On Aug 21, 2013, at 6:56 AM, Randy Bush <ra...@psg.com> wrote:

>> Correct.  The ones in black are exchanges, the ones in gray are things
>> that someone asserted to have been exchanges, or asserted will be
>> exchanges.
> 
> glad it's all so black and white, well grey. :)

When different people are asserting different things (i.e. that something is, 
and is not, an IXP) the situation is, by definition, contentious.  We move 
things into the "definitely an exchange" and show it in black text when we're 
able to observe a number of things:

 - Three or more participants
 - Shared layer-2 switch fabric across which participants peer with each other, 
exchanging customer routes
 - New participation is not too rigorously constrained (at least a domestic ISP 
new market entrant should be able to participate)
 - Participants do not receive a metered-rate bill based on utilization

In addition, we look for a number of signs of openness and transparency that 
would indicate that it's intended to be a good-faith effort to provide a point 
of interconnection between interested parties, rather than a regulatory 
compliance function, a set of private crossconnects that don't facilitation 
connection of new participants, a transit buyers'  club, or a commercial 
layer-1/2 WAN carrier trying to re-brand their services.  Which are, I would 
say, the four most common things that attempt to brand themselves as IXPs in 
disagreement with the general consensus that we observe.

New IXP founders typically contact our staff early in the formation process, 
and we collect the information above through conversations with participants, 
direct participation in the exchange, and on-site visits.  The weak point in 
this process is that when IXPs go defunct, we're often lacking a clear date of 
dissolution in our records, because they tend to fade away gradually, with very 
little public notice.

Whenever anyone notices such a discrepancy, we very much appreciate their 
bringing it to our attention, so we can make the directory more accurate.

> but how do you represent seattle colonolizing bc?

If, by that, you mean Canadian ISPs peering in Seattle, you'd see that in the 
participant list...

    https://prefix.pch.net/applications/ixpdir/detail.php?exchange_point_id=345
    https://www.seattleix.net/participants.htm

…and in theory the map here...

    
https://prefix.pch.net/images/applications/ixpdir/origin_country_worldmap/345.png

…should be showing the Canadian participation visually, but the fact that it's 
not, at the moment, is indicating a data coding error on our ARIN whois import, 
which I'll have our guys take a look at.

                                -Bill




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