Well, with net flow Analytics, it's not really the case that we don't have a 
way of evaluating the relative burdens.  Every major net flow Analytics vendor 
is implementing some type of distance measurement capability so that each party 
can calculate not only how much traffic they carry for each peer, but how far.

Dave

--
520.229.7627 cell


On Jun 19, 2013, at 8:23 PM, "Benson Schliesser" <bens...@queuefull.net> wrote:

> 
> On 2013-06-19 8:46 PM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
>> 
>> That was a great argument in 1993, and was in fact largely true in system 
>> that existed at that time.  However today what you describe no longer really 
>> makes any sense.
>> 
>> While it is technically true that the protocols favor asymmetric routing, 
>> your theory is based on the idea that a content site exists in one location, 
>> and does not want to optimize the user experience.
>> ...
>> 
>> A much better business arrangement would be to tie a sliding fee to the 
>> ratio.  Peering up to 2:1 is free.  Up to 4:1 is $0.50/meg, up to 6:1 is 
>> $1.00/meg, up to 10:1 is $1.50 a meg.  Eyeball network gets to recover their 
>> long haul transport costs, it's cheaper to the CDN than buying transit,
> 
> Agreed that CDN, traffic steering, etc, changes the impact of routing 
> protocols. But I think you made my point. The sending peer (or their 
> customer) has more control over cost. And we don't really have a good proxy 
> for evaluating relative burdens.
> 
> That's not to suggest that peering disputes are really about technical 
> capabilities. Nor fairness, even...
> 
> Cheers,
> -Benson
> 
> 
> 

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