Booming IP telephony challenges NTT's telecom empire.Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (日本電信電話株式会社 (NTT NTT Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation NTT New Technology Telescope NTT National Technology Transfer, Inc NTT Name That Tune (TV game show) NTT National Tree Trust NTT Number Theoretic Transform Group has held a de facto monopoly A de facto monopoly is a monopoly that was not created by government. It is most often used in contrast to de jure monopoly, which is one that is protected from competition by government action. in the fixed phone business for the past 100 years. Despite the keitai boom, as well as the coming of the broadband age, the Japanese still need NTT's connections for their fixed phones even if they use other fixed line providers such as Heisei Denden and Cable & Wireless IDC for intermediary connections. But the recent expansion of voice communications via IP telephony The two-way transmission of voice over a packet-switched IP network, which is part of the TCP/IP protocol suite. The terms "IP telephony" and "voice over IP" (VoIP) are synonymous. in Japan may change the whole picture. IP telephony services, using VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol See Internet and TCP/IP. (networking) Internet Protocol - (IP) The network layer for the TCP/IP protocol suite widely used on Ethernet networks, defined in STD 5, RFC 791. IP is a connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol. ) technology that divides voice data into IP packets for transmisson across the Internet, have been on the rise over the past two years. According to Yano Research Institute (YRI YRI Yum Restaurants International (Dallas, TX) YRI Yaw Rate Indicator (aviation) YRI You Recall Incorrectly (chat) ), the number of IP phone subscribers increased from 304,000 in 2000 to 1.58 million in 2001. YRI estimates that the number will reach 2.42 million in 2002 and 3.64 million in 2003. So far, the expansion of IP phone in Japan has been closely connected to that of ADSL See DSL. ADSL - Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line . Yahoo! BB, for example, provides BB Phone IP phone service as a package deal for its ADSL subscribers. BB Phone is much cheaper than NTT's station-to-station phone calls: [yen] 7.5 every three minutes for domestic calls and international calls to major countries such as the US or England, plus minimum ADSL monthly connection fees of [yen] 3,143. Electronics firms are also entering the space. NEC (NEC Corporation, Tokyo, www.nec.com, www.necus.com) An electronics conglomerate known in the U.S. for its monitors. In Japan, it had the lion's share of the PC market until the late 1990s (see PC 98). NEC was founded in Tokyo in 1899 as Nippon Electric Company, Ltd. and Oki Electric Industry said in January that they have agreed to cooperate in developing an IP telephony business. This must be scary enough for NTT, but what is worse is the recent entry of electric companies into this space. Telecommunication Network (TTNet), in which Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) has a 36 percent equity stake, is planning to launch fiber-to-the-home (FTTH (Fiber To The Home) See FTTP. ) based IP phone services by the end of March, while Osaka-based k-opti.com--100 percent owned by Kansai Electric Power Co. (Kepco)--has just completed a deal with KDDI to jointly provide FTTH-based IP phone services. ADSL-based IP phone services in Japan still depend on NTT phone lines for the "last mile"--the distance from the nearest NTT connection point to the phone--and subscribers still pay the same NTT monthly basic connection fees of between 1,500 yen and 2,500 yen for home phones and slightly more for office phones. But FTTH-based IP phone services are theoretically free from that restriction and could bypass NTT phone lines all together, says a TTnet spokesperson, although she adds that some calls--such as emergency toll-free calls with the prefix 0120, still require NTT lines. Although the details of the services are still under discussion, the new service will be available for the company's broadband connection subscribers by attaching a modem to the phone they are using. Although it's too early to predict whether FTTH-based IP phones will boom in Japan, electric power companies with their rich fiber networks may become a major threat to other ISPs, including Yahoo! BB, which is in the middle of a fierce price war for ADSL subscriptions. The NTT Group may suffer a lot too, as its regional companies are already hurting from a decline in revenue from phone service businesses. But while these companies are struggling from the decline in fees for calls made, the basic monthly connection fees are providing stable revenue. |
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