
DSL
Inside the Goldmine, NTT Bags DSL
Japan's telco has long preferred ISDN over DSL, but with
friendly regulation, NTT could learn to love DSLand could learn
the DSL tricks of other nations' telcos.
In January 1998, NTT,
Japan's largest carrier, was conducting experiments to test the viability
of DSL through its infrastructure. At the same time, it was pushing ISDN
services like there was no tomorrow.
The prices of ISDN routers dropped dramatically, and they became more
common on the store shelves than analog modems. But on the other side
of the Pacific, some journalists were already bringing out the black armbands
for ISDN, predicting that DSL would be the wave of the future.
NTT, having sunk a considerable amount of effort into the development
and promotion of ISDN throughout Japan, seemed reluctant to see any other
players corner the broadband market before it was ready to make a move
itself. With cable partially knocked out as a competitor (regulations
forbid multiple cable operators per region, and cable connections typically
cannot be made to condominiums, apartment buildings, and the like, which
make up a high proportion of Japanese urban housing) NTT was in a good
position to control the flow of the broadband game.
Some statistics: in October 2000, some 460,000 Internet users
in Japan were estimated to be connected via cable (Korea had about twice
that number), and a mere 3,171 through NTT's trial DSL services (Korea
had just under 2 million DSL users at that time).
It's my party...
NTT had kept the numbers in the DSL game low through controlled access
to its switches. Since every ASDL provider must use the final mile provided
by NTT, the traditional stalling game, familiar to many overseas CLECs,
was used on domestic competitors. Delays of up to nine weeks were common
for reports on whether space was available for third-party equipment
at NTT locations. Bills for engineering work were presented with no
itemization. Strangely, when the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications
stepped in to clear up the rules covering interconnection, report times
dropped from a matter of weeks to about four days.
Of course, the cost of using the service is also another way of keeping
out the opposition. The few companies who have had the courage to see
their way through the swamp of NTT-imposed difficulties, mainly Tokyo
Metallic and eAccess,
saw an ¥800/month charge (about US$7) slapped on their users by NTT as
a payment for being allowed to use their (existing) lines for DSL. This
is in addition to the normal line rental and the per-minute charges for
all POTS calls (as well, of course, as the fees to the DSL provider).
There may also be engineering fees to be paid to NTT by the subscriber
to downgrade an ISDN line to analog.
Surprise, surprise!
And then NTT dropped the other shoe. It suddenly announced (mid-December)
that it was going to provide its own DSL service starting later that month,
at about ¥4,000/month (about $35)a drop from the ¥5,100 (about $45)
it had been asking for its limited trial service. Furthermore, as a concession,
the access to the lines was going to be halved to ¥410 (about $4).
The bureaucrats dug in their heels and demanded that the usage charge
for DSL lines be halved again to ¥200 (about $2). Although eAccess wanted
this fee to be reduced to ¥66, this wasn't forthcoming immediately, and
the price went down to ¥190.
Hideo Kobayashi, speaking for eAccess, actually professes
a slight relief with regard to NTT's entry into the arena. As he told
me, ISDN had always been popularly perceived, thanks to NTT's propaganda
machine, as the fastest thing around. NTT's market entry has now legitimized
DSL as a speedy contender in the eyes of the public. Of course, the
pricing has caused a serious rethink in the non-NTT camps. eAccess,
whose business is to sell the service to ISPs, rather than to the
end-user, has had to remain competitive, though Kobayashi was a little
coy regarding the exact details.
Tokyo Metallic, on the other hand, are furious, loudly
and publically. They state that NTT has played a foul, and they also
accuse the press of pandering to the whims of NTT by publicizing DSL
as an NTT "invention" when the spadework has actually been done by
Tokyo Metallic. They also make it clear that in their opinion the
reason for the delay in providing end-user applicants with the service,
some of whom have been waiting for three months or more (I recently
talked to two friends who were both in this position), rests fairly
and squarely with NTT
Naughty, naughty!
The Fair Trade Commission recently (December 20) issued a written warning
to NTT East about its delaying tactics (up to 14 months of preparation time
for would-be competitors while keeping its own business plans firmly under
wraps). Although this public slap on the wrist is unprecedented, it has
drawn a ritual apologetic response, and has generated some negative publicity
for NTT. But it is almost certainly too little too late as far as the competition
is concerned.
Actually, there are some very interesting shifts in the attitude of the
public media. The latest proposed budget, with its trillions of yen being
spent on unwanted public works, has attracted criticism from even the
usually compliantly uncritical NHK (public broadcasting service) news.
The government's "IT initiative" with its focus on (hideously expensive)
fiber-to-the-home is being publicized and praised. The 21st century equivalent
of dams, tunnels and airports? But even while extolling the virtues of
the new service, the NHK interviewer talking to a NTT spokesman expressed
shock and horror over the proposed ¥13,000/month charge (about $115) for
this broadband service. Some concern was also expressed over NTT's proposed
business model for broadcasting, whereby NTT would levy charges on both
the provider of the content and on the subscriber.
Are we at last seeing a public revolt against the heavy-handed tactics
of NTT? Stay tuned for future developments.
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