I have recently put together a brief history of peering arrangements, and am now starting on an economic/political analysis of peering. I'm trying to get in touch with people in the industry and sift through answers to the following questions. If you have time to answer them via email or the phone that would be great. Can you think of other questions I should be asking? I suppose my ultimate question is "Is the market fair, open and free"? I say yes, and economically it's probably fairly easy to prove. Politically is another story... How easy is it to enter the market at different levels? What are the largest start-up costs? How political is it? How do you stay competitive? What are the technical dangers involved in peering? What are the excuses used for not peering? Are they valid? What reasons are smaller ISPs giving for wanting free settlements? Are they valid? Is the claim true that the telco-owned networks use their Internet shares to "force" smaller ISPs to lease their lines? If so, is this unfair? How does it affect pricing and the market in general? Does is produce waste? What percentage of traffic both originates and terminates on Sprint's network, Cable & Wireless, UUNet, etc.? What, if anything, is wrong with nondisclosure agreements? How do they affect the market? How should disputes in the industry be resolved? What are the Pros and Cons of peering? How does the global market figure in? (With so much of the international traffic going through California, is this good, bad, or neutral for US companies?) I'd greatly appreciate any useful input. Thanks, Jennifer ***************************** Jennifer A. DePalma 202.789.5226 202.842.3490 (fax) Research Analyst Telecommunications and Technology Studies Cato Institute 1000 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001