Wireless Broadband Alliance establishes requirements for IoT Roaming

Latest white paper calls for use of WRIX specification to address challenges of interoperability

Internet of Things

The Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA) has published its latest white paper, entitled: ‘IoT Interoperability: Dynamic Roaming’. The paper investigates how existing Wi-Fi roaming capabilities could help the IoT market with the evolution of IoT Device roaming, ensuring devices can seamlessly ‘talk’ to each other.

The aim of the study is to provide a framework for IoT roaming, demonstrating the value and opportunities to enhance the functionality for existing technologies with the use of the WBA’s Wireless Roaming Intermediary eXchange (WRIX) specification, in areas such as authentication, financial and data clearing, invoicing, security and automation.

Over the past 10 years, the WBA has built on the cellular ecosystem success story, enabling the building blocks that are scalable and allow operators in turn to build revenue streams in the Wi-Fi world. The ecosystem now leverages more frictionless business opportunities and IoT players may benefit from such similar opportunities and avoid inefficient “islands of connectivity”.

While roaming is being accomplished today on different types of networks such as cellular and Wi-Fi, the diversity of devices and the exponential growth in the market – over [i]20 billion IoT devices forecast by 2020 - means there is a distinct need for interoperability to allow the cross-network roaming of devices.

‘IoT Interoperability: Dynamic Roaming’ white paper addresses the need to find a dynamic way for devices to search for a computable network and automatically roam at scale without intervention.  It focuses on the common requirements to enable IoT devices to connect to a non-home access network, successfully authenticate, enable accounting and facilitate subsequent billing while taking into consideration potential security and scalability concerns.

The study outlines how WRIX - the use of a modularized set of specifications to facilitate roaming between operators - can be used across the IoT Market for lessons learned, best practices and standards when developing each technology’s roaming specifications.  Using the WRIX specification as a guideline for roaming, organisations can prepare their networks to facilitate simple, seamless and secure IoT connectivity for their users. The report highlights several areas where WRIX can be used or enhanced to address the immediate challenge of massive scalability. These include:

* Adding RADSEC capabilities to the WRIX framework to enhance the security of IoT applications and enable automatic security for new deployment scenarios.

* Using the WRIX framework as best practice to address the issue of identity and authentication between security domains.

* Expanding the current WRIX definitions and specifications to include LoRa Alliance and MulteFire Alliance roaming support, to allow other IoT use cases to be supported.

* For IoT technology that was built from the ground up, and therefore, involves a specific assessment on interwork possibilities, the WBA outlines collaboration opportunities.


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