Most U.S. residents want the ability to place video calls to people
using a different service provider, even though consumer video-calling
services are now locked behind proprietary walls, according to a survey
released Tuesday by Cisco Systems.
Seventy-seven percent of 1,000 U.S. residents surveyed by Purple
Insights in August said they want video calling to be as easy as making a
phone call is today. Eighty-three percent of respondents said they
wanted Skype, the leading video-calling service for consumers, to be
interoperable with other video technologies.
Two-thirds of those surveyed said they believe interoperable video will create more jobs and innovation.
An interoperable video-calling market will create significant new
benefits, said Cisco, itself a video-calling vendor focused on the
corporate market. "We think there's a critical opportunity in front of
us," said David Hsieh, Cisco's vice president of marketing for emerging
technologies. "Video calling is becoming increasingly prevalent.
Interoperability will enable broad connectivity, and then you can
unleash a whole set of economic and social benefits."
With interoperability, the use of video calling could skyrocket, he
said. Cisco already predicts that in just three years, 1 million video
minutes will traverse the Internet every second. "There's a tremendous
opportunity to make video calling basically the prevalent way that
people communicate in the next several decades -- if we can get this
right," Hsieh said.
Cisco wants the video-calling marketplace to work more like the
telephone network or the wider Internet, but the market is "fractured
right now, where many video services cannot connect with each other,"
Hsieh said. He pointed to Skype's proprietary video calling service as
one reason for the lack of interoperability. The Microsoft-owned service
controls about 80 percent of the consumer video-calling market.
A Skype spokesman didn't respond to a request for comments on the Cisco survey.
Cisco called on video-calling vendors, both on the consumer and
enterprise sides, to work together to create interoperability standards.
While enterprise video-calling services have developed standards,
consumer-grade services have not.
"Consumers in the survey are saying they want choice, and they want interoperability," Hsieh said.
In the survey, 87 percent of respondents said they want companies to
agree to a common standard for video calling so that programs will work
together.
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