Slicing the Network: Maintaining Neutrality, Protecting Privacy, and Promoting Competition
Nick Doty, Mallory Knodel

TL;DR
This paper discusses how network slicing in 5G can be managed to uphold net neutrality, protect user privacy, and foster competition through technological and regulatory strategies.
Contribution
It provides an overview of network slicing technologies and offers recommendations for operators and regulators to balance innovation with essential internet principles.
Findings
Network slicing enables tailored services in 5G networks.
Regulatory guidelines are essential for maintaining net neutrality.
Technological solutions can protect user privacy in network slicing.
Abstract
The principles of net neutrality have been essential for maintaining the diversity of services built on top of the internet and for maintaining some competition between small and large providers of those online services. That diversity and competition, in turn, provide users with a broader array of choices for seeking online content and disseminating their own speech. Furthermore, in order for the internet to be used to its full potential and to protect the human rights of internet users, we need privacy from surveillance and unwarranted data collection by governments, network providers, and edge providers. The transition to 5G mobile networks enables network operators to engage in a technique called network slicing. The portion of a network that is sliced can be used to provide a suite of different service offerings, each tailored to specific purposes, instead of a single,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsICT Impact and Policies · ICT in Developing Communities
