On Thu, 7 Jun 2001, BrandonButterworth wrote:
i think the reasoning goes something like "your customers pay you to send this stuff out for them, you should share that money with the folks who do your final delivery for you."
Also "your customers pay you to get this stuff in for them, you should share that money with the folks who originate the stuff for you."
Oh, they've both been paid to do their job. The argument goes on in circles.
Sounds like peers.
This gets even weirder when the Tier1:s go after the end users. Heck, I know I cannot peer with UUNET (for example) as equal, but I do want to talk to them at local exchange points and give them my routes so they can use them nationally/locally and I want their national/local routes. I do not expect them to backhaul my traffic to the US from Europe, but I do want them to talk to me locally. I believe the whole structure of tier1, tier2 etc is breaking down and everybody is going after all customers, and that this will have interesting implications in the future. Personally, I firmly belive that my customers pay me to deliver their traffic the most efficient way possible. I don't care if this is content or "users", there are always two. Someone pays to get access, and someone else pays to provide content. ISPs are in the middle to provide the service of shuffling packets between these two. Let's do that as efficiently as possible. -- Mikael Abrahamsson email: swmike@swm.pp.se