[109128] in North American Network Operators' Group

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

Re: Internet partitioning event regulations

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Kevin Loch)
Wed Nov 5 18:06:10 2008

Date: Wed, 05 Nov 2008 18:04:30 -0500
From: Kevin Loch <kloch@kl.net>
To: nanog@nanog.org
In-Reply-To: <3c3e3fca0811051432i21e068eahf9933e59365eb76c@mail.gmail.com>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces@nanog.org

William Herrin wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 5, 2008 at 12:12 PM, Larry Sheldon <LarrySheldon@cox.net> wrote:
>>>> Lamar Owen wrote:
>>>>> There are three ways that I know of (feel free to add to this
>>>>> list) to limit the events: 1.) As you mentioned, regulation (or a
>>>>> government run and regulated backbone);
>> Which government?
> 
> First, let me say that I think peering regulation is a terrible idea.
> No matter how cleverly you plan it, the result will be that fewer
> small companies can participate. That's the character of regulation:
> compliance creates more barriers to entry than it removes.

The problem isn't that which networks don't peer with each other it is
that some networks don't buy transit from anyone.  That is what
causes partition related outages and distortions in peering policies.
If regulation could be part of the 'solution' then that would be the 
place to start.

But despite the flaws with the current environment it really isn't that
bad and any regulation would likely be a disaster for the industry.

- Kevin


home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post