Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-03 Thread Daniel Senie

At 06:54 PM 11/2/2008, Daniel Roesen wrote:

On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:
 Problem resolved?

https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php


Reading this accounting of Sprint's side of the story reveals 
something that's not too surprising about Sprint. They've got serious 
accounting problems.


The trial of peering they talk about was for three months in 2007, 
ending in September 2007. They claim to have billed Cogent at the end 
of it, though knowing Sprint's billing (having had them fail to send 
me bills, then hit me with late fees) they probably can't prove that. 
But this is a YEAR later.


They let an account linger for a year without collecting or 
terminating the services provided. That's their own damned fault. 
This indicates poor management of Accounts Receivable. That's your 
problem, Sprint, deal with it.


Also in this document is a complaint that Cogent failed to 
disconnect. Excuse me? This was a trial PEERING agreement. That 
implies one or a series of point-to-point connections. That implies 
EITHER party can disconnect the circuits (in reality, the physical 
circuit doesn't even matter, just shut down the BGP session(s)).


So Sprint failed to manage Accounts Receivable and left this 
temporary circuit in place too long. Some bean counter noticed this 
a year later. Way to go Sprint.


As I've noted previously, Sprint hurt its own customers by the action 
taken. It's my guess they restored the circuit to avoid further 
damage to themselves that resulted from their actions.


It's interesting to see a biased, blame Cogent first mentality in 
so many postings on NANOG. Maybe they deserve it, maybe not. But 
after reading the traffic here, after living through the consequences 
of the Cogent/L3 depeering, and after reading what Sprint said on 
their page, my read on this is that Sprint's accounting department 
might need some house cleaning.






Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-03 Thread Paul Vixie
Daniel Senie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 At 06:54 PM 11/2/2008, Daniel Roesen wrote:
 https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php

 ...
 
 Also in this document is a complaint that Cogent failed to disconnect.
 Excuse me?  This was a trial PEERING agreement.  That implies one or a
 series of point-to-point connections.  That implies EITHER party can
 disconnect the circuits (in reality, the physical circuit doesn't even
 matter, just shut down the BGP session(s)).

 ...

Not having read the contract in question, my assumption when I read Sprint's
account of their depeering of Cogent was that the trial peering contract says
Sprint will notify Cogent of its qualification status after 90 days; if in
Sprint's estimation Cogent does not qualify, and Sprint notifies Cogent of
that fact, then Cogent will either disconnect or start paying.  Sprint's
document's wording is careful even if their TITLE is not.  If they are
involved in litigation with Cogent then actual lawyers would have seen that
text (if not necessarily the TITLE) before it went out.  The heart of the
lawsuit might be whether Cogent did or didn't implicitly agree to pay, as
signalled by their lack of disconnection after their 90 day notice.  None of
us who aren't parties to the dispute can do other than wonder, ponder, guess.
-- 
Paul Vixie



RE: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-03 Thread Martin Hannigan
 -Original Message-
 From: Paul Vixie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, November 03, 2008 11:49 AM
 To: Daniel Senie
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?
 

 Sprint's
 document's wording is careful even if their TITLE is not.  

FWIW, that's the TITLE on every page on the website.

Best,

-M


--
Martin Hannigan  http://www.verneglobal.com/
Senior Director  e: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Verne Global Datacenters c: +16178216079
Keflavik, Icelandf: +16172347098



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-03 Thread Florian Weimer
* Paul Vixie:

 if cogent signed a trial peering contract which required payment if sprint
 determined after three months that cogent did not qualify, then the court's
 open questions are was the contract valid (and thus, does cogent owe sprint
 money) and why isn't there some kind of common carriage law for IP like in
 dialtone to protect the end users from these types of partition events?

Even for the phone network, I don't think you've got full isolation of
end users from partition.  For instance, beyond geographical area
codes, full connectivity is not guaranteed (and not given) on the
German PSTN.  Is this different in the U.S.?  Can you really call all
phone sex numbers from all residential lines (content filters
notwithstanding)?



RE: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-03 Thread Deepak Jain

At 06:54 PM 11/2/2008, Daniel Roesen wrote:
On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:
  Problem resolved?

https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php

Since there is active litigation going on over this, it's also possible an 
attorney said, hmmm... maybe you should wait until the judge
has rendered an opinion -- and they got to their temporary re-establishment.

I haven't looked, and don't know if I have access, to the court's 
motions/filings on this matter.

Deepak



Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Randy Epstein
Real time look at the situation:

*i4.23.112.0/2466.216.0.20  0100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.216.0.1   0100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.186.193.160100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.186.193.170100  0 1239 174 21889
i
*i4.23.113.0/2466.216.0.20  0100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.216.0.1   0100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.186.193.160100  0 1239 174 21889
i
* i 66.186.193.170100  0 1239 174 21889
i

Etc.

Problem resolved?

Randy




RE: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Johnson, Joe
Randy Epstein wrote:
snip
 Problem resolved?

From a single-homed Cogent site, I can get to sprint.net and fcc.gov, both
of which were unavailable after the de-peering.

 

Joe Johnson
Senior Systems Engineer
InnerWorkings, Inc.
Managed Print  Promotional Solutions
600 West Chicago Avenue, Suite 850
Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 312.676.6873
Fax: 312.604.5487
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.inwk.com
NASDAQ: INWK


smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature


Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Daniel Roesen
On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:
 Problem resolved?

https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php


Best regards,
Daniel

-- 
CLUE-RIPE -- Jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- PGP: 0xA85C8AA0



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET
 
 On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:
  Problem resolved?
 
 https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php
 
Check out the TITLE of the document. Me thinks it was a
rush job to post up the page and a bit of cut/paste was done. ;)

Tuc



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Randy Bush
 https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php

no nda, eh?

randy



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Brandon Galbraith
On 11/2/08, Daniel Roesen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:
  Problem resolved?

 https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php


 Best regards,
 Daniel


Seeing as Cogent is going to try tooth and nail to keep their new found Tier
1 status (and not pay anyone for transit), I would think this would bode
worse for Sprint, since most of their transit customers could migrate to
Cogent (saving $$$ and not having to face future depeerings). Just my $0.02.

-brandon

-- 
Brandon Galbraith
Voice: 630.400.6992
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


RE: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Randy Epstein
 https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php

Yes, I've read it.  They need to fix their TITLE.

So while Cogent was depeered by Sprint, we contacted the CEO of Cogent on
Friday to try and arrange at least a temporary peering arrangement so that
bits flowed between our networks while they battled this situation out with
Sprint.  Cogent's response?  Buy transit from them.

I presume one of Sprint's dissatisfactions during the trial with Cogent were
ratios.  My network happens to have a very high ratio of eyeballs (inbound
traffic) vs outbound traffic.  One would believe that Cogent would like to
offload their outbound traffic to networks other than their Tier-1 peers, to
at least give them an upper hand when negotiating peering arrangements with
these networks.

It's funny how Cogent depeers networks whenever they want, but the second
another network depeers them, they cry foul.

Randy




Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Simon Lockhart
On Sun Nov 02, 2008 at 06:05:52PM -0600, Brandon Galbraith wrote:
 Seeing as Cogent is going to try tooth and nail to keep their new found Tier
 1 status (and not pay anyone for transit), I would think this would bode
 worse for Sprint, since most of their transit customers could migrate to
 Cogent (saving $$$ and not having to face future depeerings). Just my $0.02.

Unless they need to reach other networks single homed from Sprint...

Simon
-- 
Simon Lockhart | * Sun Server Colocation * ADSL * Domain Registration *
   Director|* Domain  Web Hosting * Internet Consultancy * 
  Bogons Ltd   | * http://www.bogons.net/  *  Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  * 



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Paul Wall
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 6:05 PM, Brandon Galbraith
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Seeing as Cogent is going to try tooth and nail to keep their new found Tier
 1 status (and not pay anyone for transit), I would think this would bode
 worse for Sprint, since most of their transit customers could migrate to
 Cogent (saving $$$ and not having to face future depeerings). Just my $0.02.

Cogent has never been a Tier 1, they have only been transit free. Being
transit free is not a difficult accomplishment, it just means that you don't
announce or receive routes via a relationship which is intended to be heard
by the entire Internet. You could easily go out and buy transit from each of
the existing transit free networks, tag your routes with communities to only
announce to customers, and become a transit free network with global
reachability overnight. Of course, this carries with it the risk of breaking
global Internet connectivity in the event of a depeering. It is well known
that Cogent pays for out-of-ratio traffic with Level3 and Telia, and clearly
Sprint says that they have no actual peering agreement. This doesn't have
the making of a real tier 1 network.

As far as fighting tooth and nail, that much seems abundantly clear
considering that they are actually stealing service from Sprint (and have
been for over a year) in order to maintain their status. They used a trial
peering session to weasel their way into a direct connection with Sprint,
and once they got it they intentionally changed their announcements so
that if Sprint disconnected them it would cause unreachability.

It seems abundantly clear that this situation was created entirely by
Cogent, and that they are intentionally harming their customers and the
customers of Sprint in an effort to extort a settlement free relationship.
This is despicable behavior, if not outright criminal activity considering
the theft of service they are committing, and it is amazing that Sprint
cared enough about Internet connectivity to allow it to continue for so
long, and to restore connectivity temporarily.

If any of us stopped paying for our Internet service, and set up routing
so that as soon as our provider turned us off we would be reachable to
them and their customers complained, then demanded that they give
us free service in order to restore connectivity, we would be laughed
at. That is what Cogent has done here, and just because they've done
it on a large scale doesn't make it right. This specific issue will be
solved in a real court and not the court of public opinion, but we
should all do our parts to recognize the blatant lies Cogent has told,
and to make it clear that we will not accept that kind of behavior. The
last thing the Internet needs is more misguided regulation because
someone actually believed Cogent's lies.



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Seth Mattinen

Brandon Galbraith wrote:

On 11/2/08, Daniel Roesen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Sun, Nov 02, 2008 at 04:40:20PM -0500, Randy Epstein wrote:

Problem resolved?

https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php


Best regards,
Daniel



Seeing as Cogent is going to try tooth and nail to keep their new found Tier
1 status (and not pay anyone for transit), I would think this would bode
worse for Sprint, since most of their transit customers could migrate to
Cogent (saving $$$ and not having to face future depeerings). Just my $0.02.




I guess, if you like being affected by Cogent's peering spats on a 
recurring basis. Are you forgetting this is not the first time?


~Seth



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 9:10 PM, Seth Mattinen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Brandon Galbraith wrote:


[ snip ]



 I guess, if you like being affected by Cogent's peering spats on a recurring
 basis. Are you forgetting this is not the first time?



But according to Sprint, this isn't a peering spat. This is a customer
who didn't pay their bill.

Probably useful to keep that in perspective.

-M



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Seth Mattinen

Martin Hannigan wrote:

On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 9:10 PM, Seth Mattinen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Brandon Galbraith wrote:


[ snip ]



I guess, if you like being affected by Cogent's peering spats on a recurring
basis. Are you forgetting this is not the first time?




But according to Sprint, this isn't a peering spat. This is a customer
who didn't pay their bill.

Probably useful to keep that in perspective.



Yeah, I know, but it was a trial arrangement which it turns out Cogent 
didn't meet requirements for, then didn't want to pony up the cash and 
pretended it was still settlement free peering. And I am inclined to 
believe Sprint's side of the story because Cogent likes to do this every 
so often.


It just amazes me how some people seem to think this is the first time 
Cogent has done this. It's like they want the horrid operational impact 
it will have, cry that big bad provider X disconnected them, and people 
will come to their defense.


~Seth



Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Justin Ream
 
 It just amazes me how some people seem to think this is the first time
 Cogent has done this. It's like they want the horrid operational impact
 it will have, cry that big bad provider X disconnected them, and people
 will come to their defense.
 

Everyone loves an underdog story.

-Justin 




Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore

On Nov 2, 2008, at 7:06 PM, Randy Epstein wrote:


https://www.sprint.net/cogent.php


Yes, I've read it.  They need to fix their TITLE.

So while Cogent was depeered by Sprint, we contacted the CEO of  
Cogent on
Friday to try and arrange at least a temporary peering arrangement  
so that
bits flowed between our networks while they battled this situation  
out with

Sprint.  Cogent's response?  Buy transit from them.

I presume one of Sprint's dissatisfactions during the trial with  
Cogent were
ratios.  My network happens to have a very high ratio of eyeballs  
(inbound
traffic) vs outbound traffic.  One would believe that Cogent would  
like to
offload their outbound traffic to networks other than their Tier-1  
peers, to
at least give them an upper hand when negotiating peering  
arrangements with

these networks.

It's funny how Cogent depeers networks whenever they want, but the  
second

another network depeers them, they cry foul.


Aren't you in one of the 1300 on-net locations with Cogent?  Doesn't  
that give you a free FE?


:-)

--
TTFN,
patrick




RE: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread Randy Epstein
Patrick,

Aren't you in one of the 1300 on-net locations with Cogent?  Doesn't  
that give you a free FE?
 :-)

Clearly you are joking here, but no, wasn't even offered the free FastE!  :)

Randy




Re: Sprint / Cogent dispute over?

2008-11-02 Thread James Hess
On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 8:29 PM, Martin Hannigan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 But according to Sprint, this isn't a peering spat. This is a customer
 who didn't pay their bill.

 Probably useful to keep that in perspective.
 -M

I would say it's a peering spat, because Cogent's press releases
stated Sprint failed to meet Sprint's contractual obligation to peer
with them on a settlement-free basis.
That's a political issue that (I expect) remains to be mediated by the courts.

The disconnection should have been eminently forseeable by Cogent,  if
the entire peering was indicated by Sprint as being on a trial
basis. To maintain connectivity,  Cogent should have had a
contingency in place and taken it, when Sprint rejected their request
for  settlement-free peering.



There is something a bit worst for a single-homed customer than a Tier
1 provider that gets in peering spats;that IS:  being single-homed
to a  provider  who wants to say they're
 Tier 1  when in fact: they may _really_  be a Tier 2  in disguise.

And who as a result of wanting to market themselves  Tier 1  refuses
to pay their
paid peering fees.

Because it means your provider _could_  have taken actions to preserve
connectivity,
but something else was so much more important to them than providing
the product
you their customer expect,  that they intentionally allow it to get in the way.


In other words,  if you want to be single-homed,  a Tier 2 or 3
upstream  that admits they're
a Tier 2 or 3, and provides you redundancy and excellent connectivity,
seems like
the thing to find..

Because a Tier 2  posing and marketing as a Tier 1  might  prioritize
their continued
marketing themselves as a  Tier 1  over actually providing  Tier 1 connectivity.


-
Government regulation of peering relationships would be a disaster...
I fear regulatory organizations are too easily influenced by the
largest players.

One can imagine per-megabit peering taxes  imposed by the feds
on interconnections between different networks   that only large
providers would
have carved out rules to exempt themselves from.

And artificial government interfering with small networks wanting to peer.
Requiring reams of paperwork,  registrations, design documents,
waiting periods, etc

-- 
-J