o Since no NAP operator is going to enforce an MLPA, how can peering between multiple willing parties still be made to happen with less people time involved in the setup?
Peering is a business relationship; such relationships take time to establish. I don't see any way to get the people time out of it. --asp@partan.com (Andrew Partan)
There are (now) numerous smaller providers who have a 'peer-with-me' attitude. And they all, in particular, want to peer with each other. At least, that's what I heard at the last NANOG. As such, it would save them time to be able to peer with one box and not have to change anything on their end to get peering with other willing parties. I don't think much of the idea of groups getting together to buy transit to other exchange points or from one provider for the group; that way seems way too treacherous to me. I'm not saying that Net Access would use this; at least, not without heavy AS-path filtering. But I think that many others would, especially those subsets that are at MAE-East or MAE-West to pick up regional connectivity in addition to whatever national connectivity they can. Avi