[ih] Google, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft Weave a Fiber-Optic Web of Power (WSJ)
the keyboard of geoff goodfellow
geoff at iconia.com
Sun Jan 16 10:51:38 PST 2022
*The four tech giants increasingly dominate the internet’s critical cable
infrastructure*
By Christopher Mims
Jan. 15, 2022 12:00 am ET
To say that Big Tech controls the internet might seem like an exaggeration.
Increasingly, in at least one sense, it’s literally true
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702304173704579262361885883936?mod=article_inline>
.
The internet can seem intangible, a post-physical environment where things
like viral posts, virtual goods and metaverse concerts just sort of happen.
But creating that illusion requires a truly gargantuan—and
quickly-growing—web of physical connections
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/google-plans-fiber-optic-network-to-connect-via-saudi-arabia-and-israel-for-first-time-11606143590?mod=article_inline>
.
Fiber-optic cable, which carries 95%
<https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/in-depth-research-reports/report/cyber-defense-across-the-ocean-floor-the-geopolitics-of-submarine-cable-security/>
of
the world’s international internet traffic, links up pretty much all of the
world’s data centers, those vast server warehouses where the computing
happens that transforms all those 1s and 0s into our experience of the
internet.
Where those fiber-optic connections link up countries across the oceans,
they consist almost entirely of cables running underwater—some 1.3 million
kilometers (or more than 800,000 miles) of bundled glass threads that make
up the actual, physical international internet. And until recently, the
overwhelming majority of the undersea fiber-optic cable being installed was
controlled and used by telecommunications companies and governments. Today,
that’s no longer the case.
In less than a decade, four tech giants— Microsoft, Google parent Alphabet,
Meta (formerly Facebook ) and Amazon —have become by far the dominant users
of undersea-cable capacity. Before 2012, the share of the world’s undersea
fiber-optic capacity being used by those companies was less than 10%.
Today, that figure is about 66%.
And these four are just getting started, say analysts, submarine cable
engineers and the companies themselves. In the next three years, they are
on track to become primary financiers and owners of the web of undersea
internet cables connecting the richest and most bandwidth-hungry countries
on the shores of both the Atlantic and the Pacific, according to subsea
cable analysis firm TeleGeography.
By 2024, the four are projected to collectively have an ownership stake in
more than 30 long-distance undersea cables, each up to thousands of miles
long, connecting every continent on the globe save Antarctica. In 2010,
these companies had an ownership stake in only one such cable—the Unity
cable partly owned by Google, connecting Japan and the U.S.
Traditional telecom companies have responded with suspicion and even
hostility to tech companies’ increasingly rapacious demand for the world’s
bandwidth. Industry analysts have raised concerns
<https://venturebeat.com/2019/04/06/google-and-other-tech-giants-are-quietly-buying-up-the-most-important-part-of-the-internet/>
about
whether we want the world’s most powerful providers of internet services
and marketplaces to also own the infrastructure on which they are all
delivered. This concern is understandable. Imagine if Amazon owned the roads
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHs0e7GIlSg&t=1s> on which it delivers
packages.
But the involvement of these companies in the cable-laying industry also
has driven down the cost of transmitting data across oceans for everyone,
even their competitors, and helped the world increase capacity to transmit
data internationally by 41% in 2020 alone, according to TeleGeography’s annual
report
<https://www2.telegeography.com/hubfs/assets/Ebooks/state-of-the-network-2021.pdf>
on
submarine cable infrastructure.
Undersea cables can cost hundreds of millions of dollars each. Installing
and maintaining them requires a small fleet of ships, from surveying
vessels to specialized cable-laying ships that deploy all manner of
rugged undersea
technology <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVgjyUrhTc8&feature=youtu.be> to
bury cables beneath the seabed. At times they must lay the relatively
fragile cable—at some points as thin as a garden hose—at depths of up to 4
miles.
All of this must be done while maintaining the right amount of tension in
the cables, and avoiding hazards as varied as undersea mountains, oil-and-gas
pipelines <https://youtu.be/dlcbjKdm86E>, high-voltage transmission lines
for offshore wind farms, and even shipwrecks and unexploded bombs, says
Howard Kidorf, a managing partner at Pioneer Consulting, which helps
companies engineer and build undersea fiber optic cable systems.
In the past, trans-oceanic cable-laying often required the resources of
governments and their national telecom companies. That’s all but pocket
change to today’s tech titans. Combined, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and
Amazon poured more than $90 billion into capital expenditures in 2020 alone.
The four say they’re laying all this cable in order to increase bandwidth
across the most developed parts of the world and to bring better
connectivity to under-served regions like Africa and Southeast Asia
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebook-investment-in-africa-to-expand-internet-capacity-moves-ahead-11589465142?mod=article_inline>
.
That’s not the whole story. Their entry into the undersea fiber-laying
business was inspired by the growing cost of buying capacity on cables
owned by others, but is now driven by their own insatiable demand for ever
more terabytes of bandwidth, says Timothy Stronge, vice president of
research at TeleGeography. This has made profits razor-thin for traditional
players in the cable-laying industry, like NEC, ASN and SubCom, he adds.
(It has done the same to profits of wholesalers of capacity on submarine
cables, such as Tata and Lumen.)
By building their own cables, the tech giants are saving themselves money
over time that they would have to pay other cable operators. That means the
tech companies don’t need to operate their cables at a profit for the
investment to make financial sense.
Indeed, most of these Big Tech-funded cables are collaborations among
rivals. The Marea cable
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/facebook-and-microsoft-to-build-fiber-optic-cable-across-atlantic-1464298853?mod=article_inline>,
for example, which stretches approximately 4,100 miles between Virginia
Beach in the U.S. and Bilbao, Spain, was completed in 2017 and is partly
owned by Microsoft, Meta and Telxius, a subsidiary of Telefónica
<https://www.wsj.com/market-data/quotes/TEF>, the Spanish telecom. In 2019,
Telxius announced that Amazon had signed an agreement with the company to
use one of the eight pairs
<https://www.lightwaveonline.com/data-center/data-center-interconnectivity/article/16667845/amazon-web-services-to-take-capacity-on-marea-transatlantic-submarine-cable-system>
of
fiber optic strands in that cable. In theory, that represents one eighth of
its 200 terabits-per-second capacity—enough to stream millions of HD movies
simultaneously.
Meta works with global and local partners on all of its submarine cables,
as well as with other big tech companies such as Microsoft, says Kevin
Salvadori, vice president of network infrastructure at the company.
Sharing bandwidth among competitors helps ensure that each company has
capacity on more cables, redundancy that is essential for keeping the
world’s internet humming when a cable is severed or damaged. That happens
around 200 times a year, according to the International Cable Protection
Committee, a nonprofit group. (Repairing damaged cables can be a huge
effort requiring the same ships that laid the cable, and can take weeks.)
Sharing cables with ostensible competitors—as Microsoft does with its Marea
cable—is key to making sure its cloud services are available almost all of
the time, something Microsoft and other cloud providers explicitly promise
<https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/support/legal/sla/> in their agreements
with customers, says Frank Rey, senior director of Azure network
infrastructure at Microsoft.
But the structure of these deals also serves another purpose. Reserving
some capacity for telecom carriers like Telxius is also a way to keep
regulators from getting the idea that these American tech companies are
themselves telecoms, says Mr. Stronge. Tech companies have spent decades
arguing in the press and in court that they are not “common carriers” like
telcos—if they were, it would expose them to thousands of pages of
regulations particular to that status.
“We’re not a carrier—we don’t sell any of our bandwidth to make money,”
says Mr. Salvadori. “We are and continue to be a major buyer of submarine
capacity where it’s available, but in places it’s not available and we need
it, we are pretty pragmatic, and if we have to invest to make it happen
we’ll go do that,” he adds.
There is an exception to big tech companies collaborating with rivals on
the underwater infrastructure of the internet. Google, alone among big tech
companies, is already the sole owner of three different undersea cables,
and that total is projected by TeleGeography to reach six by 2023.
Google declined to disclose whether or not it has or will share capacity on
any of those cables with any other company.
Google has built and is building these solely owned-and-operated cables for
two reasons, says Vijay Vusirikala, a senior director at Google responsible
for all of the company’s submarine and terrestrial fiber infrastructure.
The first is that the company needs them in order to make its own services,
such as Google search and YouTube streaming, fast and responsive. The
second is to gain an edge in the battle for customers for its cloud
services.
All of these ownership changes to the infrastructure of the internet are a
reflection of what we already know about the dominance of internet
platforms by big tech, says Joshua Meltzer, a senior fellow at the
Brookings Institution who specializes in digital trade and data flows.
The ability of these companies to vertically integrate all the way down to
the level of the physical infrastructure of the internet itself reduces
their cost for delivering everything from Google Search and Facebook’s
social networking services to Amazon and Microsoft’s cloud services. It
also widens the moat between themselves and any potential competitors.
“You have to imagine this investment will ultimately make them more
dominant in their industries, because they can provide services at
ever-lower costs,” says Mr. Meltzer.
Write to Christopher Mims at christopher.mims at wsj.com
--
Geoff.Goodfellow at iconia.com
living as The Truth is True
More information about the Internet-history
mailing list