Eric, IMHO, there is no way, WCOM force to shutdown all operation before someone takes over. I bet there will be court order or something to prevent to shutdown until find buyer just like Winstar or something when they belled up. But it is going to be interesting ... Tatsuya --------------------------------------------------- Tatsuya Kawasaki - Engineer III - CSC tatsuya@kivex.com - 240-616-2417 800-581-8711 (24 Hour Support) - 240-616-2414 (fax) Allegiance Internet On 27 Jun 2002, Eric Brandwine wrote:
Date: 27 Jun 2002 17:55:16 +0000 From: Eric Brandwine <ericb@UU.NET> To: blitz <blitz@macronet.net> Cc: Richard Forno <rforno@infowarrior.org>, nanog@trapdoor.merit.edu Subject: Re: Worldcomm network question
"b" == blitz <blitz@macronet.net> writes:
b> For that and other reasons, Wcom will be bailed out, at taxpayer expense if b> necessary, for national security reasons.
WorldCom still "runs" UUNET as well. We carry a significant portion of the backbone, and have many customers that have no other connections. With the bandwidth glut, I'm sure the core could survive the sudden lack of UUNET, but there's a lot of edges that would get unhappy.
There's no way they'd let us go Chapter 7, even if we wanted to.
ericb
b> At 18:19 6/26/02 -0400, you wrote:
Anyone have any ideas, speculation, or info on how adverse future of WCOM would play out for ISPs and such? Among other things, WCOM is the preferred provider of long-haul pipes for DoD.....that can't be good!!
-- Eric Brandwine | Microsoft treats security vulnerabilites as public UUNetwork Security | relations problems. ericb@uu.net | +1 703 886 6038 | - Bruce Schneier Key fingerprint = 3A39 2C2F D5A0 FC7C 5F60 4118 A84A BD5D 59D7 4E3E