I feel I have to comment on the second point of your e-mail. It makes clear points as the how each provider is going to take full responsibility for their peering decisions. I have seen a trend where Tier 1's (nation-wide large carriers - don't want to debate the term too much) are willing to offer transit contracts to regional or tier2 nationals at cost, or only at a very small margin. This move by C&W to begin charging for those providers seems to be a very large departure from this method. As we all know, the value of the big player, is how many people they are connected to. It seems that providers are willing to take a a risk by either peering or selling very cheap transit in order to appear as a well connected ISP to the rest of the Internet. My concern now, after reading this, is how do I know value the ISPs that I buy transit from. What is the guarantees that I have that the bandwidth I expect from a transit carrier is going to be maintained. I have been a long time customer of C&W well into the MCI days. While I have had my difficulties, I feel that they have been a solid carrier. However, it has been a struggle lately to keep more and more traffic on their backbone. This whole thread seems to be the cause. In summary, my question is this: Does a peering policy like this make sense? My answer to this is: It may, but it is forsaking two different types of customers. The first, the tier 1/2 customers that is now enforcing a tariff against. The second, regional carriers that can no longer afford to purchase second rate transit. So, how can I justify paying C&W for this bandwidth that day by day may be losing value. I'd be interested to hear how many people that feel that C&W's decisions affects their direction for connectivity. Tony On Sunday, May 6, 2001, at 01:27 AM, Daniel Golding wrote:
2) Is C&W simply flaking out? Will they end up screwing themselves?
#2 - C&W's peering decision makers are certainly taking a risk, here. It is devoutly hoped that their poor judgement comes back to haunt them. On the other hand, perhaps they'll experience a change of heart, and be filled with the spirit of Internet Brotherhood. Needless to say, I'm not holding my breath.
-----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu]On Behalf Of Richard A. Steenbergen Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2001 1:08 AM To: John Payne Cc: David Schwartz; nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: Cable & Wireless "de-peering"?!?
On Sat, May 05, 2001 at 08:21:03PM -0700, John Payne wrote:
On Sat, May 05, 2001 at 07:31:25PM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
Not so fast. While each of his customers is more inconvenienced than each c&w customer, c&w has more customers. The net inconvenience (total number of people inconvenienced multiplied by the average inconvenience to each) might be nearly the same on both sides. As an added bonus, he has someone else to blame.
That depends. Somebody that small (0.0001) is not going to be transit free... so there isn't really a hole created. Sure, the smaller guy is going to be paying more on transit rather than peering, but C&W customers probably won't notice a thing, other than some relief on the congested pipes to the public peering points.
The number of customers affected is unimportant, what matters is the amount of traffic affected. I don't know about anyone else, but I think if I had just been "de-peered" the provider in question would be the LAST on my list to purchase transit from. In all likelihood the traffic is just going to go to another CW peer and to an FNSI transit. But to determine the true loser, you must know if this peer served a useful technical function. If this was a low-quality peer (congested, through a lossy atm nap, etc) or relieved no congestion elsewhere, the loser is FNSI. If on the other hand this peer was providing a better path, the traffic will be affected. Since billing is based on traffic, the loser is whoever can no longer bill their customers for something they got for free.
Also, not that I care much about either FNSI or Clueless & Witless peering, but the argument that noone would be affected AND traffic would be reduced makes no sense. If there is a significant reduction in congestion then there must have been a significant amount of traffic flowing through the peer. As far as I'm concerned, the biggest argument for peering with FNSI is Pimp War (http://www.pimpwar.com). :P
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