OT - Some observations and comments concerning "open"
Eric and Yihsuen,
While reading each of your posts I could not help but think about how this most recent "open" issue -- in connection with ATHM's competing ISPs and the MSOs -- has been rather ingeniously played by the ISPs who seem to have borrowed the term from an earlier period in the Internet's history, when it was championed as something else.
What I see being presented here is a Gordon Knot of sorts:
Do the ISPs really want to operate in an open system, or do they simply seek inclusion in one which is closed?
The present coalition has leveraged and effectively metamorphosed the original characteristics of the term 'open' beyond its originally recognizable attributes, which described a then different kind of global openness on the Internet. The coalition has reincarnated it into something that is perversely different (from several different perspectives) from the former ideal which bore the same name, when it was used by the early members of the Internet Society who sought to manage and share information and R&D through the most robust, yet least encumbered, means.
None of today's parties walks away from this Dr. Frankenstein-like pursuit without having contributed in their own way to the unraveling of a purer form of open, for they are all engaging in what the original I-SOCiety had been worried about and fretting, with due cause, for many years. And that is nothing short of the ultimate commercialization of the 'net, itself, as we have been experiencing for the past several years years, for the most part, although some milestones leading up to this point in time can be traced back to the early Eighties and prior.
Darwinists will applaud this, as I do on some level, but with competition always comes differentiation, which in turn spawns other defining characteristics, which in turn result in qualities that turn out to be highly antithetical to the principles of true Internet "openness." Sometimes this manifests in ways similar to what we are now seeing, where the largest (the Top 3) wide area carriers are creating their own end to end offerings on amounts to their own autonomous systems, in large part..
MCI's OnNet, FON's ION, AT&T's INC, to name a few examples. Teraglobal has yet another end to end service, this time supported by ATM, instead of IP, as their defining transport type. With any closed or autonomous transport scheme the temptation is always greater to go deeper into proprietary feature sets and handling methodologies, and before you know it you have a virtual quagmire of differing types of virtual wires strung across virtual marketplaces, with virtually nowhere to go but to your own virtual carrier for their own brand of virtual services.
Witness, how some of the most popular service offerings today have gone into a proprietary (read: closed) mode, like the ATHM backbone intranet, itself, as a primary, but by no means the only, example. One must consider that this is only the first step in the direction of proprietariness where the cable operators can go -- for, they are no different in this respect than the traditional inter-state telco type carriers.
Given the multidimensionality of the universe of services they have yet to release, one also has to think that there is more closed-ness down the road which is still awaiting us in the cable sector alone, never mind how these will meld with the closed architectures will be spawned by the traditional carriers, as well. And all these island platforms will work with one another, because the gateways, electronic traffic cops, gatekeepers, and other implements of complexity and toil will see to it that they work. I am tempted to call this a form of regression, except for one of the definitions of that word which stipulates: a gradual loss of differentiation.
Was this trend (with respect to the original direction of openness) done in order to enable competitors (in this case, ATHM) to excel on their own? Was it to create a more robust and predictable environment within which to operate, regardless of the need for establishing border patrols and crossing guards? Or was it done in order to exclude the others in this space from taking away some of the fruits which they had nurtured and grown to maturity? The food chain in this case is complex, and it's not as straightforward as simply viewing this as an ATHM-MSO thing, but I tend to think that all three of these reasons apply, almost equally, but not as obviously as meets the eye.
What does all of this say if ATHM is going to open up its closed architecture to others? Others, who at the present time are still a part of what is still more typically classified as an open standards-based Internet? An Internet which is still far more open than the one which the ISPs are aspiring to become a part of, if they are truly negotiating for the same kind or architectural rights and presence as ATHM occupies today?
There's some weird stuff happening here, folks, if you've been following the bouncing ball. Don't you agree? All IMO, and comments/corrections welcome, as always.
Regards, Frank Coluccio |