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    As industry lauds 5G potential, businesses will need to justify investment

    It is pipped to become the dominant mobile technology in 2029, but 5G adoption amongst enterprises will require strong use cases to justify the necessary investments as well as collaboration across the entire ecosystem. With countries such as Singapore already running pilots across several verticals, 5G deployments are expected to ramp up as more networks are rolled out this year. In fact, 5G connections will double over the next two years, with new network deployments expected in more than 30 countries this year alone, said industry group GSMA. Of the new networks slated for rollout in 2023, 15 are anticipated to be 5G standalone networks. As of January 2023, there are 229 commercial 5G networks running worldwide. There also are more than 700 smartphone models currently available in the market. The next-generation telecommunications network is projected to bypass 4G in 2029 to become the dominant mobile technology, with adoption at more than 85% in the world’s top 5G markets by 2030, according to GSMA’s annual Global Mobile Economy report. The number of 5G connections is on track to reach 1.5 billion this year, before hitting a projected 5 billion by 2030, 5G will add almost $1 trillion to the global economy in 2030, with the services and manufacturing sectors gaining the most value at 46% and 33%, respectively. In addition, the majority of operators expect private wireless networks to account for up to 20% of their total enterprise revenue, spurred by improvements in 5G capabilities. Consumer connections are projected to have exceeded 1 billion by the end of 2022 and will hit 1.5 billion this year, before reaching 2 billion by end-2025. Growth for operators, though, is anticipated to come from the enterprise market, which will be the main driver of 5G revenue growth over the next decade, GSMA said. This customer segment currently contributes, on average, 30% of overall revenue for major operators and this figure is likely to grow as organisations continue their digitalisation efforts. Edge computing and IoT (Internet of Things) also provide further opportunities for 5G, with 12% of operators already offering private wireless products and services. This will grow with a wider range of IoT deployments expected this year, GSMA said. But while there will be many 5G opportunities on the enterprise side, exploring business cases that produce desired outcomes is a key challenge, said Guannan Lu, an analyst at Forrester. Most manufacturers, for instance, use fixed networks.”Building 5G applications requires investments for network upgrades and integrations. Without explicit business values, such investment is hard to justify,” Lu said. “In addition, the delivery of solutions lacks a standard approach, which makes use cases hard to replicate. 5G vendors need to co-innovate with customers on a wide range of use cases and streamline their existing offerings.” According to Bill Rojas, IDC’s Asia-Pacific adjunct research director, industry use cases will be driven by both mobile operators as well as systems integrators and vertical specialists. Early adopters will come from manufacturing, logistics, transportation, and smart city applications, added Rojas, who is based in Hong Kong.Market players such as Huawei Technologies have identified key sectors such as healthcare and maritime, offering vertical-specific 5G products and services. Huawei, for instance, is working with Tianjin Port Group to build a digital twin of the port and introduce more automation and intelligence. The collaboration encompasses the construction of new automated terminals as well as the upgrading of traditional ones. Singapore finds use cases, should explore private networksIn Singapore, commercial adoption in the enterprise space is accelerating, with use cases that include automated quality inspection, powered by computer visualisation, at manufacturing sites. As the first country to be fully covered by standalone 5G, Singapore’s rollout of its 5G infrastructure provides a critical foundation with essential services to drive the country’s digital innovation, said Charlie Dai, Forrester’s vice president and research director. Autonomous vehicles with low-latency IoT connectivity also are deployed for logistics and port operations, while data analytics are streamed at the edge with distributed data storage to support real-time decision making. There also are opportunities for the country to expand its 5G deployments in public infrastructures, such as smart city surveillance and monitoring, traffic congestion management, and smart streetlights, said Rojas.Asked about challenges Singapore could face in driving the adoption of 5G, he noted that applications and use cases that require network slicing or URLLC (Ultra-Reliable Low Latency Communications), such as augmented/virtual reality (AR/VR), will need a dense 5G network that works on the ground, in all urban areas.  Handset prices for network slice-enabled devices also have to be in a suitable mid-range segment to drive wider adoption, he said. “Edge computing assets will become important in a similar timeline as AR/VR and network slicing adoption,” he added. Dai also stressed the importance of timing in fuel 5G adoption. “5G will augment existing technologies rather than serve as a replacement technology,” he said. “Ensuring ROI (returns on investment) in 5G adoption, while managing the complexity of regulatory policies, business impact, and underlining technologies is critical. Regulators as well as business and technology leaders should take a holistic and comprehensive approach to align the priorities, focusing on the right platforms, practices, and partners to become future-fit.”Noting that 5G adoption still is at its exploration stage, Lu said the entire 5G ecosystem will be crucial, encompassing regulators and standard bodies, 5G infrastructure vendors, software and hardware providers, and mobile manufacturers. To successfully navigate China’s 5G market, for instance, he recommended decision makers on the buyer- and vendor-side to be realistic, especially under the pressures of a potential economic recession. Rojas also suggested Singapore’s industry regulator, Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA), seek out views from the industry to determine if there was need to allocate dedicated spectrum for private networks. He noted that mobile network operators in the country were required to build 5G standalone networks that enabled network slicing and URLLC. Hence, building private networks using these operators’ spectrum could be a priority as well as delivering network slicing in the macro network. “The industry would have to convince the regulator that they need their own private network spectrum. In a tight [land] area such as Singapore, there could be a case made for mmWave [to facilitate] private networks,” Rojas said. The IDC analyst noted that Hong Kong, for instance, has created a licensing regime to support several flavours of private networks. Its regulators in 2021 issued a more restricted version of its wireless broadband service (LWBS) license that was intended only for private use. It did not licensees to publish public tariffs, offer billing and metering accuracy, or manage service contracts as were required of providers of public telecommunication services. M1 CEO Manjot Singh Mann believed unlicensed private 5G networks had low relevance and applicability in Singapore. “Locally, M1 is already developing and deploying end-to-end 5G solutions that businesses from different industries can readily adopt,” Mann said. “High QoS (quality of service) and enhanced data security are better managed with carrier-grade solutions at scale with network providers. As such, there isn’t an urgent need for unlicensed private 5G networks.”The Singapore telco is working with Gardens by the Bay, amongst others, to provide 5G-powered metaverse experiences at the tourist attraction’s indoor venues. It also recently inked a partnership with the National Heritage Board to provide 5G connectivity and edge computing products and services to the National Museum of Singapore and Children’s Museum Singapore (CMSG).But while 5G adoption amongst consumers is climbing, Mann noted that the enterprise segment will see accelerated growth in adoption and is where the value of 5G lies. M1, to date, has conducted more than 15 5G use cases and partnerships.”With all the trials we have conducted over the years, we are now at an inflection point for 5G solutions to take off,” he said. “These 5G solutions are no longer just experimental use cases, but are commercially viable and scalable solutions ready for businesses to adopt, deploy, and scale. Once more commercial solutions are readily available, further support and grants from the government will likely be able to further accelerate 5G adoption.” He also underscored the importance of industry collaboration. “One way to continue to boost 5G adoption is through partnerships to co-create 5G solutions and showcase real results,” Mann said. Easing developer access to drive 5G innovation Industry teamwork also seemed to be the key theme this week at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. GSMA at the show introduced an API (application programming interface) framework that it said would provide developers “universal access” to operator networks. Called GSMA Open Gateway, the initiative currently is supported by 21 mobile operators worldwide, including Singapore’s Singtel, Australia’s Telstra, China Mobile, South Korea’s KT, Japan’s KDDI, Deutsche Telekom, Swisscom, and India’s Bharti Airtel. Open Gateway APIs are developed and published in open source project CAMARA, which is led by Linux Foundation with GSMA’s collaboration. It aims to ease the flow of APIs and access between telcos and developers as well as cloud providers. Eight APIs are available at launch, including SIM Swap, Edge Site Selection and Routing, and Number Verification (SMS 2FA). These can be used to facilitate services such as autonomous vehicles, drones, fleet management and incident reporting, and immersive online games. More APIs will be added throughout the year, according to GSMA. Speaking at the congress, GSMA Board Chair José María Álvarez-Palette said the Open Gateway initiative will enable single points of access to ultra-broadband networks and provide a catalyst for immersive and Web3 technologies. “By federating open network APIs and applying the roaming concept of interoperability, mobile operators and cloud services will be truly integrated,” Álvarez-Palette said. “Collaboration amongst telecom operators and cloud providers is crucial in this new digital ecosystem.” He added that future digital services will be enabled through telecommunication networks, shared through any device and at any time, with full interoperability and real-time computing. Network traffic will accelerate amidst further data growth over the next decade, driven by emerging technologies such as Web3 and artificial intelligence (AI). This will lead to challenges related to speed, mobility, security, and privacy, putting focus on network latency, storage capacity, compute, and personalisation services. The underlying infrastructure then must facilitate all of that, encompassing cloud and edge computing technologies that are programmable and delivered with low latency, Álvarez-Pallete said, urging telcos to step up and “transform”. A traditional telecom network is no longer sufficient. Instead, a “massively decentralised, distributed supercomputer” will be needed, with open interfaces and standard APIs playing a key role, he said, pointing to the Open Gateway initiative. “We are living in extraordinary times, in which digital technology is the foundation that underpins the economy and our society,” he added. “[The mobile industry] will continue this journey and prove a catalyst for immersive technologies like the metaverse and Web3 to fulfil their potential.”Based in Singapore, Eileen Yu reported for ZDNET from Mobile World Congress 2023 in Barcelona, Spain, on the invitation of Huawei Technologies. RELATED COVERAGE More

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    Huawei spotlights healthcare, maritime in 5G use case

    With their need for low network latency, healthcare and maritime are key sectors that can benefit from 5G connectivity. They will, however, also need to prepare for the higher security risks. Organisations across most verticals have been undergoing digital transformation in recent years and healthcare is no exception. In fact, most healthcare institutions have completed basic digitalisation and now are entering “the deep-water zone”, according to Xia Zun, Huawei Technologies’ president of global public sector. Technologies such as 5G, Internet of Things (IoT), artificial intelligence (AI), and cloud computing have emerged and are integrated with medical engineering to drive innovation in healthcare, said Xia, who was speaking to media on the sidelines of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. GSMA anticipates edge computing and IoT technology to drive more 5G opportunities, with 12% of operators already offering private wireless products and services. More are expected to do so as IoT deployments expand this year, according to the industry body. The global pandemic further accelerated the sector’s digital transformation, Xia said, where some hospitals including those in Singapore had begun exploring and implementing smart healthcare technology. 5G, in particular, played a critical role as it addressed network latency challenges, which was especially important in healthcare, Xia said. Huawei now is looking to tap such demand and offer services that support the sector’s digital transformation efforts. Specifically, it has identified products around four use cases for healthcare–namely, smart hospital ICT infrastructure, digital pathology, smart ward, and optical medical imaging. Healthcare is one of the key sectors for Huawei’s public sector business, which is the biggest segment parked under the vendor’s enterprise unit. It currently serves more than 2,800 hospitals and medical research institutions globally. The Chinese telecom equipment maker’s digital imaging products, for instance, encompass network, storage, and videoconferencing to process images more quickly, secure the data lifecycle, and reconstruct images in 3D and 4K high definition. They aim to improve efficiencies in diagnosis and treatment, especially since 70% of data used in hospital clinical diagnosis and treatment are images. These files are large and can freeze when users view them, according to Huawei. It also is using 5G, IoT and Wi-Fi technologies to provide a wireless IoT network system for smart hospital wards. Huawei is pitching this offering as a way for hospitals to cut network rollout and maintenance costs, as well as improve patient experience with features such as IV fluids monitoring and personnel location.The tech vendor also is integrating its OceanStor Pacific distributed storage systems and lossless compression technology to process pathological data. Touted to cut storage space by 30%, the product allows more than 1,000 slices to be viewed “in seconds” and supports remote pathology analysis. It can enhance analysis efficiency by 70%, said Koh Hong Eng, Huawei’s global chief of public services industry scientist. The vendor’s storage systems are equipped with ransomware detection capabilities, Koh said, and can stop data from being uploaded if its firmware detects a ransomware signature. Local storage snapshots also are used to enable fast data recovery and air-gap measures help isolate data in a secured area, so services can be restored.  He added such security features were critical as the healthcare sector was a top target for ransomware attacks. Data backups also were essential, said Samuel Wai, systems manager for Hong Kong Hospital Authority, who was at the media briefing. Asked how he addressed concerns about the sector’s widening attack surface amidst increased adoption of IoT technologies and online data use, Wai pointed to the ability to restore data should a breach occur. This meant carrying out regular data backs was key, he said. He noted that Hong Kong also was looking to drive IoT initiatives, for instance, to facilitate home-based healthcare, and was assessing how IoT data can be safely transferred to a hospital’s database. This had added complexity as storage vendors currently adopted different data standards, Wai said. Hong Kong currently was looking to establish a healthcare-sector data standard to unify all messaging formats, which then could be adopted across the territory, he said. It also was assessing how data should be secured and was exploring various options, including working with local telcos to roll out private 5G networks and using VPNs. Security critical when traditional, digital realms convergeCybersecurity risks will inevitably increase as traditional industries go through digital transformation and OT (operational technology) systems converge with IT systems, said Yue Kun, Huawei’s CTO for smart road, waterway, and port. This further underscored the need for organisations in these sectors to ensure their IT infrastructures and systems had a strong security foundation, Yue said, adding that Huawei worked alongside its partner ecosystem to address potential risks. Asked if CII (critical information infrastructure) sectors should run private 5G networks to enhance their security posture, he said robust technologies could be deployed on both public and private 5G networks. Network slicing, for instance, could be implemented to secure public 5G networks. Hence, it would be difficult to pit one as more secure than the other, he noted. Furthermore, such rollouts were dependent on government policies and spectrum allocation within a local jurisdiction, Yue said. Apart from healthcare, Huawei also is targeting to push its offerings to another CII sector–maritime. The Chinese vendor in January inked an agreement with Tianjin Port Group to build a digital twin of the port, with the aim to introduce more automation and intelligence. The collaboration would encompass the construction of new automated terminals as well as the upgrading of traditional ones. Noting that ports played an important role in maritime transportation, Yue said: “Building more efficient smart ports is becoming an increasingly pressing requirement for the global supply chain. Section C Terminal of the Port of Tianjin has now been operating stably for over one year. This proves that 5G and L4 autonomous driving have already been successfully adopted by industries in China, and are creating true commercial and social value.” Section C Terminal, which began large-scale commercial operations in October 2021, features container cranes that operate automatically and robots that roam the area. Remotely controlled quay cranes lift loaded containers from cargo ships and placed them on the robots for ground transportation. The port’s container throughput last year clocked at more than 21 million TEUs, placing it amongst the world’s top 10 ports, according to Huawei.The vendor now hopes to extend its reach to ports outside China. Yue said the Port of Singapore Authority (PSA) jointly invested in a terminal located across one Huawei was showcasing in Tianjin Port. This should provide opportunities for the former to see how the Chinese port was benefitting from its Huawei deployments, he noted, adding that he hoped PSA would make “the right choice”. Singapore’s container port operator, PSA is in the midst of relocating its operations across three terminal locations to Tuas Port by 2027. Based in Singapore, Eileen Yu reported for ZDNET from Mobile World Congress 2023 in Barcelona, Spain, on the invitation of Huawei Technologies. RELATED COVERAGE More

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    Stop using your 4-digit iPhone passcode in public. Do this instead

    NurPhoto/Getty Images After months of investigating successful iPhone robberies, Apple ID erasures, and drained bank accounts, senior tech columnist for The Wall Street Journal, Joanna Stern, concluded that thieves only need that four-digit pin code you use to unlock your phone to erase your personal data. Also: Apple working on a new iPhone SE model with bigger […] More

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    Google is expanding this 'next level' encryption to more Gmail users

    Image: FG Trade/Getty Images Google is expanding its rollout of client-side encryption to Gmail and Calendar, allowing more users to send and receive encrypted email and calendar invites.       The client-side encryption (CSE) feature is now generally available for Google Workspace Enterprise Plus, Education Plus, and Education Standard customers following the beta launch in […] More

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    What's the best way to ensure your privacy with a web browser?

    Galeanu Mihai/Getty Images Ah, the web browser. It’s the one tool modern society cannot do without. We work, play, research, connect, and shop with web browsers. I think it’s safe to say that the majority of desktop computer usage is done via a web browser. That means there are millions of users ripe for having […] More

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    LastPass breach: Hackers put malware on engineer's home computer to steal their password

    June Wan/ZDNET LastPass has revealed that hackers stole a master password that they used to access highly restricted corporate databases and information by targeting a senior engineer’s home computer.  Also: Leaving LastPass? Here’s how to get your passwords out The password manager company first revealed that it had been hacked in August last year when it said attackers […] More