Remember that it is almost a year since Peter Kline told the community that it needed LAWYERS to whip it into shape and that AGIS would provide all the lawyers needed.
From a press release on the AGIS web server http://www.agis.net/press17.htm:
Press release: Little Rock, AR: October 23, 1996-- ALLTEL Corporation will invest **up to** $12.5 million and become a minority investor in Apex Global Information Services, Inc. (AGIS), one of only six global providers of Internet access, Joe T. Ford, chairman and CEO of ALLTEL, has announced. [Cook: emphasis added.] AGIS is currently serving more than 200 cities in the United States with points of presence (POPs) for Internet access, and has dedicated service available in almost 50 countries. In addition, the company provides backbone services to more than 700 of the estimated 3000 Internet service providers (ISPs) around the world. Cook: 700 isps? Gosh. That's impressive. Anyone got any data on when they overtook MCI, Sprint, and UUNET in market share? Leased line access to almost 50 countries round the world? Any one seen the map of their global network? Anyone got a list of their foreign pops? Or are they claiming LDDS lines and POPs in this country and abroad as though they (AGIS) owned them all. Press release: "This venture is an investment by ALLTEL in the communications link of the future," Ford continued. "ALLTEL is making this investment because AGIS is one of only six global providers of Internet access. Cook: six global providers: Hmmm. Might they be referring to Sprint, AGIS UUNET, PSI, MCI, and ANS? The so called gang or club of six that a year ago were the exclusive direct peers at all the major exchanges? If they are, then, by process of elimnation, BBN is not a global provider -which I think is news to BBN, nor is AT&T, nor is Advantis, nor is Compuserve, nor are a lot of other major players with more than a fresh12.5 million behind them. Gee. I wonder if BBN realizes that AGIS has relegated it to second rank status? Or perhaps they are referring to those global providers who are beginning to move most of their traffic through private inter connects - and in so doing are becoming a new internet apex? In this case they are not even one of the five let alone six. Here the five are MCI, Sprint, BBN, UUNET and ANS. I have been talking to a lot of sources, none of which is aware of AGIS having any private Interconnects with these five. Press release: It is these providers that have management control of the Internet routing tables, which are the directories that identify the location of all Internet users. Cook: An enormously inaccurate statement. I would surmise that if any six providers had the kind of control being talked about, there would have been a brouhaha on mail lists worse than that directed against NSI, and that there would be anti-trust action under way. Of course they also tell you how to get to other routers and not a thing about the location of the several tens of millions of individual internet users. Of course this is a press release and those who place too great a trust in the overall accuracy of press releases are likely to be disappointed. In my opinion however, the general cluelessness displayed by this press release reaches new heights. It leaves me to surmise that the folk at ALLTEL know not a lot about the internet. It would be interesting to review the due dilligence that was excercised in putting this agreement together. For example did anyone at ALLTELL ask for archives of agislist@interstice.com which was started in January by agis customers complaining about agis service? A very recent post from this mail list follows. Date: Thu, 24 Oct 1996 13:34:43 -0700 (PDT) From: Veggy Vinny <richardc@CSUA.Berkeley.EDU> To: agislist@inter2.interstice.com Subject: Hi Hi everyone, My name is Vince Poy, and I'm the Unix Networking Operations person for GaiaNet.Net located in Beverly Hills, California connected to PBI.Net which uses AGIS.Net, we've been having major problems with lag with AGIS.Net and was wondering if anyone else can share their experiences... Press release: concluding with a flourish: AGIS provides Internet access to millions of users via an extensive customer base of RBOCs, content providers, large corporations and ISPs. Cook: it would be entertaining to see how they derived these figures. ************************************************************************ The COOK Report on Internet For subsc. pricing & more than 431 Greenway Ave, Ewing, NJ 08618 USA ten megabytes of free material (609) 882-2572 (phone & fax) visit http://pobox.com/cook/ Internet: cook@cookreport.com For case study of MercerNet & TIIAP induced harm to local community http://pobox.com/cook/mercernet.html ************************************************************************ On Thu, 24 Oct 1996, JDF wrote:
Interesting speech from Peter Kline at NANOG today...it seems that AGIS's peering requirements are now so strict that AGIS today would not peer with AGIS of only a few months ago. Then there's Peter's comment to Ron Burleson, Cheif Operating Officer of CAIS Internet (some of you know that CAIS had a very good relationship with Net99, which continued for a while under AGIS.) "Ron, we're going to squish you like a bug." Peter is doing wonders for inter-provider relations. What do y'all say that the rest of us follow the older, more friendly model, instead of trying to kill each other? Sure, a lot of us are in competition. From today's speech, it seems that AGIS is is more competition than the rest of us. But personally, if I were a small or mid-size provider, I'd rather buy service from somebody that I've seen to be in /friendly/ competition with their peers -- that way, once I got big enough to strike out on my own, I could stay friendly with my old provider on a peer instead of a customer level. This was the intention with the Net99 deal, back when Net99 was known as "the backbone that doesn't suck."
Back to the point -- like it or not, we all rely on each other and each others' networks to make the Internet happen. We can follow the AGIS model and cut each others' throats until we really are just a bunch of autonomous systems with the occasional path between, or we can interconnect -- network, to use a more laoded term. I think we should be a network.
(Please note that while I am speaking only for myself, CAIS's business plan is more on the friendly side.)
-- J.D. Falk <lart@cais.net> Network Operations Center <noc@cais.net> CAIS Internet Office (703) 448-4470 McLean, Virginia, USA NOC 1-888-CAIS-NOC