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- Network Working Group M. Kapor
- Request for Comments: 1259 Electronic Frontier Foundation
- September 1991
-
-
- Building The Open Road:
- The NREN As Test-Bed For The National Public Network
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is
- unlimited.
-
- Introduction
-
- A debate has begun about the future of America's communications
- infrastructure. At stake is the future of the web of information
- links organically evolving from computer and telephone systems. By
- the end of the next decade, these links will connect nearly all homes
- and businesses in the U.S. They will serve as the main channels for
- commerce, learning, education, and entertainment in our society. The
- new information infrastructure will not be created in a single step:
- neither by a massive infusion of public funds, nor with the private
- capital of a few tycoons, such as those who built the railroads.
- Rather the national, public broadband digital network will emerge
- from the "convergence" of the public telephone network, the cable
- television distribution system, and other networks such as the
- Internet.
-
- The United States Congress is now taking a critical step toward what
- I call the National Public Network, with its authorization of the
- National Research and Education Network (NREN, pronounced "en-ren").
- Not only will the NREN meet the computer and communication needs of
- scientists, researchers, and educators, but also, if properly
- implemented, it could demonstrate how a broadband network can be used
- in the future. As policy makers debate the role of the public
- telephone and other existing information networks in the nation's
- information infrastructure, the NREN can serve as a working test-bed
- for new technologies, applications, and governing policies that will
- ultimately shape the larger national network. Congress has indicated
- its intention that the NREN
-
- would provide American researchers and educators with the computer
- and information resources they need, while demonstrating how
- advanced computer, high speed networks, and electronic databases
- can improve the national information infrastructure for use by all
-
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- Kapor [Page 1]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- Americans. (1)
-
- As currently envisioned, the NREN
-
- would connect more than one million people at more than one
- thousand colleges, universities, laboratories, and hospitals
- throughout the country, giving them access to computing power and
- information -- resources unavailable anywhere today -- and making
- possible the rapid proliferation of a truly nationwide, ubiquitous
- network... (2)
-
- The combined demand of these users would develop innovative new
- services and further stimulate demand for existing network
- applications. Library information services, for example, have
- already grown dramatically on the NREN's predecessor, the Internet,
- because the
-
- enhanced connectivity permits scholars and researchers to
- communicate in new and different ways.... Clearly, to be
- successful, effective, and of use to the academic and research
- communities, the NREN must be designed to nurture and accommodate
- both the current as will as future yet unknown uses of valuable
- information resources. (3)
-
- So as the NREN implementation process progresses, it is vital that
- the opportunities to stimulate innovative new information
- technologies be kept in mind, along with the specific needs of the
- mission agencies which will come to depend on the network.
-
- Far from evolving into the whole of the National Public Network
- itself, the NREN is best thought of as a prototype for the NPN, which
- will emerge over time from the phone system, cable television, and
- many computer networks. But the NREN is a growth site which, unlike
- privately controlled systems, can be consciously shaped to meet
- public needs. For a wide variety of services, some of which might
- not be commercially viable at the outset, the NREN can
-
- provide selective access that proves feasibility and leads to the
- creation of a commercial infrastructure that can support universal
- services.... If we fully focus on ...[current] goals and work our
- way through a multitude of technical and operational issues in the
- process, then the success of the NREN will fully support its
- extension to broader uses in the years to follow. (4)
-
- In order to function as an effective test-bed, one that promotes
- broad access to a range of innovative, developing services, the NREN
- must be built so that it is easy for developers to offer new kinds of
- applications, and is accessible to a diversity of users. For
-
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- Kapor [Page 2]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- example, to encourage the development of creative, advanced library
- services, it must be easy for libraries to open their data bases to
- users all across the network. And if these library services are to
- flourish through the NREN, then the services must be available to
- researchers and students all over the country, through a variety of
- channels. Though the NREN itself is intended to meet the
- supercomputing and networking needs of the government-financed
- research community, Congress has wisely recognized that it can also
- function as a channel for delivery of a wide range of privately-
- developed information services. To
-
- encourage use of the Network by commercial information service
- providers, where technically feasible, the Network shall have
- accounting mechanisms which allow, where appropriate, users or
- groups of users to be charged for their usage of copyrighted
- materials over the Network. (5)
-
- Congress can create an environment that stimulates information
- entrepreneurship by mandating that the NREN rely on open technical
- standards whose specifications are not controlled by any private
- parties and which are freely available for all to use. Such non-
- proprietary standards will ensure that different parts of the network
- built and operated by independent parties, will all work together
- properly. By employing widely-used, non-proprietary standards the
- NREN will make it easy for new information providers to offer their
- wares on the network. The market will snowball: as more services are
- offered, more users will be attracted, who will increase overall
- demand. The NREN will also be a test-bed for development and
- experimentation with new networking standards that facilitate even
- broader, more efficient interconnection than now possible on the
- Internet. But throughout the stages of the NREN, all concerned
- should be sure that these functionalities are fostered.
-
- The NREN design and construction process is complex and will have
- significant effects on future communications infrastructure design:
-
- Building the NREN has frequently been described as akin to
- building a house, with various layers of the network architecture
- compared to parts of the house. In an expanded view of this
- analogy, planning the NII [national information infrastructure] is
- like designing a large, urban city.
-
- The NREN is a big new subdivision on the edge of the metropolis,
- reserved for researchers and educators. It is going to be built
- first and is going to look lonely out there in the middle of the
- pasture for a while. But the city will grow up around it in time,
- and as construction proceeds, the misadventures encountered in the
- NREN subdivision will not have to be repeated in others. And
-
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- Kapor [Page 3]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- there will be many house designs, not just those the NREN families
- are comfortable with.... The lessons we learn today in building
- the NREN will be used tomorrow in building the NII. (6)
-
- The coming implementation and design of the NREN offers us a critical
- opportunity to shape a small but important part of the National
- Public Network.
-
- VISIONS
-
- At its best, the National Public Network would be the source of
- immense social benefits. As a means of increasing social
- cohesiveness, while retaining the diversity that is an American
- strength, the network could help revitalize this country's business
- and culture. As Senator Gore has said, the new national network that
- is emerging is one of the "smokestack industries of the information
- age." (7) It will increase the amount of individual participation in
- common enterprise and politics. It could also galvanize a new set of
- relationships -- business and personal -- between Americans and the
- rest of the world.
-
- The names and particular visions of the emerging information
- infrastructure vary from one observer to another. (8) Senator Gore
- calls it the "National Information Superhighway." Prof. Michael
- Dertouzos imagines a "National Information Infrastructure [which] ...
- would be a common resource of computer-communications services, as
- easy to use and as important as the telephone network, the electric
- power grid, and the interstate highways." (9) I call it the National
- Public Network (NPN), in recognition of the vital role information
- technology has come to play in public life and all that it has to
- offer, if designed with the public good in mind.
-
- To what uses can we reasonably expect people to use a National Public
- Network? We don't know. Indeed, we probably can't know -- the users
- of the network will surprise us. That's exactly what happened in the
- early days of the personal computer industry, when the first
- spreadsheet program, VisiCalc, spurred sales of the Apple II
- computer. Apple founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak did not design
- the spreadsheet; they did not even conceive of it. They created a
- platform which allowed someone else to bring the spreadsheet into
- being, and all the parties profited as a result, including the users.
-
- Based on today's systems, however, we can make a few educated guesses
- about the National Public Network. We know that, like the telephone,
- it will serve both business and recreation needs, as well as offering
- crucial community services. Messaging will be popular: time and time
- again, from the ARPAnet to Prodigy, people have surprised network
- planners with their eagerness to exchange mail. "Mail" will not just
-
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- Kapor [Page 4]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- mean voice and text, but also pictures and video -- no doubt with
- many new variations. One might imagine two people poring over a
- manuscript from opposite ends of the country, marking it up
- simultaneously and seeing each others' markings appear on the screen.
-
- We know from past demand on the Internet and commercial personal
- computer networks that the network will be used for electronic
- assembly -- virtual town halls, village greens, and coffee houses,
- again taking place not just through shared text (as in today's
- computer networks), but with multi-media transmissions, including
- images, voice, and video. Unlike the telephone, this network will
- also be a publications medium, distributing electronic newsletters,
- video clips, and interpreted reports. (10)
-
- We can speculate but cannot be sure about novel uses of the network.
- An information marketplace will include electronic invoicing,
- billing, listing, brokering, advertising, comparison-shopping, and
- matchmaking of various kinds. "Video on demand" will not just mean
- ordering current movies, as if they were spooling down from the local
- videotape store, but opening floodgates to vast new amounts of
- independent work, with high quality thanks to plummeting prices of
- professional-quality desktop video editors. Customers will grow used
- to dialing up two-minute demos of homemade videos before ordering the
- full program and storing it on their own blank tape.
-
- There will be other important uses of the network as a simulation
- medium for experiences which are impossible to obtain in the mundane
- world. If scientists want to explore the surface of a molecule,
- they'll do it in simulated form, using wrap-around three-dimensional
- animated graphics that create a convincing illusion of being in a
- physical place. This visualization of objects from molecules to
- galaxies is already becoming an extraordinarily powerful scientific
- tool. Networks will amplify this power to the point that these
- simulation tools take their place as fundamental scientific apparatus
- alongside microscopes and telescopes. Less exotically, a consumer or
- student might walk around the inside of a working internal combustion
- engine -- without getting burned.
-
- Perhaps the most significant change the National Public Network will
- afford us is a new mode of building communities -- as the telephone,
- radio, and television did. People often think of electronic
- "communities" as far-flung communities of interest between followers
- of a particular discipline. But we are learning, through examples
- like the PEN system in Santa Monica and the Old Colorado City system
- in Colorado Springs, that digital media can serve as a local nexus,
- an evanescent meeting-ground, that adds levels of texture to
- relationships between people in a particular locale. As Jerry Berman
- of the ACLU Information Technology Project has said:
-
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- Kapor [Page 5]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- Computer and communications technologies are transforming speech
- into electronic formats and shifting the locus of the marketplace
- of ideas from traditional public places to the new electronic
- public forums established over telephone, cable, and related
- electronic communications networks. (11)
-
-
- To both local and long-distance communities, accessible digital
- communications will be increasingly important; by the end of this
- decade, the "body politic," the "body social," and the "body
- commercial" of this country will depend on a nervous system of
- fiber-optic lines and computer switches.
-
- But whatever details of the vision and names gives to the final
- product, a network that is responsive to a wide spectrum of human
- needs will not evolve by default. Just as it is necessary for an
- architect to know how to make a home suitable for human habitation,
- it is necessary to consider how humans will actually use the network
- in order to design it.
-
- In that spirit, I offer a set of recommendations for the evolution of
- the National Public Network. I first encountered many of the
- fundamental ideas underlying these proposals in the computer
- networking community. Some of these recommendations address
- immediate concerns; others are more long-term. There is a focus on
- the role of public access and commercial experiments in the NREN,
- which complement its research and education mission. The
- recommendations are organized here according to the main needs which
- they will serve: first ensuring that the design and use of the
- network remains open to diversity, second, safeguarding the freedom
- of users. The ultimate goal is to develop a habitable, usable and
- sustainable system -- a nation of electronic neighborhoods that
- people will feel comfortable living within.
-
- I. Encourage Competition Among Carriers
-
- In the context of the NREN, act now to create a level and competitive
- playing field for private network carriers, (whether for-profit or
- not-for-profit) to compete. Do not give a monopoly to any carrier.
- The growing network must be a site where competitive energy produces
- innovation for the public benefit, not the refuge of monopolists.
-
- The post-divestiture phone system offers us a valuable lesson: a
- telecommunications network can be managed effectively by separate
- companies -- even including bitter opponents like AT&T and MCI -- as
- long as they can connect equitably and seamlessly from the user's
- standpoint. The deregulated telecommunications system may not work
- perfectly and may produce too much litigation, but it does work. We
-
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- Kapor [Page 6]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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- should never go back to any monopoly arrangement like the pre-
- divestiture AT&T which held back market-driven innovation in
- telecommunications for half a century. Given the interconnection
- technology now available, we should never again have to accept the
- argument that we have to sacrifice interoperability for efficiency,
- reliability, or easy-of-use.
-
- Similarly, the NREN, and later the National Public Network, must be
- allowed to grow without being dominated by any single company.
- Contracting requirements in the current legislation advance this
- goal.
-
- The Network shall be established in a manner which fosters and
- maintains competition within the telecommunications industry and
- promotes the development of interconnected high-speed data
- networks by the private sector. (12)
-
- Absent a truly competitive environment, a dominant carrier might use
- its privileged access to stifle competitors unfairly: "Use our local
- service to connect to our undersea international links, without the
- $3 surcharge we tack on for other carriers." The greatest danger is
- "balkanization" -- in which the net is broken up into islands, each
- developing separately, without enough interconnecting bridges to
- satisfy users' desires for universal connectivity. Strong
- interoperability requirements and adherence to standards must be
- built into the design of the NREN from the outset. (13)
-
- After 1992, private companies will manage an ever-greater share of
- the NREN cables and switches. The NSF should use both carrot and
- stick to encourage as much interconnection as possible. For example,
- the NSF could make funding to NREN backbone carriers contingent on
- participation in an internetwork exchange agreement that would serve
- as a framework for a standards-based environment. As the NREN is
- implemented, some formal affirmation of fair access is needed --
- ideally by an "Internet Exchange Association" formed to settle common
- rules and standards. (Their efforts, if strong enough, could
- forestall a costly, wasteful crazy-quilt of new regulations from the
- FCC and 50 State Public Utilities Commissions.) This association
- should decide upon a "basket" of standard services -- including
- messaging, directories, international connections, access to
- information providers, billing, and probably more -- that are
- guaranteed for universal interconnection. The Commercial Internet
- Exchange (CIX) formed in 1991 by three commercial inter-networking
- carriers represents a substantive, initial move in this direction.
-
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- Kapor [Page 7]
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- II. Create an Open Platform for Innovation
-
- Encourage information entrepreneurship through an open architecture
- (non-proprietary) platform, with low barriers to entry for
- information providers.
-
- The most valuable contribution of the computer industry in the past
- generation is not a machine, but an idea -- the principle of open
- architecture. Typically, a hardware company (an Apple or IBM, for
- instance) neither designs its own applications software nor requires
- licenses of its application vendors. Both practices were the norm in
- the mainframe era of computing. Instead, in the personal computer
- market, the hardware company creates a "platform" -- a common set of
- specifications, published openly so that other, often smaller,
- independent firms can develop their own products (like the
- spreadsheet program) to work with it. In this way, the host company
- takes advantage of the smaller companies' ingenuity and creativity.
-
- Even interfaces rigidly controlled by a single manufacturer, like the
- Macintosh, embrace the platform concept. Two years ago, when Apple
- began planning the System 7 release of its Macintosh operating
- system, one of its first steps was to invite comment from software
- companies like Macromind, Aldus, Silicon Beach, and T/Maker. In
- substantive, sometimes very argumentative sessions, Apple revealed
- the capabilities it planned to these independents, who knew their
- customers and needs much better than Apple. One multi-media company,
- after arguing that Apple should take a different technical turn,
- actually found itself doing the work in a joint project. The most
- useful job of Apple's famous "evangelists" is not selling the Mac
- specs, but listening to outsiders, and helping Apple itself stay
- flexible enough to work with independent innovators effectively.
-
- In the design of the NREN, information entrepreneurship can best be
- promoted by building with open standards, and by making the network
- attractive to as many service providers and developers as possible.
- The standards adopted must meet the needs of a broad range of users,
- not just narrow needs of the mission agencies that are responsible
- for overseeing the early stages of the NREN. Positive efforts should
- be made to encourage the development of experimental commercial
- services of all kinds without requiring the negotiation of any
- bureaucratic procedures.
-
- In the early stages of development of an industry, low barriers to
- entry stimulate competition. They enable a very large initial set of
- products for consumers to choose from. Out of these the market will
- learn to ignore almost all in order to standardize on a few, such as
- a Lotus 1-2-3. The winners will be widely emulated in the next
- generation of products, which will in turn generate a more refined
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- form of marketplace feedback. In this fashion, early chaos evolves
- quickly a set of high-demand products and product categories.
-
- This process of market-mediated innovation is best catalyzed by
- creating an environment in which it is inexpensive and easy for
- entrepreneurs to develop products. The greater the number of
- independent enterprises, each of which puts at voluntary risk the
- intellectual and economic capital of risk-takers, is the best way to
- find out what the market really wants. The businesses which succeed
- in this are the ones which will prosper.
-
- It is worthwhile to note that not a single major PC software company
- today dates from the mainframe era. Yesterday's garage shop is
- today's billion-dollar enterprise. Policies for the NPN should
- therefore not only accommodate existing information industry
- interests, but anticipate and promote the next generate of
- entrepreneurs.
-
- The diverse needs of these many users will create demand for
- thousands of information proprietors on the net, just as there are
- thousands of producers of personal computer software today and
- thousands of publishers of books and magazines. It should be as easy
- to provide an information service as to order a business telephone.
- Large and small information providers will probably coexist as they
- do in book publishing, where the players range from multi-billion-
- dollar international conglomerates to firms whose head office is a
- kitchen table. They can coexist because everyone has access to
- production and distribution facilities -- printing presses,
- typography, and the U.S. mails and delivery services -- on a non-
- discriminatory basis. In fact, the sub-commercial print publications
- are an ecological breeding ground, through which mainstream authors
- and editors rise. No one can guarantee when an application as useful
- as the spreadsheet will emerge for the NPN (as it did for personal
- computers), but open architecture is the best way for it to happen
- and let it spread when it does.
-
- The PC revolution was brought about without direct public support.
- Entrepreneurs risked their investors' capital for the sake of
- opportunity. Some succeeded, but many others lost their entire
- investment. This is the way of the marketplace. We should take a
- much more cautious attitude about the commitment of public monies.
- In the absence of proven demand for new applications, government
- should not be spending billions of dollars on the creation of
- broadband networks. Neither should telephone companies be allowed to
- pass on the costs of the NPN in a way which would raise the rates for
- ordinary voice telephone service.
-
- Instead, we should position the NREN to show there is a market for
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- network applications. The commercial experiments just beginning on
- the Internet provides one source of innovation. Deployment of a
- national ISDN platform in the next few years represents another
- relatively inexpensive seed bed. As such experiments demonstrate
- more of a proven demand for public network services, it should be
- possible for the private sector to make the investments to build the
- broadband NPN using experience from the NREN.
-
- At the same time as the NREN is being debated and developed,
- telephone companies continue to push at the limits imposed on them by
- the "Modification of Final Judgment" (MFJ) of divestiture, the 1982
- anti-trust agreement which split up the Bell system. (14) Under
- pressure from the D.C. Court of Appeals, Judge Greene recently lifted
- the information services restrictions on the BOCs -- despite the
- competitive tension between the telephone companies, cable TV
- carriers, and newspapers. Thus, in the next year or so, Congress may
- well be forced to define a new set of rules for regulated
- telecommunications. (15) Like the AT&T divestiture decision, this
- would represent a fundamental shift in national policy with enormous
- and unpredictable consequences.
-
- Many consumer and industry groups are concerned that as the MFJ
- restrictions are lifted, the RBOCs will come to dominate the design
- of the emerging National Public Network, shaping it more to
- accommodate their business goals than the public interest. The
- Communications Policy Forum, a coalition of public interest and
- industry groups, has recently begun to consider what kinds of
- safeguards will be needed to maintain a competitive information
- services market that allows RBOC participation. The role that the
- RBOCs come to play in the nation's telecommunications infrastructure
- is, of course, an issue that must be carefully considered on its own.
- But in this context, the NREN represents a critical opportunity to
- create a model for what a public network has to offer, free from
- commercial pressures.
-
- With all of the uncertainty that surrounds the RBOCs entry into the
- information services market, we should use the NREN to learn how to
- develop a network environment where competitive entry is easy enough
- that the RBOCs opportunity to engage in anti-competitive behavior
- would be minimized. There is evidence that the RBOCs are resisting
- attempts to transform the public telephone system into a truly open
- public network (16) notwithstanding the FCCs stated intention do
- implement Open Network Architecture. (17) But since the NREN
- standards and procedures can be designed away from the dominance of
- the RBOCs, a fully open network design is within reach. In this
- sense the NREN can be a test-bed for "safeguards" against market
- abuse just as it is a test ground for new technical standards and
- innovative network applications.
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- Kapor [Page 10]
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- An open platform network model carrier from the NREN to the National
- Public Network would actually make some MFJ restrictions less
- necessary. Phone companies were originally prohibited from being
- information providers because their bottleneck control over the local
- exchange hubs gives them an unfair advantage. But on a network in
- which the local switch is open to information providers -- because
- the platform itself is so rich and well-designed -- creativity and
- quality triumph over monopoly power. Instead of restricting
- information providers, the National Public Network developers should
- encourage the entry of as many new parties as possible. Just as
- personal computer companies started in garages and attics, so will
- tomorrow's information entrepreneurs, if we give them a chance.
- Their prototypes today, small computer networks, electronic
- newsletters, and chat lines, are among the most vibrant and
- imaginative "publishers" in the world.
-
- III. Encourage Pricing for Universal Access
-
- Everyone agrees in the abstract with universal service -- the idea
- that any individual who wishes should be able to connect to a
- National Public Network. But that's only a platitude unless
- accompanied by an inclusive pricing plan.
-
- The importance of extending universal access to information and
- communication resources has been widely recognized:
-
- In light of the possibilities for new service offerings by the
- 21st century, as well as the growing importance of
- telecommunications and information services to US economic and
- social development, limiting our concept of universal service to
- the narrow provision of basic voice telephone service no longer
- services the public interest. Added to universal basic telephone
- service should be the broader concept of universal opportunity to
- access these new technologies and applications. (18)
-
- The problem of disparate access to information resources has been
- recognized in other telecommunications arenas as well. Congressman
- Edward Markey (D-Mass.), Chairman of the Subcommittee of
- Telecommunications and Finance of the House Energy and Commerce
- Committee warns that:
-
- [i]nformation services are beginning to proliferate. The
- challenge before us is how to make them available swiftly to the
- largest number of Americans at costs which don't divide the
- society into information haves and havenots and in a manner which
- does not compromise our adherence to the long-cherished principles
- of diversity, competition and common carriage. (19)
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- To address this problem in the long-term, there is legislation now
- pending which would broaden the guarantee of universal phone service
- to universal access to advanced telecommunications services. Senator
- Burns has proposed that the universal service guarantee statement in
- the Communications Act of 1934 should be amended to include access to
-
- a nation-wide, advanced, interactive, interoperable, broadband
- communications system available to all people, businesses,
- services, organizations, and households..." (20)
-
- In the near term, the NREN can serve as a laboratory for testing a
- variety of pricing and access schemes in order to determine how best
- to bring basic network services to large numbers of users. The NREN
- platform should facilitate the offering of fee-based services for
- individuals.
-
- Cable TV is one good model: joining a service requires an investment
- of $100 for a TV set, which 99% of households already own, about $50
- for a cable hookup, and perhaps $15 per month in basic service.
- Anything beyond that, like premium movie channels or pay-per-events
- is available at extra cost. Similarly, a carrier providing connection
- to the mature National Public Network might charge a one-time startup
- fee and then a low fixed monthly rate for access to basic services,
- which would include a voice telephone capability.
-
- Because regulators are concerned about any telephone service that
- might cause the price of basic voice service to rise, they are
- unwilling to approve new services which don't immediately recover
- their own costs. They are concerned that any deficit will be passed
- on to consumers in the form of higher charges for standard services.
- As a result, telephone companies tend to be very conservative in
- estimating the demand for new services. Prices for new services turn
- out to be much higher than what would be required for universal
- digital service. This is a kind of catch-22, in which lower prices
- won't be set until demand goes up, but demand will never go up if
- prices aren't low enough.
-
- Open architecture could help phone companies offer lower rates for
- digital services. If opportunities and incentives exist for
- information entrepreneurs, they will create the services which will
- stimulate demand, increase volume, and create more revenue-generating
- traffic for the carriers. In a competitive market, with higher
- volumes, lower prices follow.
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- IV. Make the Network Simple to Use
-
- The ideal means of accessing the NPN will not be a personal computer
- as we know it today, but a much simpler, streamlined information
- appliance - a hybrid of the telephone and the computer.
-
- "Transparency" is the Holy Grail of software designers. When a
- program is perfectly transparent, people forget about the fact that
- they are using a computer. The mechanics of the program no longer
- intrude on their thoughts. The most successful computer programs are
- nearly always transparent: a spreadsheet, for instance, is as self-
- evident as a ledger page. Once users grasp a few concepts (like rows,
- cells, and formula relationships), they can say to themselves,
- "What's in cell A-6?" without feeling that they are using an alien
- language.
-
- Personal computer communications, by contrast, are practically
- opaque. Users must be aware of baud rates, parity, duplex, and file
- transfer protocols -- all of which a reasonably well-designed network
- could handle for them. It's as if, every time you wanted to drive to
- the store, you had to open up the hood and adjust the sparkplugs. On
- most Internet systems, it's even worse; newcomers find themselves
- confronting what John Perry Barlow calls a "savage user interface."
- Messages bounce, conferencing commands are confusing, headers look
- like gibberish, none of it is documented, and nobody seems to care.
- The excitement about being part of an extended community quickly
- vanishes. On a National Public Network, this invites failure. People
- without the time to invest in learning arcane commands would simply
- not participate. The network would become needlessly exclusionary.
-
- Part of the NREN goal of "expand[ing] the number of researchers,
- educators, and students with ... access to high performance computing
- resources" (21) is to make all network applications easy-to-use. As
- the experience of the personal computer industry has shown, the only
- way to bring information resources to large numbers of people is with
- simple, easy-to-learn tools. The NREN can be a place where various
- approaches to user-friendly networks are tested and evaluated.
-
- Technically trained people are not troglodytes; they approve of
- human-oriented design, even as they manage to use the network today
- without it. For years, leaders within the Internet community have
- been taking steps to improve ease of use on the network. But the
- training of the technical community as a whole has given them little
- practice making their digital artifacts appropriate for non-technical
- consumption. Nor are they often rewarded for doing so. To a phone
- company engineer designing a new high-speed telephone switch, or to a
- computer scientist pushing the limits of a data compression
- algorithm, the notion of making electronic mail as simple as fax
-
-
-
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- machine may make sense, but it also feels like someone else's job.
- Being technically minded themselves, they feel comfortable with the
- specialized software they use and seldom empathize with the neophyte.
- The result is a proliferation of arcane, clumsy tools in both
- hardware and software, defended by the cognoscenti: "I use the "vi"
- editor all the time -- why would anyone have trouble with it?"
-
- If we have the vision and commitment to try this, the transformation
- of the network frontier from wilderness to civilization need not
- display the brutality of 19th century imperialism. As commercial
- opportunities to offer applications and services develop,
- entrepreneurs will discover that ease of use sells. The normal,
- sometimes slow, play of competitive markets should cause industry to
- commit the resources to serve the market by making access more
- transparent. But at the start transparency will need deliberate
- encouragement -- if only to overcome the inertia of old habits.
-
- V. Develop Standards of Information Presentation
-
- The National Public Network will need an integrated suite of high-
- level standards for the exchange of richly formatted and structured
- information, whether as text, graphics, sound, or moving images. Use
- the NREN as a test-bed for a variety of information presentation and
- exchange standards on the road towards an internationally-accepted
- set of standards for the National Public Network.
-
- Standards -- the internal language of networks -- are arranged in a
- series of layers. The lower levels detail how the networks'
- subterranean "wiring" and "plumbing" is managed. Well-developed sets
- of lower-level standards such as TCP/IP are in wide use and continue
- to be refined and extended, but these alone are not sufficient. The
- uppermost layers contain specifications such as how text appears on
- the screen and the components of which documents are composed. These
- are the kinds of concerns which are directly relevant to users who
- wish to communicate. Recently independent efforts to develop high-
- level standards for document formats have begun, but these projects
- are not yet being integrated into computer networks.
-
- Today, for example, the only common standard for computer text is the
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII). But
- ASCII is inadequate; it ignores fonts, type styles (like boldface and
- italics), footnotes, headers, and other formats which people
- regularly use. Each word processing program codes these formats
- differently, and there is still no intermediary language that can
- accommodate all of them. The National Public Network will need such a
- language to transcend the visual poverty and monotony of today's
- telecommunicated information. It will also need additional standards
- beyond what have been developed for message addresses and headers, a
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- common set of directories (the equivalent of the familiar white pages
- and yellow pages directories), common specifications for coding and
- decoding images, and standards for other major services.
-
- Congress has provided that the National Institute of Standards and
- Technology
-
- shall adopt standards and guidelines ... for the interoperability
- of high-performance computers in networks and for common user
- interfaces to systems. (22)
-
- As the implementation of the NREN moves forward, we must ensure that
- standards development remains both a public and private priority.
- Failure to make a commitment to an environment with robust standards
- would be "the beginning of a Tower of Babel that we can ill afford."
- (23) Since current standards are so inadequate to the demands of
- users:
-
- We ... need to endow the NII [National Information Infrastructure]
- with a set of widely understood common communication conventions.
- Moreover, these conventions should be based on concepts that make
- life easier for us humans, rather than for our computer servants.
- (24) The development of standards is vital, not just because it
- helps ensure an open platform for information providers; it also
- makes the network easier to use.
-
- VI. Promote First Amendment Free Expression by
- Affirming the Principles of Common Carriage
-
- In a society which relies more and more on electronic communications
- media as its primary conduit for expression, full support for First
- Amendment values requires extension of the common carrier principle
- to all of these new media.
-
- Common carriers are companies which provide conduit services for the
- general public. They include railroads, trucking companies, and
- airlines as well as telecommunications firms. A communications
- common carrier, such as a telephone company is required to provide
- its services on a non-discriminatory basis. It has no liability for
- the content of any transmission. A telephone company does not concern
- itself with the content of a phone call. Neither can it arbitrarily
- deny service to anyone. (25) The common carrier's duties have
- evolved over hundreds of years in the common law and later statutory
- provisions. The rules governing their conduct can be roughly
- distilled in a few basic principles. (26) Common carriers have a
- duty to:
-
- o provide services in a non-discriminatory manner at a fair
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- price
- o interconnect with other carriers
- o provide adequate services
-
- The carriers of the NREN and the National Public Network, whether
- telephone companies, cable television companies, or other firms
- should be treated in a similar fashion. (27)
-
- Unlike many other countries, our communications infrastructure is
- owned by private corporations instead of by the government. Given
- Congress' plan to build the NREN with services from privately-owned
- carriers, a legislatively-imposed duty of common carriage is
- necessary to protect free expression effectively. As Professor Eli
- Noam, a former New York State Public Utility Commissioner, explains:
-
- [C]ommon carriage is the practical analog to [the] First Amendment
- for electronic speech over privately-owned networks, where the
- First Amendment does not necessarily govern directly. (28)
-
- To foster free expression and move the national communications
- infrastructure toward a full common carrier regime, all NREN carriers
- should be subject to common carriage obligations. Given that the
- NREN is designed to promote the development of science, ensuring free
- expression is especially important. As on academic said:
-
- I share with many researchers strong belief that much of the power
- of science (whether practiced by scientists, engineers, or
- clinical researchers) derives from the steadfast commitment to
- free and unfettered communication of information and knowledge.
- (29)
-
- A telecommunications providers under a common carrier obligation
- would have to carry any legal message regardless of its content
- whether it is voice, data, images, or sound. For example, if full
- common carrier protections were in place for all of the conduit
- services offered by the phone company, the terminations of
- "controversial" 900 services such as political fundraising would not
- be allowed, just as the phone company is now prohibited by the
- Communications Act from discriminating in the provision of basic
- telephone services. (30) Neither BOCs not IXCs would be allowed to
- terminate service because of anticipated harm to their "corporate
- image." Though providers of 900 information services did have their
- freedom of expression abridged by the BOC/IXC action, First Amendment
- protection was not available to them because there was no state
- action underlying the termination.
-
- As important as common carriage is to the NPN, it is equally
- important that it be implemented in such a way as to avoid sinking
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- the carriers of these new networks into the same regulatory gridlock
- that characterizes much of telecommunications regulation. (31) This
- would have a crippling effect of the pace of innovation and is to be
- avoided. The controlled environment of the NREN should be taken
- advantage of to experiment with various open access, common carriage
- rules and enforcement mechanisms to seek regulatory alternatives
- other than what has evolved in the public telephone system
-
- Along with promoting free expression, common carriage rules are
- important for ensuring a competitive market in information services
- on the National Public Network. Our society supports the publication
- of many thousands of periodicals and fifty thousand of new books a
- year as well as countless brochures, mailings, and other printed
- communications. Historically, the expense of producing
- professional-quality video programming has been a barrier to the
- creation of similar diversity in video. Now the same advances in
- computing which created desktop publishing are delivering "desktop
- video" which will make it affordable for the smallest business,
- agency, or group to create video consumables. The NPN must
- incorporate a distribution system of individual choice for the video
- explosion.
-
- If the cable company wants to offer a package of program channels, it
- should be free to do so. But so should anyone else. There will
- continue to be major demand for mass market video entertainment, but
- the vision of the NPN should not be limited to this form of content.
- Anyone who wishes to offer services to the public should be
- guaranteed access over the same fiber optic cable under the principle
- of common carriage. From this access will come the entrepreneurial
- innovation, and this innovation will create the new forms of media
- that exploit the interactive, multimedia capabilities of the NPN.
-
- VII. Protect Personal Privacy
-
- The infrastructure of the NPN should include mechanisms that support
- the privacy of information and communication. Building the NREN is
- an opportunity to test various data encryption schemes and study
- their effectiveness for a variety of communications needs.
-
- Technologies have been developed over the past 20 years which allow
- people to safeguard their own privacy. One tool is public-key
- encryption, in which an "encoding" key is published freely, while the
- "decoder" is kept secret. People who wish to receive encrypted
- information give out their public key, which senders use to encrypt
- messages. Only the possessor of the private key has the ability to
- decipher the meaning.
-
- The privacy of telephone conversations and electronic mail is already
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- protected by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. (32) Without
- a valid court order, for example, wiretaps of phone conversations are
- illegal and private messages are inadmissible in court. Legal
- guarantees are not enough, however. Although it is technically
- illegal to listen in on cellular telephone conversations, as a
- practical matter the law is unenforceable. Imported scanners capable
- of receiving all 850 cellular channels are widely available through
- the gray market.
-
- Cellular telephone transmissions are carried on radio waves which
- travel through the open air. The ECPA provision which makes it
- illegal to eavesdrop on a cellular call is the wrong means to the
- right end. It sets a dangerous precedent in which, for the first
- time, citizens are denied the right to listen to open air
- transmissions. In this case, technology provides a better solution.
- Privacy protection would be greatly enhanced if public-key encryption
- technology were built into the entire range of digital devices, from
- telephones to computers. (33) The best way to secure the privacy and
- confidentiality Americans say they want is through a combination of
- legal and technical methods.
-
- As a system over which not only information but also money will be
- transferred, the National Public Network will have enormous potential
- for privacy abuse. Some of the dangers could be forestalled now by
- building in provisions for security from the beginning.
-
- Conclusion
-
- The chance to influence the shape of a new medium usually arrives
- when it is too late: when the medium is frozen in place. Today,
- because of the gradual evolution of the National Public Network, and
- the unusual awareness people have of its possibilities, there is a
- rare opportunity to shape this new medium in the public interest,
- without sacrificing diversity or financial return. As with personal
- computers, the public interest is also the route to maximum
- profitability for nearly all participants in the long run.
-
- The major obstacle is obscurity: technical telecommunications issues
- are so complex that people don't realize their importance to human
- and political relationships. But be this as it may, these issues are
- of paramount importance to the future of this society. Decisions and
- plans for the NPN are too crucial to be left to special interests.
- If we act now to be inclusive rather than exclusive in the design of
- the NPN we can create an open and free electronic community in
- America. To fail to do so, and to lose this opportunity, would be
- tragic.
-
-
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- End Notes
-
- 1. High Performance Computing and Communications Act of 1991, H.R
- 656, S.272 section 2(6).
-
- 2. High-Performance Computing And Communications Act of 1991:
- Hearing before the Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space of
- the Senate Comm. on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, 102nd
- Cong., 1st Sess. 1 (1991)(Opening Statement by Senator
- Gore)(hereinafter 1991 Senate NREN Hearing).
-
- 3. 1991 Senate NREN Hearing 101, 103 (Statement of the Association
- of Research Libraries).
-
- 4. 1991 Senate NREN Hearing 99 (Statement of Dr. Kenneth M. King,
- President, EDUCOM).
-
- 5. S.272 (Commerce-Energy compromise) section 102(e)
-
- 6. Michael M. Roberts, Positioning the National Research and
- Education Network. EDUCOM Magazine 13 (Summer 1991).
-
- 7. 1991 Senate NREN Hearing 1 (Opening statement of Sen. Gore).
-
- 8. Details of the visions vary in their content and expression.
- Senator Gore's bill mandates that federal agencies will serve as
- information providers, side by side with commercial services, making
- (for instance) government-created information available to the public
- over the network. Individuals will gain "access to supercomputers,
- computer data bases, other research facilities, and libraries." (Gore
- imagines junior high school students dialing in to the Library of
- Congress to look up facts for a term paper.) Apple CEO John Sculley
- has predicted that "knowledge navigators" will use personal computers
- to travel through realms of virtual information via public digital
- networks.
-
- Such visions are powerful, but they sometimes seem too much like
- sales tools; too vague and overconfident to set direction for
- research. People often infer from the Apple's "knowledge navigator"
- videotape, for instance, that human-equivalent computer speech
- recognition is just around the corner; but in truth, it still
- requires fundamental research breakthroughs. Network users will still
- need keyboards or pointing devices for many years. Nor will the
- network be able (as some have suggested) to translate automatically
- between languages. (It will allow translators to work more
- effectively, posting their work online.)
-
- 9. M. Dertouzos, Building the Information Marketplace, Technology
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- Review 29, 30 (January 1991).
-
- 10. See FCC Hearing on "Networks of the Future" (Testimony of M.
- Kapor)(May 1, 1991).
-
- 11. J. Berman, Democratizing the Electronic Frontier, Keynote
- Address, Third Annual Hawaii Information Network and Technology
- Symposium, June 5, 1991.
-
- 12. S.272, section 5(d). This section continues: "(1) to the maximum
- extent possible, operating facilities need for the Network should be
- procured on a competitive basis from private industry; (2) Federal
- agencies shall promote research and development leading to deployment
- of commercial data communications and telecommunications standards;
- and (3) the Network shall be phased into commercial operation as
- commercial networks can meet the needs of American researchers and
- educators."
-
- 13. The distinction between strong support for interoperability and
- something less is illustrated in the NREN compromise debate occurring
- as this paper is being written. The bill from the Senate Commerce
- Committee (S.272) calls for "interoperability among computer
- networks," section 701(a)(6)(A), while the compromise currently being
- discussed with the Energy Committee adopts a more watered down goal
- of "software availability, productivity, capability, portability."
- section 701(a)(3)(B).
-
- 14. 552 F.Supp 151 (D.D.C. 1982)(Greene, J.). The MFJ restrictions
- barred the BOCs from providing long distance services, from
- manufacturing telephone equipment, and from providing information
- services.
-
- 15. The Senate, under the leadership of Sen. Hollings, has just
- recently voted to lift the manufacturing restrictions against the
- BOCs contained in the MFJ.
-
- 16. In The Matter of Advanced Intelligent Network, Petition for
- Investigation, filed by Coalition of Open Network Architecture
- Parties (November 16, 1990).
-
- 17. Amendment of Sections 64.702 of the Commission's Rules and
- Regulations, 104 FCC 2d 958 (COMPUTER III), vacated sub nom,
- California v. FCC (9th Cir. 1990).
-
- 18. NTIA Telecomm 2000 at 79.
-
- 19. Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on
- Telecommunications and Finance, Hearings on Modified Final Judgment,
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- 101st Cong., 1st Sess., 1-2 (May 4, 1989).
-
- 20. Communications Competitiveness and Infrastructure Modernization
- Act of 1991, S. 1200, Title I, Amending Communications Act section 1,
- 47 USC 151.
-
- 21. S.272, section 2(b)(1)(B).
-
- 22. S.272 Commerce-Energy Compromise section 203(a).
-
- 23. 1991 Senate NREN Hearing at 32 (Statement of Hon. D. Allan
- Bromley, Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy).
-
- 24. M. Dertouzos at 31.
-
- 25. See 47 USC section 201.
-
- 26. See ACLU Information Technology Project, Report to the American
- Civil Liberties Board from the Communications Media Committee to
- Accompany Proposed Policy Relating To Civil Liberties Goals and
- Requirements of the United States Communications Media
- Infrastructure. (Draft, July 15, 1991) [hereinafter, ACLU Report].
- "Non-discriminatory access to new communications systems must be
- guaranteed not simply because it is the economically efficient thing
- to do, but more importantly because it is the only way to ensure that
- freedom of expression is preserved in the Information Age."
-
- 27. Though common carriage principles have historically been applied
- to telephone and telegraph systems, the preservation of First
- Amendment values of free expression and free press was not the
- motivating factor. Professor de Sola Pool notes that telephone and
- telegraph systems inherited their common carrier obligations not so
- much out of First Amendment concerns, but in order to promote
- commerce. The more appropriate model to look to in extending First
- Amendment values to new communications technologies is the mails. As
- reflected in the post clause, empowering Congress to "establish post
- offices and post roads," the Constitutional drafters felt that
- creation of a robust postal system was vital in order to ensure free
- expression and healthy political debate. As Sen. John Calhoun said
- in 1817:
-
- Let us conquer space. It is thus that . . . a citizen of the West
- will read the news of Boston still moist from the press. The mail
- and the press are the nerves of the body politic.
-
- Non-discriminatory access to the mails has been secured by the
- Supreme Court as a vital extension of First Amendment expression. In
- a dissent which is now reflective of current law, Justice Holmes
-
-
-
- Kapor [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
-
-
- argued that
-
- [t]he United States may give up the Post Office when it sees fit,
- but while it carries it on the use of the mails is almost as much
- a part of free speech as the right to use our tongues. (Milwaukee
- Social Democratic Publishing Co. v. Burleson, 255 US 407 (1921)
- (Holmes, J., dissenting)(emphasis added). This principle was
- finally affirmed in Hannegan v. Esquire, 327 US 146 (1945) (cited
- in de Sola Pool).
-
- See de Sola Pool, Technologies of Freedom 77-107.
-
- 28. E. Noam, FCC Hearing "Networks of the Future" (May 1, 1991).
-
- 29. 1991 Senate NREN Hearing at 52 (Statement of Donald Langenberg,
- Chancellor of the University of Maryland System).
-
- 30. 47 USC section 201. Following much controversy about obscene or
- indecent dial-a-message services, a number of BOCs and interexchange
- carriers (IXCs, ie. MCI, Sprint, etc.) have adopted policies which
- limit the kinds of information services for which they will provide
- billing and collection services. Recently, some carriers have gone
- so far as to refuse to carry the services at all, even if the service
- handles its own billing. See ACLU Report.
-
- 31. See J. Berman & W. Miller, Communications Policy Overview 14-24,
- Communications Policy Forum (April 1991).
-
- 32. Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, 18 USC 2510 et
- seq. See also J. Berman & J. Goldman, A Federal Right of Information
- Privacy: The Need for Reform, Benton Foundation Project on
- Communications & Information Policy Options (1989).
-
- 33. See Statement In Support Of Communications Privacy, following
- 1991 Cryptography and Privacy Conference, sponsored by Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, Computer Professionals for Social
- Responsibility, and RSA Software. (June 10, 1990).
-
-
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- Kapor [Page 22]
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- RFC 1259 Building The Open Road September 1991
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-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- Author's Address
-
- Mitchell Kapor
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 155 Second Street
- Cambridge, MA 02142
-
- Phone: (617) 864-1550
-
- EMail: mkapor@eff.org
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