Blog: MICHELLE ROWLAND MP
Shadow Assistant Minister for Communications

Malcom’s multi-mix: An (up)load of rubbish
April 12, 2014

“The Americans have need of the telephone, but we do not. We have plenty of 
messenger boys”.

So said Sir William Preece, the chief engineer of the British Post Office, in 
1876.

Adjusted for real time, Malcolm Turnbull basically said the same this week.

For all the Minister’s flip-flopping over the past few days and the subsequent 
reporting, one of the key aspects that has largely been overlooked is the issue 
of the upload: its speed, quality and availability.  While Tony Abbott equates 
broadband infrastructure investment with a video entertainment system and 
thinks Malcolm Turnbull invented the Internet, one would have hoped his 
Minister might have acquired some appreciation of the importance of the upload.

But throughout the whole NBN debate, the issue of the upload has taken a back 
seat.  In fact, in his whole time in Parliament, the Minister for 
Communications has only mentioned the word “upload” once.

And indeed, the Government’s decision this week to lock Australia’s broadband 
future into a multi-technology mix approach 
(http://www.financeminister.gov.au/media/2014/mr_2014-22.html), despite 
foregoing its once sacrosanct prerequisite for a cost-benefit analysis, does 
more than just expose the Minister’s rank hypocrisy.

In its new Statement of Expectations, the once explicitly promised delivery of 
25 Mbps download speeds by 2016 has been refashioned as a “policy objective”.  
The download promise broken, one looks to the upload.  All we are given is a 
parenthesised objective of “proportionate upload rates”.  What does that even 
mean?

It means Tony Abbott and Malcolm Turnbull have sold Australia down the path of 
least innovation.  Ours is a messenger boy future.

During its time in Opposition, the Coalition focused solely on the download, 
something they still do today.  Yet anyone with interest in the ICT sector 
knows that the big gains in national productivity are achieved by the highest 
quality, ubiquitous broadband infrastructure with the capability for 
correspondingly high upload speeds.

As I said in my first speech to the Parliament on 29 September 2010:

In 10 or 20 years our children will look back on the current debate about the 
NBN and will be shocked by the short-sightedness of some of the views expressed 
about the NBN today, particularly the commentary that is fixated on the 
download path: the false assumption that the NBN is merely a matter of faster 
emails or web-surfing. The reality is the NBN is not about the download. It is 
all about the upload. It is about a whole new category of enhanced services and 
applications that can only be achieved on a high-speed broadband platform that 
requires speeds only fibre technology can give—services and applications that 
have not even been invented yet. We have a glimpse today of what some of those 
applications will be, and they are positive. In the area of health, they 
include online medical consultations, remote diagnosis of electronic medical 
images and in-home monitoring of elderly people and sufferers of chronic 
disease.

Nearly four years later, an appreciation of (and strategy for) harnessing the 
value of the upload for such transformation remains absent from the Abbott 
Government’s agenda and the column space of most commentators.  Which is 
actually strange when one considers we are now in the user-generated content 
era: photos, video, commentary, applications.  Don’t forget about cloud 
computing and video conferencing, all inherently symmetrical in their bandwidth 
requirements. The basic rule that download speeds are given preferential 
treatment over the upload is breaking down, as the gap between downloading and 
uploading diminishes.

Everything Everywhere, the UK’s biggest mobile company, recently reported that 
mobile data uploads on its LTE network have started to exceed downloads for the 
first time, driven by the massive surge in photo and video uploads.  Yes, 
seriously.  The demand is already here.

But where is the supply?  Well, it’s just not technically possible to get 
decent upload speeds on today’s fixed broadband networks.  And if Turnbull gets 
his way, that’s the way things are going to stay.  VDSL and HFC, the key tenets 
of his multi-technology mix, are inherently biased towards the download.

This in itself exposes the utter folly of any government to formulate policy 
based on limited predictions of the level of demand that exists now and what it 
will be in future.  If history has taught us anything, it’s that the William 
Preece view of technology is a dud.

Australia had the opportunity to be at the head of the curve of this 
upload-driven transformation.  We can again, but it won’t be by virtue of a 
dog’s breakfast of rotting copper and an existing cable network that even its 
owners admit is not up to the task.

I wonder if, during his recent visit to South Korea, the Prime Minister turned 
on a wireless-enabled device.  I’ve never had the pleasure, but I’m reliably 
informed the immediate quality of the upload and download is something to 
behold.  South Korea is considered by many to be the poster child of the 
transformational power of ICT:  a country with a variety of attributes that 
would normally impede international success such as being small in size, having 
a unique language, and proximity to more powerful competitor economies.  A 
frequent conclusion for its economic miracle status is its acceptance well over 
a decade ago that high-speed broadband, utilising the highest quality 
future-proofed infrastructure, was crucial for economic development.

And what was Australia doing in comparison when such developments were 
occurring in South Korea?  We were stuck in protracted disputes involving a 
vertically-integrated operator whilst facilities-based competition was failing.

The developments of the last week have been farcical in their lack of 
consistency and litany of broken promises.  It would almost be humorous if it 
wasn’t so depressing, topped off by the Minister’s recent performance on 
Lateline (http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2014/s3983147.htm) which 
confirmed that, for all his talk, he really doesn’t care about improving 
broadband quality and access in Australia.

This Government has been in office now for 7 months.  It’s a year since Tony 
Abbott stood by an awkward-looking Malcolm Turnbull and promised universal 25 
Mbps by 2016.  Meanwhile, I still receive a steady stream of complaints from 
local residents who can’t access “broadband” using anything other than a dongle 
– wireless broadband of unreliable quality and prohibitive cost; no ADSL and no 
cable access.  And no improvement in sight. 

Yes Minister, these people do exist and there are lots of them.

The only difference between now and 7 months ago is that they have fallen off 
the NBN rollout map, left to rely on messenger boys.
--
Cheers,
Stephen


                                          
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to