Excerpt from http://www.hkix.net/hkix/Presentation/forum20100129.pdf (Page 3)

 Two Main Sites for resilience

•HKIX1: CUHK Campus in Shatin
•HKIX2: CITIC Tower in Central

 We are confident to say that because of HKIX, more than 99% intra--HK 
Internet traffic is kept within HK


-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG <nanog-boun...@nanog.org> On Behalf Of b...@theworld.com
Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2019 2:06 PM
To: John Sage <js...@finchhaven.com>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org; b...@theworld.com
Subject: Re: 99% of HK internet traffic goes thru uni being fought over?


On November 20, 2019 at 15:11 mailto:js...@finchhaven.com (John Sage) wrote:

 > Then, as to Internet traffic, the probability that 99% of *all* Internet  > 
 > traffic to one global political entity (Hong Kong) goes through one  > 
 > single physical location that just happens to be a university currently  > 
 > experiencing student protests is ... yeah...

Interesting theory.

 >
 > I take it you know nothing about Internetworking?

Perhaps you should look at https://www.TheWorld.com/~bzs

 >
 > Or, again, Zerohedge?

Nope, knew nothing off-hand about them but wikipedia seems to concur that 
Zerohedge is likely a "Russian asset". Thanks.

Nonetheless it doesn't particularly mean that 99% of HK traffic
*doesn't* go thru that facility, not alone.

Broad comparisons to other national internet structures as you appeal to seems 
to be questionable in regards to a Special Administrative Region of The 
People's Republic of China, albeit officially ruled under "one system, two 
ways", HK being one of the regions (Macau being the other) which is ruled under 
the "second" way.

China can be unique in their communications policies and practices.

Which is why I asked hoping someone knew the facts rather than had an opinion 
about the particular source or some theory unifying all national internet 
infrastructures under some simple rule of thumb.

-- 
        -Barry Shein

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