Hello, IMHO, in the context of the AP region, I guess we are overlooking the user perspective - locally available "Internet" content. Barring .au, .sg, .kr, .hk (?), .jp and .tw, I do not see any major effort around to provide locally, content that is available in the US be it the GNU archive, the WU archive or one-of-those Beatles song and lyrics archive - result - good amount of traffic to the US. (The AP region has only 4 archie servers !) When one sees such traffic trends, why would an ISP even think in terms of investing in a link to a place other than the US - the cost permitting ? I have been attempting to convince ERNET to invest in a link each to NL/GB and SG/JP since we have a significant amount of traffic to these places. I have even tried to present the idea that IN is strategically placed in the context of linking the Southern AP region to Europe/US which could mean good gatewaying business - NO GO ! Each time we have a meeting, there's a raging war on this point, but, bring out the top 25 hosts contacted and the related traffic percentages and the consensus is to add more bandwidth on the link to the US ! If on the one hand the tariffs and the telecom policies do not provide for a good intra-AP connectivity, there is this "content availability" that's adding to the "US-centricity" (not that most of the Internet tools aren't ... ;-) ). So ... could we do anything at all ? It may not be possible to persuade governments to change their policies as fast as we would like them to change. My gut feel is that the tariffs permitting, making content available locally will hold the key to bandwidth investments and the choice of the upstream ISP. --Gopi Garge Enzo Michelangeli sez:
On Thu, 16 May 1996, Geoff Huston wrote:
Paul,
You can be a vocal as you desire, but ultimately from this part of the globe the dominant factor in any ISP business is the cost of the International Private Lease. This lease cost is approximately 10 times the cost of domestic infrastructure.
Now when you construct an IPL in a competitive environment where do you terminate it? Generally you are loking for an optimal mix of price and functionality. The observation for the AP region today is that the cheapest IPL half circuits for the AP region terminate in the US. Hence Randy's observation. The internal infrastructure within the AP region happens in a second pass, once the primary objective of major connectivity is achieved internal infrastructure can be cost effective if there is internal traffic flow to match.
About the only thing that could hasten regional infrastructure is a drastic revision of the trading practices and expectation of return on investment by the undersea cable investors. Exchange points have little impact per se as they are, in economic terms, a minor aspect of the entire equation.
Exactly. And all the regional governments should realize that the best way of shifting traffic from North America to their region is de-regulating the international telecommunications market, scrapping monopolies and increasing competition among carriers. That will result much more effective than policy-making and verbal "declarations of independence".
Enzo
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