ITU-T Y.2325: NGN Evolution Towards Future
Rashmi Kamran, Shwetha Kiran, Pranav Jha, Rashmi Yadav, Abhay Karandikar, Prasanna Chaporkar

TL;DR
The paper reviews ITU-T Y.2325, which proposes an evolved NGN architecture that decouples all services from transport, enhancing scalability and modularity for future telecom networks including 6G.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive review of the ITU-T Y.2325 recommendation, highlighting its approach to decoupling internal network services from transport for improved network design.
Findings
Evolved NGN architecture enables complete decoupling of services from transport.
Improves scalability and modularity of future telecom networks.
Applicable to 6G and beyond networks.
Abstract
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) defined Next Generation Network (NGN) underlies most wireline and wireless packet-based telecommunications networks. A key design principle of NGN is decoupling of service-related functions from the underlying transport stratum, making user services independent of transport technologies. Interestingly, the NGN architecture, as defined in ITU standards, did not follow this design principle for internal network services, e.g., mobility, or authentication though adhering for external user services like IPTV or Multimedia services. These internal services are handled by the NGN transport control plane, making them an intrinsic part of the transport stratum, resulting in a tightly coupled service and transport functionality as opposed to the proclaimed design goal. This design choice may force each transport technology to support internal services…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIPv6, Mobility, Handover, Networks, Security · Advanced Authentication Protocols Security · Telecommunications and Broadcasting Technologies
