The intro section has the following line:
“The internet will be subdivided into logical regions or by the physical
location of continents”
How will this routing protocol adapt when geo-political change occurs as it
always does resulting in a different connectivity model ?
How will a governance in a given continent opt out or in to said constraints
imposed by it’s location or logical region?
Thanks,
Jim Uttaro
From: rtgwg <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Stewart Bryant
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2020 9:01 AM
To: Robert Raszuk <[email protected]>
Cc: rtgwg <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: KRP ID Discussion.
Hi Robert,
On 6 Aug 2020, at 11:16, Robert Raszuk
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Stewart,
I hear what you are saying and politically speaking I understand your comment.
Not that I would agree - but this does not matter.
Firstly, I should make it clear that I am not advocating this, and since you
mention 2030 in the next line the 2030 project is definitely not proposing this.
My remarks are based on what I see in the world about me and what I hear from
talking to people in the industry.
But just thinking on the technical level I do not understand it. Are you saying
that maybe in 2030 it would not be legally possible to create a link of some
form (physical or virtual) and run single IGP between US and Europe ? Or
between EMEA and Japan ? Or EMEA to Africa ?
Well who knows. You can see as I do what the US administration is saying about
“clean” networks, whatever that means. You will have also seen what the EC is
saying about where personally identifying data can flow. You will have also
heard in SPRING/6man about the US restrictions on how its traffic can travel
around Africa. My crystal ball is no better than anyone else’s but the signs
are not good that the best engineering solution will win against what the
politicians require of the operators.
Are you saying that global operators would have to artificially divide their
networks into chunks ? And who would control what goes between such chunks ?
ITU-T ?
Look at what the politicians seem to be saying. All I know is that the
operators have to obey their rules, that the engineers have to design systems
that meet the operators needs, and the politicians are apparently retrenching
from globalisation to nationalism. That does not mean that I support such
changes, I am just trying to understand the engineering implications of what
seems to be happening.
What about new zoo of satellites just launched to precisely offer Internet
without any geo boundaries ? Would we need to now map earth continents to orbit
and create "fences" in the space as well ?
Setting aside the weaponisation of space that is being reported, this is an
interesting issue and one that started me on this thought train.
About a year ago Mark Handley presented a paper looking at how the zoo would
work without free-space optics, since that seemed to have been omitted from the
first bloc of Starlink satellites. His conclusion was that the operator would
need to use the earth terminals as relays and he speculated that since Starlink
owned both the satellites and the earth terminals every earth terminal could be
a relay. It was an interesting talk and worth looking up on Youtube. I was
explaining this to a senior member of SG2 at a T-SAG meeting and it was at that
point that I was told of the huge problems that exist in telephone numbering
(which includes call routing) as a result of political considerations about
which countries traffic can transit their network. It was suggested that this
would apply to ground terminal transit traffic. Now, I have no idea how this
will pan out, but it is not inconceivable that the ground terminal radio
licences (which most governments strictly control) could specifically
prohibited transit destinations.
Sorry but not only that would be end of the Internet but possibly end of
Google, MS, FB and other global operators and enterprises too. Or maybe the
idea is to kill open Internet and still allow enterprises to be global and take
most of the transit ?
Do not shoot the messenger.
I do not advocate this.
I am simply thinking about the engineering consequences of what I see.
Something that I learned at business school was to always understand where the
power is. Despite the huge size of the global operators, at the moment the
power is still with nation states, and many of them are getting concerned
about the power of the big operators.
I have no interest in killing the open Internet. I have worked to support it
for long enough. However that does not invalidate my concern about the
trajectory of global politics and the engineering implications for the network.
Stewart
Best,
R.
On Thu, Aug 6, 2020 at 12:02 PM Stewart Bryant
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Robert
I make no comment on the draft, but whilst what you say is currently true, the
state of world politics seem to make the current decoupling of the various
topologies that we enjoy at the moment less likely to continue than was the
case a few years back.
The political actions of governments trumps (if you excuse the unfortunate pun)
the preferences of the engineers and accountants.
ITU-T SG2 (numbering) has a list of Middle East cases of traffic routing issues
based on politics, the EU GDPR rules, the developing countries' concern over
traffic patterns, the actions of the current US administration, all take us in
the direction of the application of geo and political considerations to traffic
routing.
Regrettably, the writing is on the wall for restrictions to become normalised
and built into the traffic planning rules, and that will push them into the
routing system.
Stewart
> On 6 Aug 2020, at 10:15, Robert Raszuk
> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>
> Khaled,
>
> Physical network topologies do not follow geo nor political boundaries. Any
> solution based on the above is simply not practical.
>
> Best,
> R.
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