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OMG no. Politician have no business making technological decisions. They make it harder to innovate, i.e. to invent the next generation of ECC with a different name.
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I would argue that in the present conditions, regulation can actually foster and guide real innovation.

With no regulations in place, companies would rather innovate in profit extraction rather improving technology. And if they have enough market capture, they may actually prefer to not innovate, if that would hurt profits.


ECC is like Ethernet. The name doesn’t have to change for the technology to update.

If companies are allowed to change the meaning of terms in legislation we are in even more trouble.

Ethernet was once carried over thick coax at like 2 then 3 megabits per second. By the time it was standardized as IEEE 802.3 it was at 10 megabits. 802.3 was thin coax. 802.3e took a step back in speed to 1 megabit, but over phone-type wire. 10 base T, Ethernet over twisted pair at 10 megabits per second, wasn’t until 802.3i in 1990. Then 10 base F (fiber) in 1992.

Then there are various speeds of 100 M, 1000 M / 1G, 2.5 G, 5 G, 10 G, 25 G 40 G, 50G, 100 G, 200 G, and 400 G. Some of the media included twisted pair, single mode fiber, multimode fiver, twinax cable, Ethernet over backplanes, passive fiber connections (EPON), and over DWDM systems.

There have also been multiple versions of power over Ethernet using twisted pair cable. Some are over one pair, some two pairs, and some over the data pairs while other use dedicated pairs for power.

There are also standards for negotiation among multiple of these speeds. There have been improvements to timestamping. There have been standards to bring newer speeds to fewer pairs or current speeds over longer distances.

There’s currently work on 1.6 Tbps links up to 30 or possibly 50 meters. There has been work on the past to use plastic optical fibers instead of glass ones. Oh, and there are standards specific to automative Ethernet.

Ethernet itself, the name and the first implementation of a network with that name, were from 1972 and 1973. It was on the market in 1980 and first standardized in 1983 as ECMA-82.

Ethernet supports in its different configurations direct host-to-host connections, daisy chains, hubbed networks, switched networks, tunnels over routed protocols like TCP or UDP, bridges over technologies like MOCA or WiFi, and even being tunneled across the open Internet.

All of these are Ethernet. They have a common lineage. They are all derived from the same origin. Token Ring, FDDI, ATM, and SONET have all been more than one thing over time too. So has WiFi. 802.11a is very little like 802.11be, but those are also similar enough to carry the same family name.

The IEEE 802.3 series has a lot of history buried in those documents.


Politicians don’t have to be dumb.

Reading this again, did you forget your trailing /s?



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