According to a recent survey by Analysys Mason of 64 global Tier 1 and Tier 2 network operators, security and integration have emerged as their top concerns regarding vRAN and Open RAN adoption. The study found that 64% of operators cite security and privacy as a major challenge, while 56% point to integration as a significant hurdle. These findings show that operators are now considering operational and deployment-related issues as top priorities as well as total cost of ownership (TCO) and performance.
This change is not surprising, given the critical role that security and seamless integration play in the success of any network deployment. Operators need to have confidence that their vRAN and Open RAN solutions can protect sensitive data and maintain the integrity of their networks, even as they open up their architectures to new vendors and interfaces. vRAN and Open RAN deployment at scale varies in complexity depending on the operator’s network strategy, whether Standalone (SA) or Non-Standalone (NSA), distributed or centralized RAN architectures capable of running on commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) servers and/or cloud platforms. To solve this, operators are getting more involved in adapting their processes and investing in developing new skill sets to contribute to interoperability testing and integration among vendors taking full advantage of operation management and automation tools.
Samsung has met the top challenges with interoperability testing done over the last few years with their large vRAN and Open RAN ecosystem of partners, exceeding expectations from the diverse types of network requirements from customers; especially coordinating with partners on hardware and software release management, pre-integration, and validation have lessened the integration challenges. In collaboration with network operators, Samsung has been able to improve deployment efficiencies, achieving tremendous network installation and activation speeds for a massive number of vRAN and Open RAN sites. In addition, security concerns are addressed during these extensive testing and validation process, eliminating the time and cost for operators, and helping them to deploy a more reliable commercial network.