Lessons from the AU model
Matthew Moyle-Croft
mmc at internode.com.au
Tue Jan 22 03:54:06 UTC 2008
>
> Here it stands for Multilateral peering, so in simplistic terms it
> means you peer with everyone at an exchange. A route server.
>
> My issue isn't that they exist (and in fact one network I maintain is
> a member of three MLPs.) The issue is compelling people to join the
> MLP. This dissuades large networks from joining in with the public
> peering game, and is probably harmful to the peering ecology of the
> region rather than helpful.
Given that three of the Gang of Four (Telstra/Reach, Optus/Singtel,
AAPT/Telecom NZ) (hey all encumbents!) won't peer in Oz, even with
Global Tier1s in Oz, it doesn't seem a big problem as the cost the GoF
charge to access their network is so high (Does that mean there are no
global tier 1s? :-)
In Australia basically almost everyone bar the GoF peers at the major
peering fabrics (PIPEx6, WAIXx1, Equinix Sydney) as it gives you such a
large chunk of the eyeballs and corporates outside of the GoF.
We peer with some of Telstra/Reaches upstreams in the US, but they won't
peer in Oz. They won't even peer with some very large global tier2s.
>
> Best wishes
> Andy
--
Matthew Moyle-Croft - Internode/Agile - Networks
Level 5, 150 Grenfell Street, Adelaide, SA 5000 Australia
Email: mmc at internode.com.au Web: http://www.on.net
Direct: +61-8-8228-2909 Mobile: +61-419-900-366
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"The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas,
but in escaping from the old ones" - John Maynard Keynes
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