. 3.. RADIUS Server The RADIUS server performs functions necessary for authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA). An ISP can use its existing RADIUS servers the CiscoSecure implementation for these functions.

31

4. Billing Servers Billing servers are needed to provide usage-based billing. The ISP may use any RADIUS-based billing system that supports Cisco VoIP extensions. Examples include Portal, Belle, and Xaact. The RADIUS server collects and stores call detail records from the VoIP gateways. The billing servers collect this information from the RADIUS servers and process the data using specialized billing applications. The final billing statements can be made available to subscribers via the Web or through the mail, depending on the service providers service model.

 


QoS Packet WAN

 


Local call

VoiP Call

Local Call

FIGURE 4.: Steps involved in making a long distance VoIP call

)
 
 
How the Service WorksCall Processing A typical VoIP long distance call is processed as follows using H.323 protocols: 1. A caller dials the local access number for the gateway. This call arrives at the gateway over an ISDN or channel associated signaling (CAS) interface from the PSTN. 2. The gateway answers the call. 3. The gateway queries the RADIUS server with the automatic number identification (ANI) of the caller. The ANI is the callers phone number.
32

4. The RADIUS server uses the ANI to verify whether the caller is a paying customer. If the ANI is not in the account database, the gateway prompts for an account or password and sends it to the RADIUS server for verification. 5. After the RADIUS server has verified that the caller has an account, the gateway plays a second dial tone for the caller. 6. The gateway collects the destination number digits entered by the caller. 7. The gateway attempts to deliver the call using H.323 by consulting a gatekeeper. 8. The gatekeeper matches the destination number against a set of remote zone E.164 prefixes configured for the gatekeeper. The match determines the destination zone for the call, which identifies the far-end gatekeeper. 9. The originating gatekeeper consults with the terminating gatekeeper to select an appropriate gateway in the remote zone to deliver the call. The address of the remote gateway is then passed back to the originating gateway using the RAS protocol. 10. The originating gateway places an H.323 call across the IP network to the destination gateway. If the call attempt fails, the originating gateway tries a different terminating gateway using the rotary call pattern feature. The originating gateway can be configured to try any number of alternate routes. 11. The destination gateway places a call using the local PSTN to the call destination. 12. Start/stop records for the call are generated by the originating and terminating gateways and sent to the RADIUS server.

Facilities embedded in the network:User Authentication Access to the VoIP network can be controlled at the originating gateway using RADIUS-based authentication. When a caller dials the local access number for the gateway, the AAA interface on the gateway collects user account information and sends an authentication request to the RADIUS server. Interactive Voice Response The gateway has an integrated interactive voice response (IVR) application that provides voice prompts and digit collection in order to authenticate the user and identify the call destination.

33

RADIUS Accounting The VoIP long distance service uses RADIUS-based accounting. The gateway generates start/stop accounting records for each call leg, which are sent to the RADIUS server to support billing. For a VoIP call, there are a total of four call legsan incoming and outgoing call leg at both the originating and terminating gateways. These legs are linked by a unique 128-bit connection ID. Each record contains the following information stored in standard RADIUS attributes: Calling station ID Called station ID Call duration Received bytes Transmitted bytes Received packets Transmitted packets 4. Call Routing The gatekeeper routes calls using E.164 prefixes, which are in the form of zone prefixes or technology prefixes.

34

Regulation: Legal and Policy Issues

$ 
 
In U.S. telephony, service is split between Local Exchange Carriers (LECs) and InterExchange Carriers (IXCs). The generally monopolistic LECs provide local telephone service, whereas the IXCs provide long-distance service between LECs, making up a highly competitive, albeit regulated, industry. Most long-distance phone calls in the U.S. involve an LEC connection on both ends (with the long-distance carrier as the bridge). Each time an IXC terminates or originates a call through an LEC, the IXC pays the LEC an access charge of roughly 3 cents per minute on each end. This access charge is greatly inflated but it covers Universal Service obligations. However, in the early 1980's the FCC ruled that providers of 'enhanced services', like Internet Service Providers (ISPs), need not pay these access charges. ISPs are treated as "end users" who can purchase lines that have no per minute charge for receiving calls from their customers.

The following is a representative study of a landmark regulatory ruling in the field of VoiP. Americas Carriers Telecommunication Association (ACTA)5 filed a petition with U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to prevent companies from selling Internet Telephony software and to "institute rulemaking proceedings defining permissible communications over the Internet". ACTA argued that it is not public interest to permit long distance services through Internet Telephony thus depriving those who maintains infrastructure for the same and also it is not in public interest for these selected communication operators to operate outside regulatory requirements that are applicable to all other telecommunication provider.

ACTA's membership consists primarily of small to medium-sized resellers of long-distance services; larger companies like AT&T, MCI and Sprint are not concerned with ACTA or their petition since they are 'wholesalers of capacity'. Internet telephony is not a form of competition in their market. ACTA's main corporate purpose is to represent these small resellers of long-distance services in legal and political spheres 35

#   
ACTA argued that FCC has regulatory control over the Internet and should take action with regard to technology of long distance calling. ACTA further argued that goals such as Universal Service and fair competition in the telecommunications market were being thwarted by Internet Telephony.

# 
 
Though the petition names VocalTec, Webphone and others as respondents, it was clear that the FCC's jurisdiction does not extend to software. Netscape, Voxware and Insoft, in a joint opposition to the petition argued convincingly that in traditional telephony there are many companies who supply software for operating telecommunications networks - such as software for switching and signalling in the public switched telephone network without being subject to FFC regulation. It would then seem arbitrary to treat Internet Telephony software producers as telecommunications carriers and other companies who manufacture software for long distance services as not. Netscape, Voxware and Insoft further suggest that Internet telephone software be, if anything, customer premises equipment (CPE) since it enable a user's computer and peripheral devices to communicate over the Internet. Worse still for ACTA (and others), CPE providers are unregulated and detariffed; state regulation of them has been pre-empted by the Commission itself.

ACTA

submitted

that

Internet

Telephony

services

should

be

considered

interstate

telecommunications carriers under definitions provided in the Telecommunications Act of 1996

# 0  
The U.S. Telecommunications Act of 1996 makes it clear that it is the policy of the United States Government "to preserve the vibrant and competitive free market that presently exists for the Internet and other interactive computer services, unfettered by Federal or State regulation". In May 1997, while not explicitly ruling on the ACTA petition, the FCC ruled against requiring ISPs to pay per-minute access charges - instead an increase in fixed charges on each phone line for business users was implemented, ISPs included.

36

1/ 0   


The ACTA petition was fundamentally flawed since it did not identify Internet Telephony as the actual service (i.e. companies which provide IP Telephony services). It merely identified producers of software for the output and input of audio, some of whom may have coincidentally been offering IP Telephony services. The initial definition of Internet Telephony (as merely the use of the Internet to transmit 'real-time' audio either from PC to PC or from PC to phone) neglects a third, next generation type of Internet Telephony - phone to phone.

While the first two types of Internet Telephony are inherently tied to the PC (including necessary software) and Internet Service Providers. The third type, however, is not. In phone-to-phone Internet Telephony the customer, using an ordinary telephone, dials an access code and then the telephone number; the access code then routes the call to a special computer gateway (the IP network). The trouble is that local computer gateways for companies offering this type of service must be placed in strategic geographic areas. For instance, if a customer using phone-to-phone Internet Telephony plans to call London (England) from Toronto (Canada), then local gateways must be located in both London and Toronto. The gateways convert audio into data for transmission across the IP network and then convert incoming data back into analog signals.

The FCC's definition of phone-to-phone IP Telephony requires that such services: 1.Hold themselves out as providing voice telephony or facsimile transmission service; 2.Do not require the customer to use CPE different from that CPE necessary to place an ordinary touch-tone call (or facsimile transmission) over the public switched telephone network; 3.Allow the customer to call telephone numbers assigned in accordance with the North American Numbering Plan (and associated international agreements); and 4. Transmit customer information without net change in form or content.

In the FCC's report to Congress it states that "when an IP telephone provider deploys a gateway within the network to enable phone-to-phone service, it creates a virtual transmission path between points on the public switched telephone network. From a functional standpoint, users of these services obtain only voice transmission, rather than information services such as access to stored files. Routing and protocol conversion within the network does not change this conclusion,

37

because from the user's standpoint there is no net change in form or content". Given this, together with the Telecommunications Act's (1996) definitions of a telecommunications carrier, telecommunications service and 'telecommunications' - as the transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user's choosing, without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received - it seems readily apparent that phone-to-phone IP Telephony companies should be required to pay access charges for connecting to and/or the usage of the local phone companies' systems. In the absence of a more detailed case-by-case investigation, however, the FCC withheld any definitive conclusion regarding whether phone-tophone IP Telephony should be properly considered a 'telecommunications' rather than an 'information' service.

With regards to specifically PC-to-PC Telephony, the FCC held that "Internet service providers over whose networks the information passes may not even be aware that particular customers are using IP telephony software, because IP packets carrying voice communications are indistinguishable from other types of packets (in which case the) Internet service provider does not appear to be 'providing' telecommunications to its subscribers." While it would only be fair to presuppose this will also apply to PC-to-phone IP Telephony, big business cannot make that assumption.

Stance of European Commission The European Commission, in supplementing their 1995 Communication on the status and implementation of the Commission liberalisation Directives, issued a notice on January 15, 1998 (under article 1 of Directive 90/388/EEC) defining its policy on voice telephony in respect of telephony via the Internet. The notice defines "'voice telephony' means the commercial provision for the public of the direct transport and switching of speech in real-time between public switched network termination points, enabling any user to use equipment connected to such a network termination point in order to communicate with another termination point."6

Status of Voice Communications on Internet under Community Law And, in Particular, Under Directive 90/388/EEC, Published in the OJ No C 6, 10.1.1998, p. 4. http://europa.eu.int/comm/dg04/lawliber/en/voice_en.htm.

38

Does Internet Telephony falls under this definition of voice telephony?

The European Commission argues that Internet Telephony understood as either PC-to-PC or PCto-Phone - is not the principal aim of Internet access providers. The purpose of Internet access is for the facilitation of browsing, the exchange of electronic mail, and the exchange of data files. They do, however, properly identify phone-to-phone IP Telephony as involving a commercial offer. Similar considerations come into play when examining whether Internet Telephony is correctly "for the public", since computers and access to the Internet are not currently available to all citizens (nor are there any policies in place, as Universal Service, to help achieve it). The Commission argues that PC-to-PC Internet Telephony is not available 'for the public', while PC-tophone and phone-to-phone IP Telephony are.

The Commission argues that "the time period required (in Internet Telephony) for processing and transmission from one termination point to the other is generally still such that it cannot be considered as of the same quality as a standard real-time service" On an IP network packets are switched; in regular telephony the circuits are. Internet Telephony thus fulfils voice telephony's stipulation that 'switching' be involved. Internet Telephony is real-time; it simply depends on how rigorously you define 'real-time'. Surely a delay of no more than two seconds would disbar the entire technology from being labelled 'real-time'? Even shouting to someone across the street produces greater delays! (The analogy of cellular communications is also applicable in this instance).

The Commission concluded that Internet Telephony cannot be properly considered 'voice telephony' and therefore already falls within the liberalised area, before the deadlines set for the implementation of full competition. The commission states that with growing sophistication, certain Internet telephony providers would qualify as providers of voice telephony, and therefore be subject to the regulatory regime applicable to voice telephony in the future. The Commission has announced that it will review this policy in light of the evolution of IP Telephony early in 2000. It will be interesting to see if long-distance providers switch to IP networks to avoid Universal Service contributions.
39

Stance of other Government/Regulators The Mexican government has indicated unofficially that it would apply traditional telephone regulations and restrictions on phone-to-phone IP voice services, Jacobs continues, but it has not taken any official action either. A few governments, he says, such as that of Pakistan, have prohibited personal computer (PC)-based IP voice services, but it doesn't appear to be enforcing that ban.7 In Singapore, the IP telephone is considered as both the basic telecommunications service and Internet application, and different regulation methods for different definitions are adopted.The Internet telephone is completely banned in countries such as Iceland and India. While in Czech and Hungary, It is specified that the Internet provider must be awarded a license for IP telephony operations.8 Meanwhile most countries hold wait-and-see attitude, to be decided according to development of the Internet telephone. Some like Canada have started informally to discuss regulation methodology for the Internet telephone. There are two schools of thought regarding IP telephonys international regulatory future. Many governments may not worry about it for a while because IP telephony makes up only a small portion of telecom revenues, and they think it very well may stay that way. Some countries, however, may be concerned because traditional carriers are using their long distance revenues to invest in telephone network buildouts. When IP telephony carriers undercut those fees with their 3 cents-a-minute service, the regulators may conclude, it will affect telecom network investments adversely.

Interoperability of IP Telephone While the regulators in various countries and regions grapple with the IP Telephony regulation/deregulation, the industry is striving for interoperability. Interoperability includes two aspects of contents: interoperability of gateway products and application interoperability. From the view of current status of interoperability in gateway products, gateway companies now have products conforming to the H.323, interoperation testing is being performed, and the interoperability between gateway products produced by many companies will be possible very

7 8

Kim Sunderland, The 1999 Regulatory Outlook for IP Telephony, www.soundingboard.com. Zang Rong, Current Status and Future of IP Telephone, available at www.telecomn.com. 40

soon. To solve the problem of interoperability in gateway products, ITXC, Lucent and VocalTec have commenced and proposed an interoperability frame of i.NOW! Thus it appears that in the absence of sound regulatory (or deregulatory stance) by the various regulators , industry itself is moving towards self-regulation and proposing compatible standard. In other words, we strongly feel that technology would drive regulation, by means of evolving technical solutions for problems even when semantical debates are being carried out in courts of law.

41

INTERNET TELEPHONY IN INDIA The sub-committee on telecommunications, headed by Planning Commission advisor Montek Singh Ahluwalia, is likely to recommend liberalisation of Internet telephony or voice on Internet (VoI) norms, paving the way for issuing Internet telephony licenses in a year. In the New Telecom Policy 1999, the government had not permitted Internet telephony. However, the decision was kept subject to review. Similarly, in its guidelines for Internet service providers (ISP), the department of telecommunications (DoT) had said that the licence would be liable for termination following any violation. Experts believe that there may be some opposition from the Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd, as Internet telephony will end its monopoly. Also, Communications Minister Ram Vilas Paswan has said9 that Net telephony would strictly be kept off the reach of private ISPs to safeguard government revenues. A study by a London-based telecom consultancy had projected in 1997 that VSNL would lose $54 million (about Rs 195 crore) by the year 2001 if Net telephony were legalized. VSNL has until now blocked out sites on the Net which offer voice telephony services.

Small players in India (e.g., Premiere Infosystems, a Noida tech start-up) have started offering installation of software for voice services over the Net at less than 50 paise per minute. To put this in perspective: an international one-minute call on a normal basic telephone would cost some Rs 75. The infrastructure required at the subscribers end is remarkably limited: a computermultimedia kit and Net telephony software. Apart from a computer and a high-speed modem, users indulging in Netspeak need to install a sound-card (which converts sound into electronic signals and vice versa), a microphone, speakers and Net telephony software. The software like Net-ToPhone can be easily downloaded from the Net. The cost of installing the software is less than Rs 2,000, after which every call domestic or international long distance would be billed as a local call: maximum of Rs 1.40 per minute. Calls could be made to other telephones or to other computers rigged up with a multimedia kit.

Source: Cyber News Service , 7/19/00. 42

Significant interest has been shown by various IP telephony players in India, despite the regulations. In July00, Israel based Arelnet Limited, leading provider of IP telephony solutions, expressed its intentions of launching VoIP gateways in India, for small and medium-sized ISPs.10

,( (1 0(!'10#'(
The modes of proliferation of VoIP in India are primarily three 1. Traditional Dial Up Internet (through an ISP) 2. Cable access (through a cable modem through existing cable TV lines) 3. Phone to Phone (Major providers could be existing established players like VSNL and DOT)

1.Traditional Dial Up Internet Internet Service Providers connect customers to the Internet. For a particular access fee, the service provider provides an installation software, a username and password and access phone number. National ISPs These ISPs operate points of presence throughout the country. One category of national ISPs own the network backbone and lease the international connectivity while the other category of players lease the network and the international connectivity from other ISPs. The main target segment for these ISPs is the corporate segment. A presence throughout the country helps these ISPs to cover all the locations for a particular corporate. ISPs owning the network backbone use the reliability of service (due to ownership of the network) as a key USP to customers. This is helpful, especially for real-time mission-critical applications. Regional and local ISPs These are the ISPs that either operate in the smaller towns or particular states. These ISPs serve both the business and consumer segments usually within a geographic region. THE ISP SCENARIO IN INDIA Internet subscribers in India are expected to reach a figure 5,30,000 by March this year, according to IDC. This figure is expected to touch 1.3mn by March 2001, a growth of 145% over the previous year. Dataquest (DQ) estimates are slightly more optimistic. DQ expects the Internet subscriber base to reach 6,55,000 by March 2000. DQ expects this to shoot up to 1.86mn by 2001
10

Israel IP firm enters India, Business Standard, July 30th, 2000. 43

and 3.75mn by 2002. DQs estimates say that the ISP access market was worth Rs1.02bn in 1999 and is likely to touch Rs2.13bn in 2000. The market will expand sharply to touch Rs8.37bn in 2001 and to Rs15bn by 2002. Falling PC prices, coupled with a drop in the access rates (due to the price war in the ISP market) has caused this growth. To some extent, future growth will also be assisted by Internet access through cable TV. Estimates are that three to four years down the line, India, with 30mn Internet users, will have the most Internet users in Asia, next only to China. The last 12 months has seen a good growth in the usage of Internet by the corporate segment also. The factors, which have helped this, is the lowering of leased line charges by TRAI and the offering of a variety of value-added services by the ISPs. While earlier the corporates were using the Internet more as an information provider email, surfing etc, many of them are using this to do some kind of e-commerce especially on the vendor end. According to the IDC survey on 31st July 1999, the small / medium organizations had the largest portion of the subscriber base. Large organizations were next, with a subscriber base of nearly 97,000. The home segment showed a healthy growth in its subscriber base share over its November 1998 share of 8.9%. In the next few years, the home and small/ medium sized segments will experience unprecedented growth in terms of Internet connectivity.

PC / Internet Penetration comparison

India Population Number of Internet users Net-enabled PCs Internet users / population Net-enabled PC / household (%)11 1000 0.5 0.3 0.1% 0%

US 270.3 62.8 87.4 23.2% 129%

Asia-Pacific 2769.6 10.2 9.5 0.4% 1%

Growth of the corporate access market is also expected with large domestic computerization measures in the Government sector. Already initiatives are underway on the part of the Government to start a comprehensive move towards electronic governance. The corporate

11

assuming family size of 5 in India and 4 otherwise; IDC, Indiainfoline estimates 44

access market will also grow as the economy gathers momentum and companies realise the benefits of using the Internet.

2.Cable ISPs These ISPs are normally owned by the cable companies that help them to get exclusive use of the cables. (The cable IP telephony technology has been explained in detail earlier) Cable access ISPs offer broadband Internet connectivity through the coaxial fiber networks. Cable ISPs usually service the consumer segment of the market. The parent makes money from the lease charges of the cable while the ISP uses the access / e-commerce / advertising revenues to compensate for the hiring charges. The development of alternative means of access is also expected to give Internet usage a boost. The most obvious way is using the TV Cable network, given the enormous TV penetration in India. Currently, 30mn Indian households have a TV. If this segment of the population can be tapped, Internet usage can explode. Currently, set-top boxes, which connect users to the Internet through the TV, are quite costly. However, with increasing penetration the cost of these boxes should fall and help increase ISP demand. Indian Cable Television Industry . The cable industry however is growing at what some consider a chaotic rate; because

entrance barriers are low, the industry is open to almost anyone. Currently there exist over 100,000 cable operators in India (compared to 10,000 in the US) employing over 1 million people. Ninetyseven percent of cable operators have less than 1,000 subscribers, most having less than 500. Presently, an initial investment of Rs.250,000 ($7,287) covering a dish, signal receiver, mixer, amplifiers and a modulator to convert frequency is all that is needed. The only other expenses are installation and small VCR movies fee: all satellite signals are received free. Eighty percent of Indian cable systems carry between six and eight channels, fifteen percent between ten and twelve, and five percent carry more than twelve. Over 30 million Indian households receive cable serving an audience of well over 125 million, the second largest cable market in Asia after China. For this reason, the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Bill was presented to the Indian Parliament and passed December 13, 1994. Hence, the medium will be a powerful mode of Internet penetration, especially of broadband services. Internet over cable is picking up very fast in India this year. Some of the major service providers are Hathaway in Mumbai and Spectranet in Delhi. However as compared
45

to the traditional dial-up services, the subscriber charges are around Rs.1000 per month for unlimited access. These are in addition to the cost of a cable modem. Once IP telephony is permitted in India, we feel that Cable IP will be a major mode of proliferation of IP telephony services. The current subscription rates of Internet over cable are targeted towards corporates and high-income consumers. However, subscribers may retail these services to other customers (who cant purchase these services themselves) in future IP booths. Also, these services may be combined with cyber cafes which already provide Internet services to customers.

Lack of a proper telecom infrastructure has kept the Internet penetration down to only the major towns and cities. With the setting up of a National Telecom Backbone, it is expected that Internet will reach more areas of the country. Higher bandwidth availability is also expected to spur the usage of Internet in terms of both number of subscribers as well as the usage time by a particular user.

Key Features of the Indian Internet Policy 1. Licensee has the freedom to lease domestic backbone from DOT, basic service providers, SEBs, the power grid corporation, railways or any other authorized operator. 2. License fee is absent for the first five years and is nominal (Re.1) after that. 3. The decision on tariffs has been left to the ISP providers. However, TRAI has the right to review and fix the tariff anytime during the licensee period of a licensee. 4. The ISP policy does not allow for Internet telephony. The government has issued in principle clearance to all ISPs who have applied for international gateway license using satellite technology. The government has given around 225 ISP licenses so far.

46

2        '  ' #     +


Retail Segment In the retail market, the competition is likely to be fierce because the only service provided is a plain vanilla service and, therefore, there is very little differentiation, which is possible. So the competition would be around price. Since extent of value addition is very low here, the only way to compete is by reaching economic volumes, so it is essential to make large upfront investments in infrastructure and service and capture as much of the market as possible. Corporate Segment Corporate customers have relatively lower price elasticity towards access charges. As most of them use the voice and facsimile communication to support business critical applications their focus is on service rather than costs. Corporate customers are easy to retain because service disruptions due to a change in vendor can be extremely costly. Thus, entry barriers in this market are very high. This is also because a good track record is essential to get business from corporates. With e-commerce becoming a buzzword, IP telephony helps in creating a completely new class of service such as web-enabled call centers, telecommuting and long distance learning

 !    
 
  ' ' 
Presently IP Telephony is banned in India. Unlike US there has not been any comprehensive debate on the issue. Following are some of the factors that are driving the government stance:

1. International Accounting Rate System As per the prevalent International Accounting Rate System, India benefits from heavy incoming calls compared to outgoing calls. Under this system whichever country has net incoming calls gets paid for the same. The United States sends billions of dollars abroad as a result of such international settlement rates and a significant chunk of it comes to India. While IP telephony could save America billions of dollars, possibly a significant portion of the size of a federal universal service fund, India stands to lose out the precious foreign exchange, which it presently gets due to exorbitant rates being charged by VSNL from consumers making international calls.

2. Effect over investment in traditional telecom

47

After liberalisation of telecom sector in 1994, heavy investment has been made in private and public sector. These operators of basic and cellular telephony are required to pay heavy license fees in the tune of thousands of crores every year. If IP Telephony is allowed to become popular and unregulated, it will have adverse impact on the present telecom player and not only the investment made in developing telecom structure may parish but even government may lose out a major source of revenue.

3. Level Playing Field Another major concern of Indian Regulators is to provide level playing field to traditional telephony operators and IP telephony operators.

3      '


. +
A complete scenario of Indian telephony is not possible without considering the options before the incumbents, MTNL, DTS and DOT when voice services over the Internet are allowed. For this purpose, the strategy adopted by the largest U.S. telecommunication provider, AT&T in the wake of IP Telephony was studied. The Telecommunications Act of 1996, which allowed local and long distance phone companies, Internet firms, and cable businesses to compete in each others markets, immediately led way to a long list of mergers and acquisitions. AT & T has set itself the objective of becoming the leader in end-to-end communication services. In March 1999, AT&T made a $62 billion cash bid for MediaOne, one of the largest suppliers of broadband services on cable. The driving force for this merger is that AT&T wants to take advantage of recent consolidation in the industry and changing technology. The purchase of the Cable Company was not only intended to bypass the Regional Bell Operating Companies12, but also to deliver a full menu of phone, Internet and multimedia entertainment. If the deal goes through, it will create the largest Cable Company in the U.S., with over 16 million subscribers. It is now planning to provide Cable IP telephony services. Hence, it is clear from the above moves that AT&T is unfazed about the arrival of new technologies as substitutes for its services. Instead it has proactively adopted these new technologies so that it is not left behind. It plans the migration of its services from the old technology to the new as it upgrades its network across the U.S. for digital services.
12

Local access providers in the U.S. 48

We believe that it is futile for the incumbents in India to restrain the growth of IP telephony as it may not be possible to restrain users from accessing and using the services in light of the significant price differences. Given the fact that international gateways for private ISPs have been allowed, it would become more difficult to regulate the rendering of these services. In contrast, the incumbents should use their existing infrastructure and first-mover advantage to enable themselves to expedite these services on their systems. Such a process would involve the following:   

Technology assessment Establishment of Additional Infrastructure (Gateways, Gatekeepers, etc.) Deployment of Software

49

PRICING OF IP TELEPHONY
The issue of pricing IP Telephony is closely linked with the pricing of Internet services as a whole if viewed as capable of providing different kinds of services to the users.

One opinion is that we have survived so far. There is rather substantial experience with the current model, and it seems to meet the needs of many users. However, others believe that once commercial Internet service becomes mature, customers will start to have more sophisticated expectations, and will be willing (and indeed demand) to be able to pay differential rates for different services. Indeed, there is already evidence in the marketplace that there is a real need for service discrimination. The most significant complaint of real users today is that large data transfers take too long, and that there is no way to adjust or correct for this situation. People who would pay more for a better service cannot do so, because the Internet contains no mechanism to enhance their service.

In case of IP Telephony this debate becomes more critical because voice packets generated from IP Telephony users needs to be routed fast the other end to maintain semblance of real time communication. For this priority routing the voice packets needs to be given priority by the routing mechanisms.

In 1994 Jeffrey K. MacKie-Mason and Hal R. Varian (University of Michigan) advocated the usage based pricing of Internet and presented the concept of smart market. They proposed a way to price network usage that they called ``smart markets.'' Much of the time the network is uncongested; at such times the price for usage should be zero. However, when the network is congested, packets are queued, delayed, and dropped. The current queuing scheme is FIFO. They propose instead that packets should be prioritized based on the value that the user puts on getting the packet through quickly. To do this, each user assigns her packets a bid measuring her willingness-to-pay for immediate servicing. At congested routers, packets are prioritized based on bids. In order to make the scheme incentive-compatible, users are not charged the price they bid, but rather are charged the bid of the highest priority packet that is not admitted to the network. (Vickrey Auction) It can be shown that this mechanism provides the right incentives for users to reveal their true priority.

50

David D. Clark (1995)13 also discusses a scheme where bandwidth is allocated among users by creating different service classes of different priorities to serve users with different needs. The definition of priority is that if packets of different priority arrive at a switch at the same time, the higher priority packets always depart first. This has the effect of shifting delay from the higher priority packets to the lower priority packets under congestion. If this argument is pushed further by redefining priority where high priority packets (voice packets) are sent first even if they arrive a little later than the other packets (normal data packets). Clark further says that the slowing down an individual packet does not much change the observed behavior. But the probable effect of priority queuing is to build up a queue of lower priority packets, which will cause packets in this class to be preferentially dropped due to queue overflow. The rate adaptation of TCP translates these losses into a reduction in sending rate for these flows of packets. Thus, depending on how queues are maintained, a priority scheme can translate into lower achieve throughput for lower priority classes.

This might, in fact, be a useful building block for explicit service discrimination except that priority has no means to balance the demands of the various classes. The highest priority can preempt all the available capacity and drive all lower priorities to no usage. In fact, this can easily happen in practice. A well tuned TCP on a high performance workstation today can send at a rate exceeding a 45 mb/s DS-3 link. Giving such a workstation access to a high priority service class could consume the entire capacity of the current Internet backbone for the duration of its transfer. It is not likely that either the service provider or the user (if he is billed for this usage) desired this behavior.

The other drawback to a priority scheduler (where priority is not based on price) for allocating resources is that it does not give the user a direct way to express a desired network behavior. There is no obvious way to relate a particular priority with a particular achieved service. Most proposals suggest that the user will adjust the requested priority until the desired service is obtained. Thus, the priority is a form of price bid and not a specification of service (which is similar to the smart

David D. Clark, A Model for Cost Allocation and Pricing in the Internet, Presented at MIT Workshop on Internet Economics March 1995. 51

13

market pricing proposed by Hal R. Varian (1994)). It is much more direct way to let the user directly specify the service he desires, and let the network respond.

Above concept of usage based pricing may be the fundamental of IP Telephony pricing where 1 IP Telephony voice packet transmission (with priority routing) price will be equal to x normal data packet transmission price. At times when network is uncongested and spare capacity is available the value of x will be around 1 but when the network is congested and capacity is being utilized fully, the value of x will high and cost of may even approach cost of long distance telephony on traditional network.

However, such dynamic pricing and billing for every packet may not be possible for IP Telephony service provider (ISP, Cable operator) but this can be approximated by putting different slabs for different values of x based on historical congestion (magnitude and timings). This mechanism is somewhat similar to what is being followed for peak and off-peak hours in traditional telephony.

   ' #    ' 


Though it is difficult to develop the above-mentioned dynamic model, static models where values of x can be varied depending over network congestion can approximate it. In this section the cost of IP telephony if implemented in India has been estimated based on the following explicit assumptions: Key Assumptions

64 kbps ISDN connection for one IPT connection (this is very estimates. In fact 64 kbps should be sufficient to allow user to make two IP telephony calls at the same time. This conservative estimate has been taken in view of congested network condition in India that prevails most of the time and it is felt that 64 kbps connection will make the last mile network congestion free for good quality voice communication by providing excess bandwidth at user end. Another reason for taking ISDN costs is that capital investment very closely approximates capital cost of IP Telephony ports for phone to phone telephony)14.

Partly based on methodology followed by Andrew Sears (1996) for US market where he used two line of 14.4 kbps each for one IP Telephony lines. However, technical feasibility of combining two low capacity line and developing high capacity line is yet to be proven sound. Improved for additional requirement of IP Telephony. See Andrew Sears, The Effect of Internet Telephony on the Long Distance Voice Market, 1996. 52

14

    

1 data packet of IPT is equivalent to x nos. of normal data packet (as discussed earlier this variable is a function of network congestion, which may vary over time in a day). Fixed cost recovery in 4 years (Again it appears a bit conservative but has been taken as the rate of change of technology is quite fast and may make investment obsolete). Cost estimates are for ISP. Local call charges Rs. 1 per minutes (to make it unsubsidized). 1000 data hours have been assumed for a year and price has been taken for the same per ISDN connection.

0 
Yearly Cost of ISDN connection (1000 hours) = 38033 Rs. (See Exhibit 1 for detailed calculations)15. Priority Premium Factor X=1 X=2 X=3 DH = Data Hour IPTH = IP Telephony Hour Cost of IP Telephony for various values of x: x (1 IPT packet eq. Of x data packet Without Local Call Voice Price (per hour) Voice Price (per min) (all figures are in Rs.) With Local Call Voice Price (per hour) Voice Price (per min) 1 DH = 1 IPTH 2 DH =1 IPTH 5 DH = 1 IPTH 1 hour cost of IPT 1 hour cost IPT 1 hour cost IPT 38.03333 76.06667 190.1667 Equivalence (in Rs.)

1 2 5

38.03 76.07 190.17

0.63 1.27 3.17

98.03 136.07 250.17

1.63 2.27 4.17

Costs for estimation have been taken from VSNL and MTNL websites. The rates are for basic access from MTNL for ISDN connection and data hours rates are from VSNL. 53

15

From the above analysis it is evident that the IP telephony is going to be significantly cheaper that traditional telephony (see VSNL rates for overseas calls and ISD rates in India in Exhibit 2).

How cheap is IP Telephony compared to traditional telephony? To find out the actual discount available from IP telephony at present, prices of per minute call from US to 180 countries for IP telephony were compared with the traditional telephony prices (Exhibit 3). Based on analyses of pricing data (US to180 countries) available from PC to phone companies (net2pnone and deltathree) with traditional telephony provider (Telecom International Ltd.), it was found that IPT is around 25% (with stdev. 13%) cheaper on average (for major destination it is 40-50%). This discount can be increased as presently part of the path is on traditional telephony network. Once a seamless phone to phone VOIP connection infrastructure is in place, this price is further expected to come down. Major Hurdles One of the major hurdles (other than clear regulatory framework) in roll out of VOIP network is high cost of IP Telephony port ($ 1000 - 2000 compared to $100-200 for traditional telephony port). Though it is likely to come down in near future, it is also to be considered that cost of traditional telecom equipment is also falling. Possible Answers One of the positive approaches to make most of existing VOIP network is to use yield management in IP Telephony.16 It is true that providing 100% available connection to all the users for 24 hours will not be possible at a cheaper cost and the capital investment will be prohibitive. This can be overcome using different values of x for different network congestion conditions. This approach coupled with falling hardware prices is can make IP Telephony a cost effective solution for the communication for the masses.

Brett A. Leida, A Cost Model Of Internet Service Providers: Implications For Internet Telephony And Yield Management, MIT, 1998.

16

54

4. 56       

   ' #  
(All Figures are in Rs.)
MTNL Cost One Time Cost Yearly One time cost Yearly Charges VSNL Cost One Time Cost Yearly One time cost Yearly Charges (for 1000 data hours) 1000 333.33 20000 (cost recovery in 4 years @ 15.5% cost of capital) (Rs.) 17100 5700 12000 (cost recovery in 4 years @ 15.5% cost of capital)

Yearly Charges (1000 hrs)

38033.33

(excluding local calls)

The above costs are based on rates available on www.vsnl.net.in and www.mtnl.com .

55

4. 76 )   #   '    ' 


Distance @ Rs. 0.80 STD Rates Up to 50 km 50 200 km 201 500 km 500 1,000 km Above 1,000 km ISD Rates SAARC & Other Neighboring Nations Africa, Europe, Gulf, Asia and Oceania America & Western hemisphere 0.80 4.00 8.00 12.00 16.80 16.80 27.20 32.40 (from Oct 1, 2000 in Rs./min) Pulse Charges @ Rs. 1.00 @ Rs. 1.20 1.00 5.00 10.00 15.00 21.00 21.00 34.00 41.00 1.20 6.00 12.00 18.00 25.20 25.20 40.80 49.20

17

Anonymous, Trai Slashes domestic, overseas telecom charges by 16-23%, The Economic Times, 29th August, 2000. 56

4. 86    


  ' #        #   #   
 $ 
   )   
Country Albania Algeria American Samoa Angola Argentina Armenia Aruba Ascension Island Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahrain Bangladesh Belarus Belgium Belize Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia And Herzogovina Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Isl Central African Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia
18

Net2Phone $0.27 $0.24 $0.28 $0.45 $0.39 $0.59 $0.23 $0.70 $0.08 $0.10 $0.44 $0.63 $0.69 $0.39 $0.08 $0.64 $0.47 $0.53 $0.36 $0.29 $0.22 $0.25 $0.57 $0.58 $0.79 $0.65 $0.04 $0.45 $0.85 $0.99 $0.17 $0.25 $0.22 $0.75 $0.69 $0.95 $0.29 $0.28

Deltathree Smartlink Tele. Int. $0.32 $0.47 $0.31 $0.43 $0.39 $0.60 $0.39 $0.84 $0.16 $0.23 $0.50 $0.61 $0.88 $0.45 $0.20 $0.66 $0.61 $0.60 $0.43 $0.38 $0.33 $0.45 $0.68 $0.54 $1.03 $0.67 $0.15 $0.61 $0.74 $0.90 $0.25 $0.43 $0.32 $0.66 $0.51 $1.07 $0.31 $0.41 $0.49 $0.69 $0.76 $0.91 $0.59 $0.99 $0.53 $1.09 $0.21 $0.36 $0.65 $0.99 $1.32 $0.55 $0.30 $0.99 $1.15 $0.88 $0.64 $0.79 $0.59 $0.50 $0.84 $0.97 $1.35 $1.02 $0.19 $0.84 $1.16 $1.40 $0.39 $0.92 $0.69 $1.17 $1.09 $1.50 $0.69 $0.54 $0.30 $0.39 $0.53 $0.57 $0.25 $0.35 $0.35 $0.84 $0.08 $0.08 $0.49 $0.80 $0.75 $0.30 $0.08 $0.71 $0.33 $0.42 $0.30 $0.46 $0.21 $0.33 $0.64 $0.69 $1.03 $0.85 $0.12 $0.58 $0.99 $1.27 $0.11 $0.21 $0.15 $1.02 $0.75 $1.15 $0.43 $0.26

Average for IPT $0.29 $0.35 $0.30 $0.44 $0.39 $0.59 $0.31 $0.77 $0.12 $0.16 $0.47 $0.62 $0.78 $0.42 $0.14 $0.65 $0.54 $0.56 $0.40 $0.34 $0.27 $0.35 $0.62 $0.56 $0.91 $0.66 $0.09 $0.53 $0.79 $0.95 $0.21 $0.34 $0.27 $0.71 $0.60 $1.01 $0.30 $0.34

Average for Discount Traditional Tele. $0.40 $0.54 $0.65 $0.74 $0.42 $0.67 $0.44 $0.97 $0.15 $0.22 $0.57 $0.90 $1.04 $0.43 $0.19 $0.85 $0.74 $0.65 $0.47 $0.63 $0.40 $0.42 $0.74 $0.83 $1.19 $0.94 $0.15 $0.71 $1.08 $1.34 $0.25 $0.57 $0.42 $1.10 $0.92 $1.33 $0.56 $0.40 26% 35% 54% 41% 7% 11% 30% 20% 17% 25% 18% 31% 24% 1% 27% 23% 27% 13% 16% 46% 32% 16% 16% 33% 24% 30% 39% 25% 26% 29% 16% 39% 36% 35% 35% 24% 46% 14%

IP Telephony prices have been taken from www.net2phone.com and www.deltathree com while the traditional telephony prices have been taken from www.smartlink,com and www.telecominternationl.com.

57

Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands Fiji Islands Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guinea Guyana Haiti Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Ivory Coast Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kuwait Kyrgystan

$0.31 $0.22 $0.08 $0.73 $0.15 $0.26 $0.54 $0.34 $0.99 $0.25 $0.79 $0.38 $0.83 $0.10 $0.08 $0.39 $0.63 $0.43 $0.65 $0.08 $0.31 $0.35 $0.19 $0.36 $0.38 $0.10 $0.25 $0.40 $0.76 $0.53 $0.08 $0.19 $0.13 $0.49 $0.29 $0.80 $0.89 $0.08 $0.09 $0.10 $0.70 $0.45 $0.08 $0.59 $0.49 $0.63 $0.83 $0.59 $0.54

$0.34 $0.32 $0.15 $0.90 $0.30 $0.63 $0.72 $0.43 $1.09 $0.38 $0.98 $0.39 $0.82 $0.21 $0.19 $0.61 $0.58 $0.57 $0.55 $0.18 $0.49 $0.34 $0.33 $0.70 $0.46 $0.16 $0.41 $0.48 $0.99 $0.68 $0.16 $0.33 $0.25 $0.81 $0.40 $0.90 $1.05 $0.23 $0.24 $0.23 $0.80 $0.64 $0.21 $0.76 $0.65 $0.71 $0.86 $0.77 $0.60

$0.57 $0.42 $0.26 $1.10 $0.39 $0.78 $0.99 $0.69 $1.50 $0.44 $1.30 $1.07 $1.18 $0.28 $0.25 $0.65 $0.92 $0.75 $0.90 $0.25 $0.82 $0.54 $0.49 $0.70 $0.67 $0.29 $0.69 $0.96 $1.25 $0.85 $0.36 $0.37 $0.46 $0.99 $0.94 $1.17 $1.24 $0.29 $0.49 $0.37 $1.17 $0.81 $0.39 $0.99 $0.89 $1.07 $1.19 $1.15 $0.94

$0.26 $0.17 $0.08 $0.93 $0.23 $0.34 $0.60 $0.36 $0.99 $0.20 $0.96 $0.71 $0.99 $0.08 $0.08 $0.40 $0.66 $0.58 $0.35 $0.08 $0.49 $0.37 $0.20 $0.54 $0.50 $0.12 $0.26 $0.59 $0.87 $0.66 $0.08 $0.18 $0.26 $0.55 $0.36 $0.95 $1.11 $0.08 $0.08 $0.08 $0.89 $0.46 $0.08 $0.85 $0.35 $0.78 $0.99 $0.49 $0.35

$0.32 $0.27 $0.11 $0.82 $0.23 $0.45 $0.63 $0.39 $1.04 $0.32 $0.88 $0.38 $0.83 $0.15 $0.13 $0.50 $0.60 $0.50 $0.60 $0.13 $0.40 $0.35 $0.26 $0.53 $0.42 $0.13 $0.33 $0.44 $0.87 $0.60 $0.12 $0.26 $0.19 $0.65 $0.35 $0.85 $0.97 $0.15 $0.17 $0.17 $0.75 $0.54 $0.14 $0.67 $0.57 $0.67 $0.85 $0.68 $0.57

$0.42 $0.30 $0.17 $1.02 $0.31 $0.56 $0.80 $0.53 $1.25 $0.32 $1.13 $0.89 $1.09 $0.18 $0.17 $0.53 $0.79 $0.67 $0.63 $0.17 $0.66 $0.46 $0.35 $0.62 $0.59 $0.21 $0.48 $0.78 $1.06 $0.76 $0.22 $0.28 $0.36 $0.77 $0.65 $1.06 $1.18 $0.19 $0.29 $0.23 $1.03 $0.64 $0.24 $0.92 $0.62 $0.93 $1.09 $0.82 $0.65

22% 8% 33% 20% 27% 20% 21% 26% 16% 1% 22% 57% 24% 15% 19% 4% 24% 25% 4% 23% 39% 24% 24% 14% 29% 38% 31% 43% 18% 20% 46% 6% 47% 16% 47% 20% 18% 16% 42% 27% 27% 14% 39% 27% 8% 28% 22% 17% 12% 58

Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Luxembourg Macao Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Moldova Monaco Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Reunion Island Romania Rwanda San Marino

$0.73 $0.33 $0.58 $0.43 $0.39 $0.36 $0.10 $0.39 $0.35 $0.79 $0.45 $0.10 $0.69 $0.79 $0.22 $0.58 $0.59 $0.16 $0.44 $0.11 $0.64 $0.39 $0.48 $0.38 $0.70 $0.78 $0.08 $0.64 $0.08 $0.44 $0.69 $0.69 $0.95 $0.08 $0.85 $0.49 $0.70 $0.49 $0.59 $0.25 $0.21 $0.16 $0.15 $0.07 $0.69 $0.55 $0.39 $0.79 $0.19

$0.86 $0.44 $0.62 $0.48 $0.46 $0.43 $0.24 $0.40 $0.51 $0.70 $0.46 $0.29 $0.73 $0.89 $0.32 $0.44 $0.89 $0.29 $0.70 $0.28 $0.66 $0.54 $0.50 $0.35 $0.82 $0.94 $0.22 $0.68 $0.17 $0.61 $0.67 $0.85 $1.12 $0.18 $0.71 $0.90 $0.37 $0.57 $0.61 $0.49 $0.40 $0.36 $0.32 $0.16 $0.69 $0.45 $0.50 $0.82 $0.78

$1.42 $0.50 $0.99 $0.95 $0.73 $0.63 $0.30 $0.73 $0.57 $1.18 $0.63 $0.49 $1.10 $1.15 $0.48 $0.99 $0.85 $0.49 $0.88 $0.33 $0.80 $0.64 $0.88 $0.89 $1.34 $1.29 $0.24 $0.95 $0.30 $0.82 $1.11 $0.99 $1.49 $0.25 $1.19 $1.27 $49.00 $0.85 $0.95 $0.89 $0.75 $0.42 $0.50 $0.19 $1.10 $0.97 $0.59 $1.19 $0.57

$0.89 $0.38 $0.68 $0.57 $0.49 $0.39 $0.08 $0.56 $0.47 $1.00 $0.48 $0.19 $0.83 $0.89 $0.24 $0.72 $0.72 $0.17 $0.73 $0.35 $0.87 $0.47 $0.72 $0.56 $1.05 $0.95 $0.08 $0.75 $0.08 $0.56 $0.69 $0.74 $1.16 $0.08 $0.90 $0.78 $0.89 $0.57 $0.41 $0.31 $0.21 $0.29 $0.16 $0.07 $0.79 $0.69 $0.35 $0.83 $0.45

$0.80 $0.38 $0.60 $0.46 $0.43 $0.40 $0.17 $0.39 $0.43 $0.75 $0.46 $0.20 $0.71 $0.84 $0.27 $0.51 $0.74 $0.23 $0.57 $0.20 $0.65 $0.46 $0.49 $0.37 $0.76 $0.86 $0.15 $0.66 $0.12 $0.53 $0.68 $0.77 $1.03 $0.13 $0.78 $0.69 $0.54 $0.53 $0.60 $0.37 $0.31 $0.26 $0.24 $0.11 $0.69 $0.50 $0.44 $0.81 $0.49

$1.16 $0.44 $0.84 $0.76 $0.61 $0.51 $0.19 $0.65 $0.52 $1.09 $0.56 $0.34 $0.97 $1.02 $0.36 $0.86 $0.79 $0.33 $0.81 $0.34 $0.84 $0.56 $0.80 $0.73 $1.20 $1.12 $0.16 $0.85 $0.19 $0.69 $0.90 $0.87 $1.33 $0.17 $1.05 $1.03 $24.95 $0.71 $0.68 $0.60 $0.48 $0.36 $0.33 $0.13 $0.95 $0.83 $0.47 $1.01 $0.51

31% 13% 28% 40% 30% 22% 11% 39% 18% 32% 18% 42% 26% 18% 26% 40% 6% 32% 29% 42% 22% 16% 39% 49% 37% 23% 6% 23% 34% 24% 24% 11% 22% 22% 26% 32% 98% 26% 11% 39% 36% 27% 28% 13% 27% 40% 5% 20% 5%

59

Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa Spain Sri Lanka St. Helena Sudan Suriname Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Togo Tonga Islands Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Ukraine United Kingdom Uruguay Uzbekistan Venezuela Vietnam Yemen Zaire Zambia Zimbabwe

$0.11 $0.25 $0.24 $0.29 $0.10 $0.86 $0.65 $0.43 $0.98 $0.23 $0.08 $0.10 $0.67 $0.10 $0.47 $0.49 $0.49 $0.85 $0.96 $0.35 $0.29 $0.59 $0.79 $0.29 $0.08 $0.61 $0.59 $0.22 $0.89 $0.71 $0.58 $0.68 $0.29

$0.26 $0.38 $0.38 $0.43 $0.34 $0.79 $0.99 $0.52 $0.67 $0.33 $0.16 $0.19 $0.72 $0.24 $0.53 $0.58 $0.46 $0.98 $1.01 $0.50 $0.36 $0.51 $1.03 $0.40 $0.15 $0.55 $0.54 $0.44 $1.24 $0.96 $0.75 $0.57 $0.44

$0.42 $0.42 $0.44 $0.69 $0.47 $1.27 $0.97 $0.71 $1.35 $0.60 $0.20 $0.27 $1.15 $0.63 $0.89 $1.07 $0.89 $1.19 $1.29 $0.59 $0.66 $0.94 $1.05 $0.63 $0.19 $0.94 $0.90 $0.50 $1.35 $1.06 $0.89 $1.07 $0.74

$0.15 $0.24 $0.19 $0.30 $0.08 $0.81 $0.81 $0.52 $1.11 $0.27 $0.08 $0.08 $0.84 $0.11 $0.35 $0.62 $0.45 $0.89 $0.98 $0.44 $0.26 $0.65 $0.86 $0.20 $0.05 $0.62 $0.35 $0.26 $0.97 $0.86 $0.66 $0.69 $0.37

$0.19 $0.31 $0.31 $0.36 $0.22 $0.83 $0.82 $0.47 $0.83 $0.28 $0.12 $0.15 $0.69 $0.17 $0.50 $0.54 $0.47 $0.92 $0.98 $0.42 $0.33 $0.55 $0.91 $0.34 $0.11 $0.58 $0.56 $0.33 $1.07 $0.83 $0.66 $0.62 $0.36 Mean Std Dev. Min Max

$0.29 $0.33 $0.32 $0.50 $0.28 $1.04 $0.89 $0.62 $1.23 $0.44 $0.14 $0.18 $1.00 $0.37 $0.62 $0.85 $0.67 $1.04 $1.14 $0.52 $0.46 $0.80 $0.96 $0.42 $0.12 $0.78 $0.63 $0.38 $1.16 $0.96 $0.78 $0.88 $0.56

35% 5% 2% 27% 20% 20% 8% 23% 33% 36% 14% 17% 30% 55% 19% 37% 29% 12% 13% 18% 29% 31% 5% 17% 5% 26% 10% 14% 8% 13% 15% 29% 35% 25% 13% 1% 98%

60

Bibliography
1. Clark, D. David. A Model for Cost Allocation and Pricing in the Internet, Presented at MIT Workshop on Internet Economics March 1995. 2. Mackie-Mason & Varian, H., 1995, "Pricing the Internet," Public Access to the Internet, ed. Kahin & Keller, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. 3. Varian, Hal R. Some FAQs about usage based pricing, University of Michigan, September 1994. 4. Xie. J & Sirbu M., 1985, "Price Competition and Compatibility in the Presence of Positive Demand Externalities," Management Science, June 1995. 5. Tracy, Lenore. Internet Telephony: Who is Buying, available at www.infoexpress.com. 6. Burkhard Stiller, George Fankhauser, Bernhard Plattner, Nathalie Weiler. Charging and Accounting for Integrated Internet Services- State of the Art, Problems, and Trends , Computer Engineering and Networks Laboratory TIK, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, ETH Zrich, Gloriastrasse 35, CH8092 Zrich, Switzerland. 7. Francis Chow, Ingrid Ma, Ramon San Andres, Jun Shu and Kristin Wright, Network Pricing, Costs and Settlements, available at www.berkeley.edu, May, 1997. 8. Anonymous, Elemedia Pricing Models, available at www.elemedia.com, 2000. 9. Mitrabarun Sarkar. An Assessment of Pricing Mechanisms for the Internet--A RegulatoryImperative, Presented at MIT Workshop on Internet Economics March 1995. 10. Jeffrey K, MacKie-Mason, Liam Murphy and John Murphy. The Role of Responsive Pricing in Internet, Presented at MIT Workshop on Internet Economics March 1995. 11. Emir A. Mohammed. The Growth of Internet Telephony: Legal and Policy Issue, available at www.firstmonday.com, 1999. 12. Lamb, Chris. Packet Telephony Primer, 3Com Technical Papers, available at www.3com.com. 13. Anonymous, Packet Telephony: Long Distance Service for ISPs, Business case available at www.cisco.com. 14. Anonymous, An Introduction to Cisco Open Packet Telephony for Service Providers, White paper available at www.cisco.com. 15. Anonymous, Internet Call Waiting Solution Overview, Overview available at www.cisco.com. 16. Hu, Howard. IP Telephony: Paving the Way for Enhanced Services ,Technical Paper available at www.cisco.com. 17. Anonymous. Sector Report: Internet Service Providers, available at www.indiainfoline.com. 18. Moron, Rick. Getting Ready for IP Telephony, A supplement to business communication review, Nortel Networks. 19. Mcknight, Lee and Leida, Brett. Internet Telephony: Cost, Pricing and Policy, Chapter submitted to the volume of selected papers from the1997 Telecommunications Policy Research Conference.

61

20. Mcknight, Lee. Internet Telephony and Open Communication Policy, Internet Telephony Consortium, MIT, 1997. 21. Clark, David D. A Taxonomy of Internet Telephony Appluications, Internet Telephony Consortium, MIT, 1997. 22. Leida, Brett A. A Cost Model Of Internet Service Providers: Implications For Internet Telephony And Yield Management MS Thesis, MIT, 1998. 23. Ladid, Latiff. IPv6- The New Generation Internet, Ericsson Review No. 1, 2000. 24. McGarty, Terrence P. The Internet Protocol (IP) and Global Telecommunications Transformation, presented at the Seminar on Creative Destruction: Telecomm in Transition, Tufts University, Medford, MA, March 12, 1999. 25. Andrew Sears, 1996. "The Effect of I-Phone on the Long Distance Voice Market," revised October 4, 1996. 26. Percy Alan, Understanding latency in IP Telephony, available at www.soundingboard.com 1999. 27. Mine, Hilary, The Evolution of internet Telephony, white paper available on www.att.com, september 1998. 28. Anonymous, AT&Ts IP Telephony Initiative, white paper available on www.att.com, september 1998. 29. Gill, Navjit. Hot Line on the Net, Businessworld, 1 May, 2000. 30. Anonymous, Quality of Service for IP Voice over DSL, Product Brief available at Nortel Network. 31. Yeung, Angela, Internet Telephony in Hong Kong, available at www.tradeport.org/ts/countries/hongkong/isa/isar0017.htm, March 1999. 32. Breiter, Maria. Internet Telephony in Russia, available at http://www.comptek.ru/telephony/itsp_list1.html, November, 1998. 33. Longtao, Wu. IP Phone over Wireless Data Access Network, available at www.telecomn.com\focus4_20002.htm. 34. Rong, Zhang. Current Status and Future of IP Telephone, available at www.telecomn.com\focus2_20002.htm. 35. Sunderland, Kim. The 1999 Regulatory Outlook for IP Telephony, posted on www.soundingboard.com. 36. Semaria, Chuck. Multiprotocol Label Switching: Enhancing Routing in the New Public Network, white paper available at www.juniper.net, Juniper Networks, September 1999. 37. Anonymous, IP Telephony basics, available at www.dialogic.com 38. Anonymous, ThruQoS for VoIP, available at www.iphighway.com

62

You might also like