On Fri, 28 Sep 2001, Sean M. Doran wrote:
Sean Donelan wrote: | Sprint kept the filters on for years afterwards. It may have taken | the clueless salespeople a few years, but they eventually did figure out | how to recite the magic words "buy your circuit from sprint and you | won't have problems with filters" was a way to win a sale.
"Thank you even more clueless competitors."
As I mentioned, I applied the same filters on both inbound route announcements which had a Sprint AS in the path, and outbound route announcements. Because I used consistent route announcements, inbound and outbound, I never had a customer complaint. The only people who complained were Sprint customers. They always had the same story, but the filter's don't apply to us. We use Sprint. Upon further investigation, they always found they didn't need to announce those more specific routes. With a little extra work, they figured out how to announce their registry allocated block. If Sprint had used a consistent route announcement policy, their customers could have reduced their use of the global routing table must sooner. And after all, wasn't that the reason why this would "save the Internet?" Instead the policy seemed to be "save the Internet, unless you pay Sprint extra then its all you can eat night at the village commons." Sprint never did pay me.