VoIP Raises Its Voice

The gates for VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) seem to be fully opened now. With momentum moving toward a deregulated environment seemingly by the day -- and every significant telecom

January 16, 2004

4 Min Read
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The gates for VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) seem to be fully opened now. With momentum moving toward a deregulated environment seemingly by the day -- and every significant telecom player jumping into the market -- there's not much doubt anymore that this is the telecom trend of 2004, one that will have a significant effect on networks and network administrators alike.

The regulatory framework, evenly split in major markets between moves toward regulation and a more laissez-faire approach, has tipped toward freedom with two recent developments: Moves by California, previously a strong-regulation market, toward a more wait-and-see approach, and a bill filed in Congress by Sen. John Sununu (R-NH) to establish an unregulated market at both the federal and state levels. Sununu's bill, were it to pass, would particularly cement the temptation that telcos are feeling to cast aside their circuit-switched networks, which just happen to be subject to access regulations and taxes.

In fact, analysts think that's just what recent Verizon moves are aiming at, as the company undertakes a huge expansion of its IP backbone. Other huge players such as AT&T and British Telecom are following suit; AT&T is already touting its long-established worldwide IP backbone and its history of VoIP at the business level to potential customers. Meanwhile, smaller companies, such as Vonage and Level 3, that have previously been at the forefront of VoIP are scrambling to nail down as much business as they can while the big boys are still ramping up.

For network administrators, VoIP may mean some headaches with regard to costs, network loads, and bandwidth. But the move toward IP-based networks also brings an opportunity to finally have networks that truly integrate voice, video, and data--in other words, true digital convergence.

With the Session Initiation Protocol standard in place to handle converged traffic, and the bigger telcos looking to justify moves to VoIP by selling converged services (which is where analysts think the real big bucks are), network admins could be looking at the next step in their enterprise's network evolution.Sununu To File 'Hands-Off' VoIP Legislation
Sen. John Sununu (R-NH) is preparing legislation to keep federal and state regulators from interfering with the development of VoIP.

California May Hold Back On Regulating VoIP
California Public Utilities Commissioner Susan Kennedy is in the forefront of the PUC's new "wait and see" stance on VoIP.

AT&T Moves Into The VoIP Market
AT&T, which has offered limited VoIP service to business customers for years, jumped into the Internet phoning market, announcing a major initiative.

Telecom Recovery Hopes Raised By Verizon Moves
While Verizon Communications says two recently announced upgrade programs have no direct ties to each other, the combination points to a mass migration to all-IP networks going forward.

The Survivor's Guide to 2004: Converged Voice, Video and Data
The smart money in 2004 will move toward true digital convergence: Voice, video, and data traffic running on one network--an IP network.DEEP BACKGROUND

Related Techweb Features

FCC Decisions Impact Broadband, VoIP

Many enterprises would like to see broadband access and telecom as a purely free-market exercise. Not likely.

VoIP: Decisions, Decisions
VoIP -- it's a floor wax and a dessert topping. That's the upshot of conflicting U.S. legal decisions that, for the moment, leave voice over Internet protocol unregulated in most states.

Related NewsVonage Extends VoIP Reach
VoIP provider Vonage Holdings has unveiled two marketing pincer movements aimed at bringing its Web telephoning service to broadband subscribers.

Level 3 Rounds Out VoIP Offerings
Level 3 Communications Inc. launched a toll-free calling service across the United States, rounding out its local and long-distance VoIP offerings.

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