2010: D-day for the Internet as it hits "full capacity"?

Wed Apr 23, 2008 4:19PM EDT

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Doom-filled warnings arrive from AT&T this week. The company says that without substantial investment in network infrastructure, the Internet will essentially run out of bandwidth in just two short years.

Blame broadband, says AT&T. Decades of dealing with the trickle of bandwidth consumed by voice and dialup modems left AT&T twiddling its thumbs. The massive rise of DSL and cable modem service in the 2000s has had AT&T facing a monstrous increase in the volume of data transmissions. And that's set to increase another 50 times between now and 2015. That's enough, says AT&T, to all but crash the system.

In response, AT&T says it's investing $19 billion to upgrade the backbone of the Internet, the routers, servers, and connections where the bulk of traffic is processed.

Of course, AT&T is using this breathlessness in part to point fingers beyond simple broadband use. Web video (especially high-definition video) is the most commonly mentioned bandwidth hog. AT&T says video alone will eat up 80 percent of traffic in two years vs. just 30 percent now. One wonders how YouTube doesn't collapse under the pressure. Hmmm.

Meanwhile, many are wondering whether this is prelude to AT&T announcing (or not announcing, but doing anyway) a traffic prioritization/shaping system like Comcast has been tinkering with... and which has earned it nothing but scorn. Net neutrality (which would forbid premium pricing for certain Internet applications and destinations) is a topic that continues to be hotly debated on Capitol Hill, and telcos are anxious to kill the idea since they'd love to be able to charge additional money for different kinds of web traffic. If the whole Internet is about to crash, well, that makes AT&T's argument all the more compelling, doesn't it?

Comments on 2010: D-day for the Internet as it hits "full capacity"?

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  • 1 Posted by taficke on Wed Apr 23, 2008 5:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    People knew this was going to happen. Why didn't people invest in this more when the first times of trouble were appearing instead of wait till the last minute to try and fix something that will take time?

  • 2 Posted by jd_1876 on Wed Apr 23, 2008 5:19PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with the YouTube comment. But I do think someone will get this fixed in time, well, I hope anyway.

  • 3 Posted by lillgad on Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    I live in a REMOTE area of Florida {Inglis , yeah I never heard of it until I moved here 2 years ago} that all I can obtain in broadband is either Comcast or Dish network, cost are prohibitly ? (spelling) and only dsl at about 6 - 7 KB/sec. Where is all the tecnolgy from the majors, or are they waiting for a crunch to justify a huge increase in service? I feel for our children that are now more adapt in computers than I ever thought was possible 20 years ago. It's heck to get old.

  • 4 Posted by kojak58_1x_sailorman on Wed Apr 23, 2008 6:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    In my opinion, this smells. It smells like another effort in the making by greedy corporations... to bleed the consumer of even more outrageous sums of money.

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