Re: [FRnOG] [MISC] Fwd: France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering ...

2012-04-06 Par sujet Raphael MAUNIER
Ah Ah,

They are asking for the IPV4/IPV6 price-list :)

-- 
Raphaël Maunier
NEO TELECOMS
CTO / Directeur Ingénierie
AS8218


On Apr 5, 2012, at 11:18 PM, Michael Hallgren wrote:

 Le jeudi 05 avril 2012 à 11:19 -0700, Martin J. Levy a écrit :
 Even the English speaking world is seeing what's going on in France ...
 
  
 http://www.telecompaper.com/news/france-telecom-commits-to-more-transparency-in-peering
 
 ... enjoy!
 
 Hi Martin,
 
 Sure, no surprise! v6 as well ? :)
 
 mh
 
 
 Martin
 
  Martin J. Levy
  Director IPv6 Strategy
  Hurricane Electric
  760 Mission Court,
  Fremont, CA 94539, USA
  +1 408 499 3801 (mobile)
  mar...@he.net (email)
  http://he.net/ (web)
 
 
 
 News
 France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering
 Wednesday 4 April 2012 | 10:50 CET
 
 France Telecom-Orange has made a commitment to the Competition Authority to 
 make its internet interconnection pricing and technical offer more 
 transparent following a regulatory decision stemming from a January 2011 
 complaint by US internet connectivity provider Cogent. At the time Orange 
 customers complained of slower downloads from MegaUpload and MegaVideo, 
 carried by Cogent. The US firm accused France Telecom-Orange of throttling 
 access to its users and to not have invested enough for acceptable QoS. The 
 French operator sought additional payment to open new interconnection 
 capacity as free peering would not be able to compensate for much higher 
 traffic in one direction than in the other. The Competition Authority 
 criticised France Telecom-Orange for the opacity of its arrangement with its 
 Open Transit subsidiary, a competitor of Cogent, finding that the prices 
 charged to an unnamed very popular website seem to be substantially lower 
 than market rates. However it did not find the French operator to have 
 broken its peering agreement by refusing Cogent access to its customers, but 
 only wanted to be paid for it. The regulator will run market tests until 3 
 May to collect observations from websites, hosts, transit operators, ISPs 
 and other actors about France Telecom's proposals. It will meet again to 
 determine whether the proposed commitments are sufficient to meet 
 competition concerns.
 
 
 
 ---
 Liste de diffusion du FRnOG
 http://www.frnog.org/
 
 
 
 ---
 Liste de diffusion du FRnOG
 http://www.frnog.org/


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http://www.frnog.org/


[FRnOG] [MISC] Fwd: France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering ...

2012-04-05 Par sujet Martin J. Levy
Even the English speaking world is seeing what's going on in France ...

  
http://www.telecompaper.com/news/france-telecom-commits-to-more-transparency-in-peering

... enjoy!

Martin

  Martin J. Levy
  Director IPv6 Strategy
  Hurricane Electric
  760 Mission Court,
  Fremont, CA 94539, USA
  +1 408 499 3801 (mobile)
  mar...@he.net (email)
  http://he.net/ (web)



News
France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering
Wednesday 4 April 2012 | 10:50 CET
 
France Telecom-Orange has made a commitment to the Competition Authority to 
make its internet interconnection pricing and technical offer more transparent 
following a regulatory decision stemming from a January 2011 complaint by US 
internet connectivity provider Cogent. At the time Orange customers complained 
of slower downloads from MegaUpload and MegaVideo, carried by Cogent. The US 
firm accused France Telecom-Orange of throttling access to its users and to not 
have invested enough for acceptable QoS. The French operator sought additional 
payment to open new interconnection capacity as free peering would not be able 
to compensate for much higher traffic in one direction than in the other. The 
Competition Authority criticised France Telecom-Orange for the opacity of its 
arrangement with its Open Transit subsidiary, a competitor of Cogent, finding 
that the prices charged to an unnamed very popular website seem to be 
substantially lower than market rates. However it did not find the French 
operator to have broken its peering agreement by refusing Cogent access to its 
customers, but only wanted to be paid for it. The regulator will run market 
tests until 3 May to collect observations from websites, hosts, transit 
operators, ISPs and other actors about France Telecom's proposals. It will meet 
again to determine whether the proposed commitments are sufficient to meet 
competition concerns.



---
Liste de diffusion du FRnOG
http://www.frnog.org/


Re: [FRnOG] [MISC] Fwd: France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering ...

2012-04-05 Par sujet Michael Hallgren
Le jeudi 05 avril 2012 à 11:19 -0700, Martin J. Levy a écrit :
 Even the English speaking world is seeing what's going on in France ...
 
   
 http://www.telecompaper.com/news/france-telecom-commits-to-more-transparency-in-peering
 
 ... enjoy!

Hi Martin,

Sure, no surprise! v6 as well ? :)

mh

 
 Martin
 
   Martin J. Levy
   Director IPv6 Strategy
   Hurricane Electric
   760 Mission Court,
   Fremont, CA 94539, USA
   +1 408 499 3801 (mobile)
   mar...@he.net (email)
   http://he.net/ (web)
 
 
 
 News
 France Telecom commits to more transparency in peering
 Wednesday 4 April 2012 | 10:50 CET
  
 France Telecom-Orange has made a commitment to the Competition Authority to 
 make its internet interconnection pricing and technical offer more 
 transparent following a regulatory decision stemming from a January 2011 
 complaint by US internet connectivity provider Cogent. At the time Orange 
 customers complained of slower downloads from MegaUpload and MegaVideo, 
 carried by Cogent. The US firm accused France Telecom-Orange of throttling 
 access to its users and to not have invested enough for acceptable QoS. The 
 French operator sought additional payment to open new interconnection 
 capacity as free peering would not be able to compensate for much higher 
 traffic in one direction than in the other. The Competition Authority 
 criticised France Telecom-Orange for the opacity of its arrangement with its 
 Open Transit subsidiary, a competitor of Cogent, finding that the prices 
 charged to an unnamed very popular website seem to be substantially lower 
 than market rates. However it did not find the French operator to have broken 
 its peering agreement by refusing Cogent access to its customers, but only 
 wanted to be paid for it. The regulator will run market tests until 3 May to 
 collect observations from websites, hosts, transit operators, ISPs and other 
 actors about France Telecom's proposals. It will meet again to determine 
 whether the proposed commitments are sufficient to meet competition concerns.
 
 
 
 ---
 Liste de diffusion du FRnOG
 http://www.frnog.org/



---
Liste de diffusion du FRnOG
http://www.frnog.org/