internet Archives - United Networks https://www.united-networks.co.uk/tag/internet/ Business Communication Solutions Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:58:55 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.united-networks.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/favicon.ico internet Archives - United Networks https://www.united-networks.co.uk/tag/internet/ 32 32 BT and Ofcom agree deal to legally separate Openreach https://www.united-networks.co.uk/bt-and-ofcom-agree-deal-to-legally-separate-openreach/ Fri, 10 Mar 2017 16:58:55 +0000 http://www.united-networks.co.uk/?p=697 BT and Ofcom have reached agreement on a long-term regulatory settlement that will see Openreach become a distinct, legally separate company with its own Board within the BT Group. The agreement is based upon voluntary commitments submitted by BT that the regulator has said meet its competition concerns. Once the agreement is implemented around 32,000 [...]

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BT and Ofcom have reached agreement on a long-term regulatory settlement that will see Openreach become a distinct, legally separate company with its own Board within the BT Group. The agreement is based upon voluntary commitments submitted by BT that the regulator has said meet its competition concerns.

Once the agreement is implemented around 32,000 employees will transfer to the new Openreach Limited following TUPE consultation, and once pension arrangements are in place.

Openreach Limited will have its own branding, which will not feature the BT logo.

The Openreach CEO will report to the Openreach Chairman with accountability to the BT Group Chief Executive with regards to certain legal and fiduciary duties that are consistent with BT’s responsibilities as a listed company.

Gavin Patterson, BT Chief Executive, said: “I believe this agreement will serve the long-term interests of millions of UK households, businesses and service providers that rely on our infrastructure. It will also end a period of uncertainty for our people and support further investment in the UK’s digital infrastructure.

“This has been a long and challenging review where we have been balancing a number of competing interests. We have listened to criticism of our business and as a result are willing to make fundamental changes to the way Openreach will work in the future.”

The transfer of around 32,000 employees, under TUPE regulations, will be one of the largest such transfers in UK corporate history. It will take place once the agreement has been implemented and pension arrangements are in place for these employees. Under the agreement, Openreach will manage and operate its assets and trading but ownership of those assets and trading will remain with BT.

The agreement builds on changes that BT has already made to the governance of Openreach in recent months. These include the creation of an Openreach Board with a majority of independent members.

This Board will set Openreach’s medium term and annual operating plans and determine which technologies are deployed, within a strategic and financial framework defined by BT. Openreach will be free to explore alternative co-investment models in private with third parties.

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EE shows off helium balloon mobile masts https://www.united-networks.co.uk/ee-shows-off-helium-balloon-mobile-masts/ Fri, 24 Feb 2017 09:25:25 +0000 http://www.united-networks.co.uk/?p=673 Mobile phone provider EE has demonstrated helium balloons and drones that could provide 4G mobile coverage following damage to existing infrastructure.   The devices are fitted with small mobile sites that include a base station and an antenna. They could also be used to connect remote parts of the UK where coverage is thin. EE [...]

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Mobile phone provider EE has demonstrated helium balloons and drones that could provide 4G mobile coverage following damage to existing infrastructure.

 

The devices are fitted with small mobile sites that include a base station and an antenna.

They could also be used to connect remote parts of the UK where coverage is thin.

EE said it planned to deploy such a network in a UK rural area this year.

The drones can stay airborne for up to an hour at a time and the “helikite” balloons for several weeks as they have a tethered power source.

The drone was designed to give short-term targeted coverage to aid search and rescue situations, EE said.

“Innovation is essential for us to go further than we’ve ever gone, and deliver a network that’s more reliable than ever before,” said EE chief executive Marc Allera.

“Rural parts of the UK provide more challenges to mobile coverage than anywhere else, so we have to work harder there – developing these technologies will ultimately help our customers, even in the most hard to reach areas.”

It was the first time this had been tried out in the UK, said Kester Mann, analyst at CCS Insight.

“Everyone immediately thinks of disruptive players like Facebook and Google when it come to things like balloon-based networks. The traditional networks need to step up so they don’t get left behind,” he told the BBC.

Google is developing a network of huge balloons to provide connectivity to rural areas around the world, known as Project Loon.

Last month the tech giant confirmed it had closed its internet drone project, Titan, which was designed to bring the internet to remote rural areas.

Facebook’s Project Aquila involves building solar-powered aircraft which will fly for months at a time above remote places, beaming down an internet connection.

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Leicester UK City Council to Deploy FREE WiFi Internet Connectivity https://www.united-networks.co.uk/leicester-uk-city-council-to-deploy-free-wifi-internet-connectivity/ Tue, 09 Feb 2016 08:50:32 +0000 http://www.united-networks.co.uk/?p=454 Residents, businesses and visitors to the most popular parts of central Leicester (e.g. the Clock Tower, Jubilee Square and outside the Richard III centre), which is a city in the East Midlands of England, will be pleased to learn that BT are planning to roll-out a free WiFi zone in the area. At present BT [...]

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Residents, businesses and visitors to the most popular parts of central Leicester (e.g. the Clock Tower, Jubilee Square and outside the Richard III centre), which is a city in the East Midlands of England, will be pleased to learn that BT are planning to roll-out a free WiFi zone in the area.

At present BT has only just begun their initial planning and survey work for the 10 year deal, with the new network expected to go live sometime during theSpring 2016. The deployment, which will utilise the existing CCTV network for capacity, won’t cost the council anything and may also be used to help improve local 4G mobile phone coverage.

Rory Palmer, Deputy City Mayor, said:

We already have free wi-fi in our libraries and we know how popular wi-fi hotspots in city centre coffee shops and other venues are. We’d like to be able to extend this offer so that people can get online even more easily.

Free wi-fi will also support our plans to promote economic growth in the city as well as being an essential infrastructure for a modern connected city.”

BT has also made similar deployments in Cardiff, Gloucester, Glasgow, Nottingham and Newcastle etc.

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UPD Science and Tech Committee Warns of UK Internet Snooping Bill Costs https://www.united-networks.co.uk/upd-science-and-tech-committee-warns-of-uk-internet-snooping-bill-costs/ Mon, 01 Feb 2016 13:35:37 +0000 http://www.united-networks.co.uk/?p=408 The cross-party Science and Technology Select Committee (House of Commons) has today warned that the Government’s controversial new Investigatory Powers Bill (IPB) could cost significantly more than claimed and needs to be clearer about what it expects ISPs to actually do. The bill marks the third attempt by a Government to expand the United Kingdom’s [...]

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The cross-party Science and Technology Select Committee (House of Commons) has today warned that the Government’s controversial new Investigatory Powers Bill (IPB) could cost significantly more than claimed and needs to be clearer about what it expects ISPs to actually do.

The bill marks the third attempt by a Government to expand the United Kingdom’s existing telecoms snooping laws by forcing broadband ISPs into logging a bigger slice of everybody’s online activity and then keeping that log for up to 12 months, irrespective of whether or not you’ve committed a crime.

On top of that the IPB would also make this data (ICRInternet Connection Records) more easily accessible for law enforcement agencies through a complex “Request Filter” (not unlike a central database) and Police would not require a full warrant in order to gain access. But a warrant would still be needed for more targeted and detailed interception of an individual’s communications.

More recently ISPs have also warned that the predicted costs of implementing the bill (upwards of£175m) are far too low (here) and that some of the measures could impose an effective ban on encrypted end-to-end communication services (not even the service provider can view these). A recent meeting between smaller ISPs and the Home Office also suggested that the Government didn’t yet have a full grasp of the technical challenges involved (here).

Into this battle steps the Science and Technology Committee, which has today published the outcome from their inquiry into the IPB and echoed the above concerns.

Nicola Blackwood MP, Chair of the Committee, said:

“It is vital we get the balance right between protecting our security and the health of our economy. We need our security services to be able to do their job and prevent terrorism, but as legislators we need to be careful not to inadvertently disadvantage the UK’s rapidly growing Tech sector.

The current lack of clarity within the draft Investigatory Powers Bill is causing concern amongst businesses. There are widespread doubts over the definition, not to mention the definability, of a number of the terms used in the draft Bill. The Government must urgently review the legislation so that the obligations on the industry are clear and proportionate.

There remain questions about the feasibility of collecting and storing Internet Connection Records (ICRs), including concerns about ensuring security for the records from hackers. The Bill was intended to provide clarity to the industry, but the current draft contains very broad and ambiguous definitions of ICRs, which are confusing communications providers. This must be put right for the Bill to achieve its stated security goals.”

Interestingly, on the subject of encryption, Blackwood states: “The Government needs to do more to allay unfounded concerns that encryption will no longer be possible,” particularly in regards to the impact upon end-to-end encryption. “The Government should … state clearly in the Codes of Practice that it will not be seeking unencrypted content in such cases,” says the report.

Blackwood also loosely notes the risk to international competition if UK tech companies are effectively required to limit the security of their hardware and software products in order to meet the Government’s new rules, particularly in regards to weakening encryption. Rival products from other countries that do not impose such measures would naturally look more competitive.

The Committee also ruled that the Government should pick up the tab for all of the additional data storing costs involved in the IPB’s implementation, especially for smaller ISPs, and clarify some of the bill’s more confusing terms (e.g. what exactly does an ICR constitute?). It also demands further examination of the costs in order to arrive at a more accurate figure.

In keeping with all that the report recommends that the bill adopt Detailed Codes of Practice, which should for example “clearly set out the requirements for protecting ICR data that will have to be retained and managed by [ISPs], along with the security standards to keep them safe“.

Finally the report calls on the Government to review the composition of its Technical Advisory Board to “ensure that it will have members from industry who will be able to give proper consideration, not just to the technical aspects of appeals submitted to it from CSPs concerned about ICR or other interception or ‘interference’ notices, but also any concerns raised about costs“.

Nicholas Lansman, ISPA Secretary General, said:

“We are pleased parliament recognises that the Bill, as drafted, risks undermining the competitiveness of the UK tech sector. We now expect the Home Office to take on board these recommendations, along with those of the upcoming Joint Committee report, to produce a clearer Bill that is clear, technically feasible, proportionate and maintains trust in online services.”

In Blackwood’s words, “There are good grounds to believe that without further refinement, there could be many unintended consequences for commerce arising from the current lack of clarity of the terms and scope of the legislation.”

UPDATE 10:31am

Fibre optic ISP Gigaclear has added some thoughts.

Matthew Hare, CEO of Gigaclear, told ISPreview.co.uk:

For the UK to remain the best place to do business online, investment and focus needs to be on building a better broadband infrastructure, not on data storage measures that are unlikely to deliver the security we all want.

Gigaclear will connect 55,000 properties to its pure fibre network this year, but if the data storage measures outlined in the IPB have to be enacted, we will have to divert resources away from this important work. The focus for our engineers will be on monitoring data, rather than the expansion of our network, which is so crucial to the UK.

I am also concerned that capturing and retaining Internet Connection Records (ICRs) will actually create a security risk, not solve one. The data could be vulnerable to criminals. It will also undermine trust in the use of the Internet in the UK. Businesses will be reluctant to base themselves here in Britain, which will have a hugely damaging knock on effect to the wider economy.

Finally, such data storage demands will only become more burdensome in the future. Our Gigaclear customers, who have ultrafast broadband with speeds of up to 1Gbps, use the Internet up to 15 times more than the UK average. This shows a direct correlation between broadband speeds and Internet use. As the UK infrastructure is updated during the BDUK rollout and more people have access to faster speeds, so data usage will rocket and the task will become even more onerous for companies like ours. This has to be taken into account.”

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