On May 1, 2012, at 13:26 , William Herrin wrote:
> On 5/1/12, Dominik Bay <d...@rrbone.net> wrote:
>> Yesterday I received the following mail, from a CDN:
>> 
>> ---->8----
>> Greetings,
>> 
>> Limelight Networks [has] recently updated our requirements for
>> settlement-free peering

I love the fact Dominik says "from a CDN", then leaves Limelight's name in the 
text. :)


> If I'm willing to go to your location, buy the card for your router
> and pay you for the staff hours to set it up, there should be *no*
> situation in which I'm willing to accept your traffic from an upstream
> Internet link but am unwilling to engage in otherwise settlement-free
> peering with you.

I disagree with this.  In fact, I can think of several possible cases where 
this would not hold, both using pure business and pure technical justifications.

Generalizations are difficult in complex situations, and this is most 
definitely a complex situation.


> Your customers have paid you to connect to me and my customers have
> paid me to connect to you. Double-billing the activity by either of us
> collecting money from the other is just plain wrong.

Wrong?  My rule is: Your network, your decision.  (Anyone who is paying 
attention knows my decision, but I it would be quite silly to assume my 
decision is right for all networks in all situations.)  Asking for settlements 
is not illegal, or even immoral.  Moreover, this is an operational list.  
"Right" and "wrong" are not really part of the discussion.

But even if they were, this is not not "just plain wrong".  "It's just 
business" is a much better way to say it, and in business, trying to make more 
money is the _point_, not wrong.  Whether this is a good way to make money is 
left as an exercise to the reader.

Instead, let's focus on the operational impact.  Will the reduced complexity on 
these networks result in improved performance?  Irrelevant to performance?  
Decreased performance?  Maybe even whether that change in performance is an 
acceptable trade for the lower CapEx/OpEx?  This is relevant since business 
requirements are the foundation for operational discussions.  Can't buy more 
10G ports if the business doesn't support it.

Etc., etc.

But right vs. wrong in a peering dispute?  I think not.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick


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