DocumentCode
954348
Title
Commercial, legal, and international aspects of packet communications
Author
Mathison, Stuart L.
Author_Institution
Telenet Communications Corporation, Washington, DC
Volume
66
Issue
11
fYear
1978
Firstpage
1527
Lastpage
1539
Abstract
Packet switching technology emerged rapidly in the 1970´s as another viable mode of communications switching, along with circuit and message switching. Since packet switching offers economical and versatile data communication capabilities in a multiuser environment, it is particularly well suited for furnishing public data communication network services. Public packet networks are now established or being developed in most industrialized countries, and the introduction of these networks has raised policy issues relating to the structure and regulation of the national networks, and the interconnection of national networks into an international packet switching system. This paper reviews these issues and concludes that public packet switching network services will continue to be regulated in all cases; that competitive packet networks will coexist in the U.S. and in Canada, but that only one national packet network will exist in each of most other countries; that packet networks will aggravate the problem of distinguishing nonregulated data processing services from regulated data communication services; that international interconnection of public packet networks based upon CCITT standanh will occur rapidly over the next several years; and that a unified international packet switching system will eventually emerge similar to today´s international telephone and telex systems.
Keywords
Communication switching; Communications technology; Data communication; Data processing; Environmental economics; Integrated circuit interconnections; Law; Legal factors; Packet switching; Switching circuits;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1978.11154
Filename
1455423
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