NEWS The telecoms meltdown that has hit service providers such as WorldCom and KPNQwest could see the development of a two-tier internet. Duncan Black, corporate solutions strategies director at Cable & Wireless, said: "The single approach to the internet will disappear. You will see a basic internet service, which just provides connectivity, and a business quality internet." The main customers for top-tier internet services will be multinational corporations, which are looking for high-availability services such as virtual private networks (VPNs) with quality of service guarantees - which Black sees as a key growth market over the next five years. Consumers are also likely to see an increasing range of internet access products, according to Black - from a simple internet access-only product with no quality of service guarantees to more advanced and more expensive services which support, for example, advanced multimedia and video capabilities. "The challenge of supporting streaming video over the public internet is not trivial," said Black, so ISPs may look to introduce specialised premium internet subscriptions with improved support for multimedia applications. BT has already moved to provide some differentiated internet access products, with the launch of its DSL-without-an-ISP product described by CEO Ben Verwaayen as "a dialtone for the internet". Black expects to see around five to seven major international ISPs survive the current industry meltdown. Those ISPs, who will have large networks with five or more globally distributed points of presence, will have 'private peering' arrangements with each other. These private peering arrangements effectively allow ISPs to route traffic onto each others networks freely and without payment - combining their resources to form a larger and more stable IP network. These seven companies' combined networks will then provide the backbone for the business-quality internet. Other smaller telcos such as BT Ignite don't have the scale or global reach to be attractive partners for private peering. They will buy access to the network on a 'chargeable peering' basis - similar to the chargeable peering deal BT currently has with Cable & Wireless. The network of UUNet, a division of troubled telco WorldCom, which filed for bankruptcy this week, is likely to be one of the big players: "Though under whose name and whose ownership, who knows," Black said. "Current names and ownership may not survive." However, if UUNet were to go down, then the overall performance of the internet would be affected, says Black. "If you went to the States and removed UUNet then that would have an effect - you would start to see delays, packet loss and even loss of connectivity."
Will the future see a two-tier internet?
Internet II: This time it's personalised...
Post your comment
In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below
Latest Networks stories
Get silicon.com's daily newsletter
-

Enter your email to register
Featured white papers
-
Solution Brief: Optimizing Video Delivery with Blue Coat
Hosting and disseminating videos within your business offers a unique challenge to organizations with limitations in...
-
How to prime your WLAN for employee devices
The modern smart device has had a transformative effect on the enterprise. One result of this transformation of...
-
12 tips for better video conferencing
Travel is expensive in terms of both money and time. Interestingly, however, when 1,188 video conferencing users...
Popular Networks stories
Keep in touch with silicon.com
-
Connect with silicon.com on Facebook
Discuss the news of the day with the silicon.com team
-
Follow silicon.com on Twitter
Get regular updates from the silicon.com editors
-
Join the silicon.com LinkedIn networking group
Network with your peers and share expertise
Latest jobs
-
Architect Java, J2EE, Oracle, Spring London £55-65K
Java, J2EE, Oracle, PL/SQL, SQL, Spring, Struts, Maven, Swing Java, J2EE, Oracle My client a premiere...
-
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst)
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst) £31,000-£42,000 + excellent benefits We take the best Business...
-
Head of Financial Accounts
A large and forward thinking NHS organisation at the forefront of the NHS change agenda currently seeks an Interim...
silicon.com newsletters
-
Stay up to date with silicon.com newsletters
Keep up with the latest news and analysis from silicon.com with our free email newsletters





