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Intelligent Interconnects in the VoIP Peering Environment. Alan R. Bugos Vice President of Advanced Technology and Engineering. Defining Voice Peering.
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Intelligent Interconnects in the VoIP Peering Environment Alan R. BugosVice President of Advanced Technology and Engineering
Defining Voice Peering • VoIP Peering can generally defined as a process of interconnecting two different VoIP networks with or without an underlying commercial relationship associated with the voice traffic • Intelligent VoIP Peering can be realized when business logic and intelligence are applied in the address resolution process to enhance the interconnect (quality), value or reduce cost (LCR)
VoIP Islands: With ENUM • ENUM capability enables signaling (address resolution) and direct interconnects between VOIP networks • After ENUM lookup, the PSTN is by-passed with efficient and cost effective use of VoIP networks ENUM Registry or Database PSTN Internet
Cost Reduction using ENUM(Example: North America Termination) • Cost reduction can be significant savings as ENUM registries and databases expand • Example: A carrier terminates 4 Million minutes/day to North America region • If 1 % of termination points are reached via ENUM and NA termination cost is $0.005 per minute (Average) • Savings per day: $200.00 • Savings per year: $73,000.00 • At 10% address resolution via ENUM , yearly savings increases to $730K!
ENUM/Peering Benefits Advantages • Capitalizing on the “Trend is our Friend” Model (TDM to IP migrations) within the carrier industry • Reduction in circuit MRC • Reduction in CapEx (GW and DACS ports, A/C, colo space, maintenance costs, etc.) • More use of SBCs (SBC ports are less expensive) • ENUM Address resolution is simple (DNS-like) and can scale highly • Use of ENUM services to enable direct IP end point termination (at significantly lower costs)
ENUM/Peering Concerns Issues and Concerns • Lack of CDRs since many of these peering networks are transport • Troubleshooting – may (often) require all three parties involved to solve issue • Peering network business models may not make sense although these models are in process of definition (flat rate, Volume-based, membership, or per query models) • SPIT and VoIP security concerns when ENUM registries are “open” to queries • Hidden costs: Peering fabric/networks still need to address issues associated with IP physical transport (Private vs Public networks), Discovery/Location, interworking, interoperability, media and trans-coding, policy/trust/security, commercial, etc.
SBC SBC SBC PSTN IP Use of ENUM and VoIP Peering Networks ENUM Registry (REMOTE) IP Phone Private ENUM Registry IP Phone VoIP Peering Network IP Phone VoBB Service Provider B IP Network VoBB Service Provider C IP Network VoBB Service Provider A IP Network 2 3 • A TDM or VoIP call enters iBasis Network • The E.164 (phone) number is presented and resolved through an ENUM registry or DB (Intelligent Business Logic is applied) • A SIP URL and IP End-point identified with the E.164 phone number • VoIP call is terminated at lower cost directly to the IP Phone or PC client over the Internet Gateway or SBC 4 1 TDM or VoIP Call Customer Tandem - Transit Switch Route Engine with Intelligent ENUM Database (Address resolution and routing logic)
Uses of ENUM and Intelligent Peering • Intelligence and business logic can be applied to the ENUM data, not just E.164 to SIP URL • Carrier-ENUM: Direct Peering and toll by-pass, private, secure, operator-controlled discovery of IP-based applications and services. • SoIP: Service over IP controlled end-to-end SoIP addressing includes VoIP and Video over IP. • Routing with or without business logic applied: LCR, Quality, Route Optimized • Number-Portability (LNM/MNP) : Highly efficient portability resolution with traditional SS7 interfaces. • Calling Party Identification (CPI): Highly flexible, carrier-defined CNAM address resolution logic including integrated access to the industry leading TARGUSinfo CNAM database. • SMS and MMS: Portability-corrected addressing for cross-operator (mobile operators) SMS and MMS services. • Special routing applications (TDM-VoIP Call Diversion with Presence Databases) • Redirecting undesired traffic - Fax and Modem Re-direct
Summary • ENUM is a technology that can provide for intelligent interconnects across multiple IP-based services and applications • With the use of ENUM, intelligence and business logic can be applied to each specific service to enhance its value. • Business models may change and need clarity. • The future use of intelligent peering and ENUM will provide for new exciting services in the near future.
www.ibasis.com Thank You!abugos@ibasis.net
Welcome to the New iBasis • October 2007, iBasis merged with KPN Global Carrier Services • One of the world’s largest carriers of international voice traffic: more than 20 billion minutes of int’l voice traffic in 2006 • Profitable & financially strong: no debt
Key Discussion Points • Will peering work and how will service providers make money? • Will carriers provide the numbers needed for ENUM registries? • Will the hidden costs hamper the growth or peering and use of ENUM? • Will MNP/LNP be the first practical use of ENUM? • How much will we invest in securing the data? Is this a major concern amongst end-users and carriers? • Should wholesale carriers consider the creation of their own peering and ENUM registry solution for routing and number portability? • Who are the major technology enablers (registries) of ENUM? • What are your organization’s thoughts on ENUM?