On Mon, 03 Apr 2000 21:47:50 EDT, Paul Ferguson said:
At 09:27 PM 04/03/2000 -0400, Gordon Cook wrote:
surprised not to see this mentioned on NANOG
Sent: Friday, March 31, 2000 To: Notify Subject: Exodus Customer Confidential Communication Gordon,
Does the word "confidential" elude you?
- paul
In Gordon's defense (I feel like the ACLU here ;), (a) Yes, professional courtesy does usually respect a "confidential" label. However, you have to remember that Gordon has been acting as a whistleblower for quite some time, and if Gordon hadn't posted it, there'd be a lot of people pondering the lack of BGP announcements and labelling it "just another screw-up" rather than a actual deliberate action. (b) By the time Gordon posted it, the announced disconnect time had already passed by several days. (c) I am *hoping* that the Exodus message was mistaken when it said that "*all* connectivity" would be lost - PSI isn't *really* dropping all packets on the floor if they happen to have come from an Exodus-connected network, even if they are arriving via a PSI-Sprint or whatever peering? If it's merely "PSI refuses to peer directly with Exodus", that's one thing. If PSI is also refusing packets carried by some other 3rd party that PSI and Exodus both peer with, or alternate routing is failing for some other reason, that's a lot worse. Does anybody know definitively what the REAL story is? Valdis Kletnieks Operating Systems Analyst Virginia Tech