Announcing Industry-wide Multi-SDO Initiative
Autonomous Networks
Multiple Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) announce working together for an aligned vision of AN with better collaboration between Industry Stakeholders.
The long journey towards autonomy has only just begun and the industry needs standards to guide the best way to achieve Autonomous Networks (AN). Ideally, these standards should fit well together and form a coherent whole.
The IT and telecommunications industries are entering an interesting phase of architectural innovation. The autonomous network is defining a new paradigm for business models, operations, service offerings and supporting network architectures. It promises to optimize the production cost structure and improve the end-to-end production flexibility and business agility of digital services. As such, autonomous networks can aggregate the efforts of all stakeholders within the ICT industry. Individual initiatives, no matter how successful they are, will not be able to deliver the industry-wide change required. Industry organizations, CSPs, system integrators, and equipment/software suppliers should work together to turn the autonomous networks vision into an industrial reality.
Communications Service Providers (CSPs) face several challenges in their current Autonomous Networks initiatives:
The business and technology challenges are multi-faceted, complex and diverse. Industry standards are essential to help the industry as a whole to address those challenges. However, standards must now seek to form a cohesive whole, i.e. 'the whole is greater than the sum of the parts' approach where multiple standards when taken together form a holistic blueprint for how operators and vendors work well together on delivering real autonomous systems capable of making decisions in uncertain situations.
Several SDOs have ongoing activities to build the standards foundation of Autonomous Networks. However, without careful coordination, these efforts will be hampered by fragmentation (leading to gaps) or duplication of effort (leading to overlaps).
From a standardization perspective, the main issues to be addressed are:
Every challenge is an opportunity and so we have an opportunity to share, align and harmonize the collective achievements of the leading SDOs to make Autonomous Networks a successful business opportunity and to fully enable digital transformation. The organizations announcing this collaboration see the following high level studies as priorities to be achieved in a jointly developed Multi-SDO collaboration reference:
All ten organizations recognize the importance of this coordination effort and agree to participate in the M-SDO Coordination Reference on Autonomous Networks to fulfill the end-to-end perspectives of Autonomous Networks.
The following plan is proposed:
This initiative is open to all interested parties, including SDO representatives, company delegates/SMEs.
By addressing the 'big picture' vision of autonomous networks we will ensure that the real business drivers behind AN are considered from a customer perspective. With a solid foundation of industry standards to guide and inform the development of autonomous systems for their human users and supervisors, we aim to discover the emerging properties of Autonomous Networks and to build the next wave of intelligent and autonomous systems to help our industry thrive.
SDO | Group/Project | SDO | Role |
3GPP | SA5 | IETF | WG on AN |
CCSA | TC7 | ITU-T | FG-AN |
ETSI | ENI, F5G, MEC, NFV, PDL, TC INT/AFI, ZSM | Linux Foundation* | ONAP |
GSMA | Future Networks | NGMN | Automation |
IEEE | Future Networks | TM Forum | AN Project |
(*Open Source Community