[1623] in Commercialization & Privatization of the Internet

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

more moves on altering the Internet model

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Martin Lee Schoffstall)
Sat Dec 7 12:19:57 1991

To: com-priv@psi.com
Date: Sat, 07 Dec 91 12:14:47 -0500
From: "Martin Lee Schoffstall" <schoff@psi.com>


and ANS speaks for the government again.

Marty
-----------------------------------

Return-Path: Ellen.Hoffman@um.cc.umich.edu
Received: from nic.cerf.net by psi.com (5.61/2.1-PSI/PSINet)
	id AA08070; Sat, 7 Dec 91 12:05:27 -0500
Received: from mailrus.cc.umich.edu by nic.cerf.net (4.1/CERFnet-1.0)  id AA25693; Sat, 7 Dec 91 09:03:10 PST
Received: from um.cc.umich.edu by mailrus.cc.umich.edu (5.61/1123-1.0)
	id AA08927; Sat, 7 Dec 91 11:57:35 -0500
Date: Sat, 7 Dec 91 11:59:56 EST
>From: Ellen.Hoffman@um.cc.umich.edu
To: members@farnet.org
Message-Id: <10405971@um.cc.umich.edu>
Subject: Commercial traffic

THE FOLLOWING IS A LETTER TO THE INTERNET COMMUNITY FROM 
ALAN WEIS OF ANS AND ERIC AUPPERLE OF MERIT:
 
The National Science Foundation (NSF) has requested that ANS 
establish appropriate routing controls to ensure that 
federally sponsored networks that do not wish to carry 
commercial traffic are not burdened by commercial traffic. ANS 
will work cooperatively with Merit to ensure that controls are 
put in place to prevent commercial traffic from traversing 
federally sponsored gateways and networks that have indicated 
that they do not wish to carry commercial traffic. 
 
ANS commercial traffic will be restricted from interchange 
with federally sponsored networks which have not signed an ANS 
connectivity agreement or developed an alternative plan with 
ANS that will meet their requirements. This restriction on ANS 
commercial traffic also covers other Internet connected 
networks such as state, federal agency and international 
networks that do not wish to receive commercial traffic.
 
For the interchange to occur, federally sponsored midlevels 
must have in place a signed connectivity agreement with ANS 
which has been designed to meet the requirements established 
by NSF. Participation in the basic connectivity agreement 
between a midlevel and ANS is maintained without any charges 
to the midlevel. ANS connectivity agreements are currently in 
place for several midlevels: BARRNet, MichNet, Midnet, OARNet, 
MRNet, NYSERNet, and PREPnet; several others are in the 
process of final approval. As the list grows, it will be 
posted. Customers at campuses and research organizations 
attached to these networks will be able to access ANS 
connected commercial service providers directly via the 
Internet.
 
As requested by NSF, ANS will block restricted networks from 
exchanging traffic with ANS attached commercial networks by 
the use of network route filtering. The ANS router which 
resides at a commercial premise will not receive routes to 
restricted non-commercial networks from the ANS backbone. This 
filtering will be verified and monitored by Merit in their 
role as contractor under the cooperative agreement with NSF.
 
The route filtering plan implemented by ANS inside the ANS 
network is designed to support several features. Each 
federally sponsored midlevel network will continue to be 
responsible for the policies and routing plans within their 
own networks. The ANS plan does not impose any new changes or 
requirements on these networks whether they participate in the 
ANS plan or not. Midlevel networks that use default routing 
can continue to do so without exposure to commercial networks.
 
ANS's first commercial customer, Dialog, will interconnect to 
the ANS network in San Jose California as an ANS CO+RE 
customer. This enables Dialog to provide fee based commercial 
information services over the Internet to other networks that 
have agreed to support the exchange of commercial traffic with 
the ANS network in one of the  following ways:
 
      1.   Participate in the ANS Connectivity Agreement. 
           There is no charge for participation in this
           program. Those who participate are eligible for
           funds to help build their infrastructure.
 
      2.   Interconnect to a network service provider that
           participates in the ANS Connectivity Agreement.
 
      3.   Establish an ANS CO+RE connection.  This is a fee 
           based ANS attachment service for sites that choose
           to interconnect directly to the ANS network.
 
We are excited by the prospect of major information providers 
such as Dialog being available to the academic and research 
communities via the Internet, and recognize that such 
connections have the potential to save many institutions the 
additional expenses they now incur to reach such services via 
private networks. We will continue to work with the entire 
Internet community to make such opportunities a reality, and 
to promote interconnectivity so that such services can be 
broadly available.
     Alan Weis                            Eric Aupperle
     Advanced Network and Services, Inc.  Merit Network, Inc.

------- End of Forwarded Message


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