Under a proposal currently being discussed, tech giants could be asked to help pay for European 5G infrastructure, with Apple potentially on the list of companies receiving a bill.
The European Union is planning to consult on the idea of asking companies which generate a lot of Internet bandwidth to contribute to the cost of upgrading the telecoms equipment used to deliver it …
A decade-old idea revived
There’s nothing new about the idea of suggesting that companies which generate a lot of Internet bandwidth should be asked to contribute to the capital costs of installing and upgrading the necessary infrastructure. The European Telecommunications Network Operators’ Association (ETNO) first proposed this back in 2012.
Today there is a huge disproportion amongst revenues and a clear shift of value towards players (Over the Top players ‐ OTT) who are not contributing to network investment. Traffic and revenue flows need to be realigned in order to assure the economic viability of infrastructure investment and the sustainability of the whole ecosystem.
European Union commissioner Thierry Breton revived it last year, citing a risk that 5G infastructure in Europe could fall behind the US and Asia unless we looked again at “who should pay what.”
Proposal on paying for European 5G infrastructure
That idea has now solidified into a draft proposal, which Bloomberg has seen.
The European Union is weighing a proposal to make technology companies that use the most bandwidth, like Netflix Inc. and Alphabet Inc., to help pay for the next generation of internet infrastructure, according to a draft document seen by Bloomberg.
The suggestions are part of a “fair-share” vision from the EU’s executive arm that could require large tech businesses, which provide streaming videos and other data-heavy services, to help pay for the traffic they generate.
While Apple is not named in the report, Apple TV+ bandwidth was considered large enough to be included in a requirement to reduce streaming quality during the pandemic. This was intended to preserve enough bandwidth to cope with increased demand – for both entertainment, and all the videoconferencing calls being generated by people working from home.
European officials have instructed streaming services to reduce the amount of bandwidth their services use, in order to reduce strain on internet networks […]
Apple appears to be serving video streams with resolutions as low as 670 pixels tall. In addition to lower resolution, the streams appear heavily compressed with visibly blocky artifacts.
Both Apple TV+ and Netflix restored normal bandwidth usage in May 2020.
Bloomberg does note that the EU appeared to have rejected the idea back in October, but that it now appears to want to find out what the telecoms industry thinks, with a consultation expected to last 2-3 months.
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