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To: djane who wrote (47108)5/19/1998 1:45:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 61433
 
Security on the horizon. [VPNs were the rage at N+I 98]

By Scott Bradner, Network World, 5/18/98

nwfusion.com

As predicted in a front-page story in the May 4th issue of Network World, virtual private networks (VPN) were all the rage at NetWorld+Interop 98 in Las Vegas. VPNs were not the only hot topic by far, but they did seem to be everywhere you looked.

The show seemed a bit subdued compared with
last year's (although any show in Las Vegas is on
an entirely different plane than shows elsewhere). The magicians trying to
entice you to listen to a spiel about Ethernet switches were here once
again, but there seemed to be fewer of them and, wonder of wonders,
there were even some technically competent people in some of the
booths.

In addition to VPNs, the Gigabit Ethernet vendors were out in force with
20 or more booths in addition to the big Gigabit Alliance booth. There
were many other interesting products, such as Manage.Com's Java-based
front-line management station.

But VPNs seemed to me to be the show focus this year, just like Gigabit Ethernet was last year, IP Switching the year before and ATM before that. I just hope Gigabit Ethernet and VPNs do not take the same path to success that the other hot topics did.

One problem with all of the attention on VPNs is there is no one
consistent thing that the VPN proponents are talking about.

Some vendors are talking about the connections between corporate
firewalls when they speak of VPNs. Others are referring to the
connections inside a WAN that an ISP might set up to do traffic
engineering or to help facilitate the delivery of consistent quality of service
(QoS). Others mean the IP tunnels that can be created between an
on-the-road employee dialing into a local ISP and the home office. And a
few vendors seem to think any en-crypted point-to-point link qualifies as
a VPN.

All of the above are valid definitions of what a VPN might be. But with all
of the differing assumptions about VPNs, it is a good idea for users
considering the purchase of VPN services or equipment to be sure that
their own and the vendors' assumptions about the technology are in line.

One thing that most definitions of the technology have in common is that a
VPN includes encrypted point-to-point tunnels. Encouragingly, most of
the vendors I saw said they supported IP Security. IPSec is the IETF
technology that supports encrypted tunnels along with management of the
cryptographic keys. IPSec is in the final stages of being approved as a
proposed standard.

In spite of the fact that IPSec is not yet approved, eight IPSec software
vendors have already demonstrated interoperability between their
products, and many more companies have announced products.

It's a good sign that most of the VPN vendors say they already support
IPSec or will in the future. This means there is a reasonable chance that
many of the VPN products will interoperate. This, of course, is the
purpose of standards.

Disclaimer: Even though Harvard sets its own standards, its
products interoperate. The above are my own observations.

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To: djane who wrote (47108)5/19/1998 1:54:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
Fed Won't Change Rates Some for Increase, But Not Greenspan
[FYI. About 1 month ago, Cramer wrote that Berry is the main writer to whom he pays attention for interest rate directions.]

By John M. Berry
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 19, 1998; Page C01

washingtonpost.com

There will be voices raised arguing for an interest rate increase when
Federal Reserve policymakers meet this morning, but Chairman Alan
Greenspan's won't be among them and therefore rates won't change,
according to a broad consensus of Fedwatchers.

All of the Fed officials, Greenspan included, regard the pace of U.S.
economic growth during the past year and a half as unsustainably fast,
particularly now that the nation's jobless rate has dropped to a super-low
4.3 percent, several officials said. Sooner or later, continued strong growth
and tight labor markets will begin to push inflation up, an outcome most
Fed officials are determined to avoid.

For months, Greenspan and the other members of the Fed's top
policymaking group, the Federal Open Market Committee, have been
expecting U.S. growth to slow, particularly with the economic turmoil in
Asia hurting exports of U.S. goods to that region. The question for the
committee is: How long to wait for growth to slow down before taking
steps to make that happen?

"We have had an extraordinary run of good luck," said former Fed vice
chairman Alan Blinder, who has returned to teaching economics at
Princeton University. "Steady-as-you-go has worked well for the Fed a
long time and is appropriate for a while longer."

Blinder said a series of developments -- including a strong U.S. dollar,
falling prices for imports, weak energy prices, moderation of health care
cost increases, productivity gains and technical changes to the consumer
price index that have reduced its rate of increase -- have allowed the
central bank to keep rates stable while unemployment and inflation have
come down.

"If we had not had this good luck, the Fed would already have had to raise
interest rates. In May 1998, are we in danger of losing all this? Not except
for medical care, but it's not always going to be this way," he predicted.

If he were at the table in the Fed boardroom today, he would not vote to
raise rates, Blinder said.

Some of the analysts who don't expect any action on rates remain
confident that growth is about to slow anyway.

"We are starting to see signs of the economy moderating somewhat," said
economist Mickey Levy, of NationsBank Montgomery Securities in New
York.

The most important sign of such slowing is in manufacturing, where
production last month was slightly lower than it was in December, the Fed
reported last week. And the share of production capacity actually being
used has dipped to levels not usually associated with accelerating inflation.

"When the Fed last tightened the federal funds rate on March 25, 1997,
and cited strong demand for a reason, the Fed had been seeing much
stronger industrial output and retail sales than have been recently reported,"
said Maury N. Harris, chief economist for PaineWebber Inc. in New
York. The recent data are "not strong enough to justify Fed tightening."
The federal funds rate is the interest rate banks charge one another for
overnight loans.

Nevertheless, consumers -- whose confidence levels are high -- continue
to increase their spending somewhat faster than many forecasters had
expected, given their spending spree in the first couple of months this year.
As a result, growth forecasts for this quarter have begun to creep toward
2.5 percent or 3 percent, after a 4.2 percent rate from January to March.

And then there is the wild card of inventories. Despite flat production and
healthy demand by both consumers and businesses, stocks of unsold
goods are still expanding. Sooner or later, production is going to have to
be trimmed further to halt the ever greater accumulation of inventories,
many analysts said.

Meanwhile, with unemployment low and falling, and labor markets tight in
most of the country, average hourly earnings were up 4.4 percent for the
12 months ended last month compared to 3.7 percent for the year ended
in April 1997. The issue on inflation for the Fed, the analysts said, is
whether those gains are being offset by productivity gains.

And to complicate matters further, there is Asia.

"In our opinion, the Asian economic crisis is far from over," Ian
Sheperdson, chief economist at HSBC Securities Inc. of New York, told
clients. "If we're right, the impact on the United States will intensify over
the next few months. . . . This, together with concerns over the possible
effect on Asia itself of higher U.S. rates, means that Greenspan will be
reluctant to raise rates even if the domestic economy does not slow in line
with the Fed's expectations. The risks are simply too big compared to the
potential benefits."

c Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company




To: djane who wrote (47108)5/19/1998 2:01:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 61433
 
MCI Said to Be Soliciting Bids for Part of Its Internet Division

nytimes.com

By SETH SCHIESEL

Trying to placate regulators who are weighing its $37 billion sale to
Worldcom Inc., MCI Communications Corp. has quietly
solicited bids for part of its fast-growing Internet business, people close
to the negotiations said Monday.

The unit should fetch around $500 million, and British
Telecommunications PLC is among the companies expected to be
involved in the bidding, the people close to the talks said.

Small new long-distance carriers including
IXC Communications Inc. and the Williams
Companies Inc. were also invited to
participate, people close to the talks said, and
GTE Corp. could play a role. But MCI had
not solicited bids from its main competitors,
AT&T Corp. and Sprint Corp.


By declining to solicit bids from AT&T and Sprint, MCI appeared to
be trying to ensure that the Internet unit it is considering selling cannot
be used by its most formidable foes.

The companies declined to comment Monday.

By weighing the sale of a big portion of its Internet unit, MCI is moving
to allay fears by regulators in Europe and the United States that a
combined MCI Worldcom would dominate the market for
long-distance, or "backbone," Internet capacity. The Internet backbone
can be likened to the nation's interstate highways, while the retail
Internet market, which includes companies like America Online Inc., is
more akin to the roads that feed such highways.

Consumer groups and some rival companies that oppose MCI's
proposed merger with Worldcom and some independent analysts have
estimated that a combined MCI Worldcom would control as much as
70 percent of the Internet backbone, a figure both companies dispute.
The Justice Department's antitrust lawyers have focused on the Internet
issue. Regulators from the European Commission were also examining
the merger.

MCI is considering selling its domestic wholesale business, which
provides broad cyberspace on-ramps to smaller Internet access
providers, and its trans-Atlantic Internet business.

MCI would not sell its retail Internet unit, in part because MCI and
Worldcom do not stand accused of having the potential to dominate the
consumer Internet business in the same way they could control
wholesale pricing.

America Online, for instance, is the largest online service with 11 million
customers, providing ample competition in the retail market. But its
Internet communications network is owned by Worldcom.

By divesting itself of much of MCI's Internet business, the combined
company would strengthen its case for being allowed to hold on to
Uunet Technologies Inc., the largest Internet backbone supplier.

Worldcom acquired Uunet in 1996 when it agreed to acquire MFS
Communications Co., a big competitive local telephone company, for
$14 billion. MFS completed its $2 billion acquisition of Uunet only
weeks before MFS itself agreed to be acquired by Worldcom.

John W. Sidgmore, Uunet's president, is now vice chairman of
Worldcom. GTE asked European regulators last week to force
Worldcom to sell Uunet as a condition for approving Worldcom's
acquisition of MCI, people close to the companies said.

One of the odd twists of the current solicitation process is that both
British Telecom and GTE were involved in the original battle for MCI
last year. British Telecom had agreed to acquire MCI for $24 billion
before renegotiating the price to $19 billion, opening the door for
Worldcom.

GTE offered $28 billion in cash for MCI shortly after Worldcom made
its initial $30 billion stock bid last October, but GTE did not or could
not keep pace when Worldcom made its second, and winning,
proposal of $37 billion in both cash and stock.

British Telecom has agreed to support MCI's merger with Worldcom,
partly because British Telecom would receive $7.3 billion in cash for its
20 percent stake in MCI. But GTE has adopted an aggressive lobbying
position that has seen it fight the deal at every turn, including in the
courts.

The European Commission has said that it will rule on the proposed
merger by July 15, while the Justice Department has not outlined a
definitive time frame.

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Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company



To: djane who wrote (47108)5/19/1998 2:18:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 61433
 
Why A Big Deal Could Be A Bad Deal - For SBC

By Carol Wilson, with Kathleen Cholewka and Louis Trager
Inter@ctive Week May 18, 1998

zdnet.com

Who wins when one giant local phone company buys
another giant local phone company? Very possibly, no
one. At least that's one outcome of last week's
announced acquisition of Ameritech Corp. by SBC
Communications Inc. As contradictory as it may sound,
the deal that would give a single company control of one-third of U.S. phone lines could limit consumer choice, slow the use of new data technology in the phone network and thereby dampen sales of newer,faster computers. It could even make SBC more vulnerable to technologically agile competitors.

Of course, the merger still must pass muster with the
Federal Communications Commission. Many consider
federal approval unlikely since the prospect of
recreating the Bell System is sounding alarms from the
halls of Congress to the streets of Chicago, where the
Rev. Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow Coalition called
on the Clinton administration to move to stop
megamergers among telephone companies.

The greatest concern is that allowing SBC to absorb
Ameritech and its five Midwestern states will trigger a
chain reaction of mergers that will leave the country
with only a few very large local phone service
providers.

If the deal goes through, a domino effect is likely. "Bell
Atlantic [Corp.] and BellSouth [Corp.] probably will
discuss a merger," figured Brian Adamik, senior vice
president at The Yankee Group. "The considerations
will now change radically for AT&T Corp. There's
going to have to be a change in the way regulators look
at a merger between AT&T and a Bell."

A combined Ameritech and SBC had 1997 revenue of
$41 billion, compared with a combined MCI
Communications Corp.-WorldCom Inc. revenue of
$26 billion, Bell Atlantic with $30 billion or BellSouth
with $20 billion. Only AT&T's revenue would exceed
the new partners at $51 billion in 1997.

"This merger would give SBC dominion over one-third
of the [phone lines] in the U.S.," said Dan Taylor of
The Aberdeen Group Inc. "SBC would have 37
[million] to 40 million lines if the merger goes through."

Now The Bad News

That kind of concentration of power will give a new
larger entity disproportionate control over how fast
technology reaches the mass market, according to
Victor Schnee, founder of Probe Research Inc. and the
man who predicted SBC would take over Ameritech in
an April report titled "Mega Strategies: Winning the
Computer-Telecom War."

That prediction was made based not on insider
information, but on 22 years of study of Bell company
behavior that produced what Schnee called the "genetic
code" of the Bells. Schnee and colleague Allan Tumilillo concluded that the big losers as the Bells get bigger are the computer companies that need faster communications networks if they are to continue driving up sales of bigger and faster PCs.

"Popping up on the radar screen of the Bell companies is the technology threat of the Internet," Schnee said. "The Bells are driven to a situation where in order to address the future, they need to get the industry into as small and tight a cartel as is possible. Once a company has mammoth power, it can manage the speed with which new technology - like faster access systems - can move into the network."


The need to "administer" new technologies and network change is fundamental behavior to a Bell company - part of its "genetic code," according to Schnee. A prime example of this behavior was the way the Bells offered Integrated Services Digital Network, a technology available 13 years ago, he said, but still not in widespread use.

That does not bode well for deploying new, higher-speed Digital Subscriber Line technology. Such
digital lines can carry data at speeds 30 or more times
as fast as today's fastest conventional modems.
Computer makers are counting on such fast Net access
to spur demand for more high-performance machines
on corporate and personal desktops.

Which means companies such as Compaq Computer
Corp. should be wary of phone company
consolidation.
But, Schnee added, the phone
companies have convinced the computer industry, led
by Microsoft Corp. and Compaq, that they can
generate a lot of revenue selling their computer
software and hardware into telephone networks. Their
status as potentially large customers blunts any action
the computer companies might mount against them.

Based on the FCC's rulings to date, the Bells know
exactly what's required to get into long-distance,
Schnee said. They will open up their local markets
when they're ready - and probably immediately
swallow up some long-distance companies to further
enhance the cartel. He called the result the NeoBell
System.

"These guys are not dumb," Schnee said. "SBC, in
particular, has shown it is methodical about appraising
investment opportunities, but once that's done, the
company acts decisively."

Many industry analysts believe, however, that the Bell companies are dumb when it comes to understanding the Internet. To date, they have been slow to recognize how fast companies are moving to Internet Protocol (IP)-based networks, initially for data but ultimately for voice as well. Expanding the base of aging, if still profitable, circuit-switched voice networks makes less sense than aggressively migrating those networks toward the IP world.

The merger would absorb corporate energy and dilute
marketing efforts at a critical time. Numerous smaller
companies are attacking local phone companies in
every major metropolitan area, and new emerging
potential giants such as Level 3 Communications Inc.
and Qwest Communications International Inc.
are
building new coast-to-coast networks that use only
state-of-the-art technology and are designed from the ground up to support high-speed data services.
Developing voice-over-IP technology will enable those
networks also to capture voice services, particularly for
businesses that like the idea of a single integrated
network service provider. Qwest already offers a
high-quality voice service using Internet technology, in
nine cities.

By contrast, the phone company networks include
several generations of technology, most of which were
created to support voice services handled primarily by
circuit switches, the huge, proprietary computers that
direct calls and provide enhanced services. Where the
telephone companies offer data services, such as frame
relay, they usually use network overlays - adding
network equipment that operates over the physical lines
but isn't logically tied into the voice network.

"You're certainly tied down in recovering that [existing]
network investment, and that hamstrings you," said
Terence Barnich, a consultant at New Paradigm
Resources Inc. and former chairman of the Illinois
Commerce Commission.

Where SBC is likely to be hurt is in its revenue from
small to midsized businesses, the target market for
many of the competitive local exchange carriers
(CLECs). While a huge SBC chases big business and
butts heads with WorldCom and AT&T, smaller firms
are likely to be disenchanted with impersonal service.

Opportunity For CLECs

"On a customer-by-customer basis, this is great news
for us," said Bob Taylor, president of Focal
Communications Corp., a CLEC operating in Chicago
and New York. "How are customers in Chicago and
Detroit going to be better served out of a company in
San Antonio? We have been able to create a niche by
providing better service. We can prove we provide
better service than Ameritech - this just makes it even
more appealing."

But Taylor said he believes his company's ability to get
the connections it needs from the new SBC will also be
damaged. "As these companies get bigger, they
become less responsive and they become slower in the
actions necessary to facilitate the CLECs," he said.
SBC is particularly known for foot-dragging, according
to Taylor and other CLEC officials.

Royce Holland, president and chief executive officer of
Allegiance Telecom Inc., is also licking his chops at the
prospects for his firm. The company now operates in
Dallas, providing communications services to
businesses, and plans to be in Chicago, Los Angeles
and San Francisco by year's end.

"The only thing slower than one monopoly is two
monopolies put together," he said.

But Holland said the combined SBC-Ameritech will be
held to conditions at least as tough as those given Bell
Atlantic when it acquired Nynex Corp. Those
conditions already bore fruit, he said, when the New
York Public Service Commission came up with
stringent rules for Bell Atlantic to offer electronic
interfaces into its operations systems before getting
state approval to enter long-distance. This summer, an
independent third party plans to test what Bell Atlantic
has developed.

"By the time this deal has gone through the states and
the antitrust people and reaches the FCC, we will have
completed the course in New York and we'll be a lot
smarter," Holland said. "We'll know exactly what to
push for."

"The merger could be good news for the CLECs," agreed Greg Cline, principal analyst for Internet
infrastructure research at Cahners Business
Information's In-Stat. "To get federal approval, SBC is going to have to be very pro-competition. They'll have
to open their markets even more."

SBC has pledged to go into other local markets around
the country and generate competition for other Bells as
part of this merger deal.

But business and residential customers are not likely to
benefit much, if at all, from such a merger. Potential
competition between SBC and Ameritech will be
stopped, and the combined size of the company and
the intransigence of SBC in allowing potential rivals to
connect to its network will make it harder for
innovation and price-cutting to emerge.

Immediately swept aside in the merger will be
head-to-head battles once planned between Ameritech
and SBC in Chicago and St. Louis.

Despite the burgeoning competition from new rivals,
however, there is no one posing a real threat to any of
the Bells in the local market, Schnee said.

"Every one of these companies wants to be the next
MCI. That's the model they have in mind," he said. "But
if you took all their business plans today and combined
them, it wouldn't equal SBC or Bell Atlantic or
BellSouth."

If SBC moves quickly to open key local markets and
resell its local facilities, there will still be little incentive
to upgrade those local facilities until there is
overwhelming pent-up demand that can guarantee
instant return on investment.

"What are they buying? Old network," said Bill White, a spokesman at Sprint Corp. "But they still have that
control of the end user. The question is, what are they
going to do to upgrade their network to the network of
the future?"


"Many people think this is the dance of the dinosaurs,"
said Adamik of The Yankee Group. "That's the wild
card in this whole thing. [But] owning the wire is the
key thing today - whether it's antiquated local loop or
fiber."

For that control to rest with SBC - not known for its
customer focus - could be problematic.

SBC can be reached at www.sbc.com

The Yankee Group can be reached at
www.yankeegroup.com

Ameritech can be reached at www.ameritech.com

AT&T can be reached at www.att.com

Probe Research can be reached at www.probe.com

Compaq can be reached at www.compaq.com

The FCC can be reached at www.fcc.gov

Qwest cwww.qwest.net

New Paradigm can be reached at www.alts.com

WorldCom can be reached at www.wcom.com

Bell Atlantic can be reached at www.bellatlantic.com

Related Story:

Merger Deals Get
Harder To Do