The first time I heard about Neil Tagare was back in the go-go ’90s, when he was the man behind the international fiber network FLAG Telecom. FLAG went public in 2000, but by then Tagare was already onto his next big idea: building a $1.5 billion global network that would carry Internet traffic from most of the major nations over a giant fiber backbone.
It was called Project Oxygen, and it not only received a ton of media coverage but backing from the likes of Lucent Technologies and Bechtel. But it also suffered from vision overload, and as the broadband bubble burst, Tagare, like many big telecom industry names, faded from the scene. Still, we’ve kept in touch, occasionally exchanging emails and notes. Last week, he let me know about the launch of his new startup, BuySellBandwidth.com, through which carriers around the globe are able to buy, sell and swap capacity.
You’re probably saying to yourself, “Haven’t I heard of this before?” Indeed, even Enron tried to start a bandwidth platform. But BuySellBandwidth.com is more akin to private exchanges or ECNs on the stock market, where membership is by invitation only. The way it works, as Tagare explains, is:
With current cables being able to deliver Terabits of bandwidth, most of which remain unused for years, you can swap capacity with other carriers or cables, either eliminating or significantly decreasing the need for additional Capex investment. You control and decide who to swap with and all the terms and conditions. You can even swap fiberoptic cable capacity with satellite circuits, Wi-Max or 3G spectrum.
Yes, he’s talking about swapping bandwidth, the very thing that a few years back got a lot of broadbandits into trouble — even landing some of them in jail. “Swapping got a bad rap in 2000 because of the illegal accounting transactions certain carriers like Global Crossing were involved in,” Tagare acknowledged. But he went on to say that, “In light of the current economic climate, swapping represents the most economical way to acquire new capacity, especially considering the fact that most fiber cables have plenty of spare capacity.”
http://gigaom.com/2008/07/23/buysellbandwidth-neil-tagare/