AFAIK Comcast wasn't consuming, "mass amounts of data" from Level 3 (Netflix's transit to them). Are you implying that a retail customer has a similar expectation (or should) as a tier 1 ISP has for peering? I hope not, that would be hyperbole verging on the silly. Retail customer agreement spell out, in every example I've seen, realistic terms and expectations for service and those are very different from peering arrangements. Scott Helms Vice President of Technology ZCorum (678) 507-5000 -------------------------------- http://twitter.com/kscotthelms -------------------------------- On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 2:28 PM, Blake Dunlap <ikiris@gmail.com> wrote:
I agree, and those peers should be then paid for the bits that your customers are requesting that they send through you if you cannot maintain a balanced peer relationship with them. It's shameful that access networks are attempting to not pay for their leeching of mass amounts of data in clear violation of standard expectations for balanced peering agreements.
Oh... you meant something else?
-Blake
On 5/15/14, 1:28 PM, "Nick B" <nick@pelagiris.org<mailto: nick@pelagiris.org>> wrote:
By "categorically untrue" do you mean "FCC's open internet rules allow us to refuse to upgrade full peers"?
Throttling is taking, say, a link from 10G and applying policy to constrain it to 1G, for example. What if a peer wants to go from a balanced relationship to 10,000:1, well outside of the policy binding the relationship? Should we just unquestionably toss out our published policy – which is consistent with other networks – and ignore expectations for other
On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 12:34 PM, Livingood, Jason <Jason_Livingood@cable.comcast.com> wrote: peers?
Jason