Measured Internet good v. "bad" traffic
Stephen J. Wilcox
steve at telecomplete.co.uk
Wed Aug 27 18:26:10 UTC 2003
On Wed, 27 Aug 2003, Raymond, Steven wrote:
> Have received complaints from usage-based-billing Internet customers lately
> about not wanting to pay for the nuisance traffic caused by worm-of-the-day.
> I believe that in the case of a short-duration, targeted attack that can be
> eventually be stopped, a billing credit is probably appropriate. But what
> about these current plagues that go on for weeks or forever- what is your
> network's response?
> Some simply want the traffic filtered in our routers- permanently. That is
> my least favorite option. Others want to simply not be billed for "bad"
> traffic. My reaction is to suggest that metered billing is probably not for
> you, then. But I could of course sympathize if I were footing the bill.
> What are other network operators doing about this issue, if it is an issue
> for them at all?
Well imho the simple way to look at this is that short bursts are generally
swallowed up by the network and the upstreams and not charging is fine however
for sustained traffic .. days or weeks or forever its different, if you didnt
charge any customer for the increased bandwidth and load then you have to foot
the cost of the network and equipment upgrades and that is surely wrong?
I mean if the traffic were unrealistically to increase so that bad traffic was
50% of all traffic we would all have to double our circuit and router capacity
and you either pass that cost on directly (charge for extra usage) or indirectly
(increase the $ per Mb) to the user.
I think you're right to say that if thats not acceptable to the user then usage
based billing should be avoided for them but ultimately they will still incur
the cost as you increase prices over time to foot the cost of increasing
overheads.
Steve
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