On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 09:31:07AM -0700, George Bonser wrote: > > Yes they are -- content providers aren't getting their connections to > > the > > Internet for free (and if they are, how can I get me some of that?). > > Maybe I wasn't clear. Traffic is moving away from "transit" to direct > peering at private exchanges in many cases. [Citation needed]
> > > If the ISPs are directly peering with the content provider at > > > some IX, the content provider gets what amounts to a free ride to > the > > > end user. > > > > Say wha? ISPs don't *have* to peer at an IX; if they think that it's > > cheaper to buy transit from someone than it is to peer, they're more > > than > > capable of doing so. > > Transit would have to get extremely cheap to compete with exchange > peering. I don't see it getting that low any time soon. So it *is* cheaper to peer than to buy transit. Take the money you save from not buying transit and put it towards upgrading your core. - Matt -- Generally the folk who love the environment in vague, frilly ways are at odds with folk who love the environment next to the mashed potatoes. -- Anthony de Boer, in a place that does not exist