(note: i don't think sprint or cogent is being evil in this situation.) <michael.dillon@bt.com> writes:
Has anyone heard of a backup route? With a longer path so it is never used unless there is a real emergency? Why was there no backup route available to carry the Sprint <-> Cogent traffic? Because there was a political failure in both Sprint and Cogent.
what you're calling a political failure could be what others call a rate war. i'd imagine that cogent's cost structure lower than most networks' (since their published prices are so low and since they're not pumping new money in from the outside and since they have no non-IP business they could be using to support "dumping"). if cogent's rates aare also lowest then the other large networks might be losing customers toward cogent and those other large networks might feel they are hurting their own cause by peering, settlement free, with this new-economy competitor. if that's the case then the "political failure" you describe might be a matter of cogent saying "we don't want our prices to our customers to reflect the capital inefficiencies of other networks" and those other networks saying "we do." note, i'm not on the inside and i'm working only from public knowledge here and so this is all supposition. but calling it "political failure" when these possibilities exist seems like a stretch. there'd be no other leverage whereby cogent could protect the price point its customers seem to like so well. i'm not saying a cogent customer will be glad to trade some instability to get those prices, but i am saying that if this long chain of guesses is accurate it likely also represents the ONLY way to drive efficiency in a competitive capital-intensive market.
Back in 2000 it was acceptable for the big New York banks to have all their eggs in one basket in central Manhattan. In 2002, it was no longer acceptable. Do we really need a 911 magnitude of disaster on the Internet for people to wake up and smell the coffee? The Internet is no longer a kewl tool built and operated by the cognoscenti to meet their own interests. It is now part of every nation's and everbody's critical infrastructure. It needs to be engineered and operated better so that it does not end up partitioning for dumb reasons.
that sounds like justification for government regulation, if true. -- Paul Vixie