They add a cookie.

 

This generate traffic

 

From: NANOG <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Tom Beecher
Sent: April 1, 2021 4:12 PM
To: Matt Erculiani <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected] list <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: wow, lots of akamai

 

Does Akamai bear some burden here to make these rollouts less troublesome for 
the ISPs they traverse through the last mile(s)? IMO yes, yes they do. When 
you're doing something new and unprecedented, as Akamai frequently brags about 
on Twitter, like having rapid, bursty growth of traffic, you need to consider 
that just because you can generate it, doesn't mean it can be delivered. 

 

Akamai, and other CDNs, do not **generate** traffic ; they serve the requests 
generated by users.  

 

On Thu, Apr 1, 2021 at 3:54 PM Matt Erculiani <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Niels,

 

I think to clarify Jean's point, when you buy a 300mbps circuit, you're paying 
for 300mbps of internet access. 

 

That does not mean that a network should (and in this case small-medium ones 
simply can't) build all of their capacity to service a large number of customer 
circuits at line rate at the same time for an extended period, ESPECIALLY to 
the exact same endpoint. It's just not economically reasonable to expect that. 
Remember we're talking about residential service here, not enterprise circuits.

 

Therefore, how do you prevent this spike of [insert large number here] gigabits 
traversing the network at the same time from causing issues? Build more 
network? That sounds easy, but there are plenty of legitimate reasons why ISPs 
can't or don't want to do that, particularly for an event that only occurs once 
per quarter or so.

 

Does Akamai bear some burden here to make these rollouts less troublesome for 
the ISPs they traverse through the last mile(s)? IMO yes, yes they do. When 
you're doing something new and unprecedented, as Akamai frequently brags about 
on Twitter, like having rapid, bursty growth of traffic, you need to consider 
that just because you can generate it, doesn't mean it can be delivered.  
They've gotta be more sophisticated than a bunch of servers with SSD arrays, 
ramdisks, and 100 gig interfaces, so there's no excuse for them here to just 
blindly fill every link they have after sitting idle for weeks/months at a time 
and expect everything to come out alright and nobody to complain about it.

 

On Thu, Apr 1, 2021 at 1:21 PM Niels Bakker <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  (Jean St-Laurent via NANOG) [Thu 01 
Apr 2021, 21:03 CEST]:
>An artificial roll out penalty somehow? Probably not at the ISP 
>level, but more at the game level. Well, ISP could also have some 
>mechanisms to reduce the impact or even Akamai could force a 
>progressive roll out.

It's an online game. You can't play the game with outdated assets. 
You'd not see walls where other players would, for example.

What you're suggesting is the ability of ISPs to market Internet access 
at a certain speed but not have to deliver it based on conditions they 
create.


        -- Niels.




 

-- 

Matt Erculiani

ERCUL-ARIN

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