Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-10 Thread Michael . Dillon

> > Regulations also do not imply the involvement of governments.
> > It is possible for industries to self-regulate such as the
> > ARIN policies which are a product of the ARIN membership,
> > i.e. companies who use IP addresses in their networks.
> > 
> Mostly true.  However, ARIN policies are a product of both
> the ARIN membership and the IP using community at large.
> It is an important and good thing that the policy process is
> not limited to ARIN members.

I suppose the corollary to this in the world of network
peering is that it will be a good thing for end-users to
have some say in the peering agreements which are causing
some of them grief at present. Wise self-regulation of Internet
peering would find a way to incorporate the views of users
who, in the end, pay everyone's bills.

> If I had faith in any of the regulatory organizations that are likely
> to attempt to do this having half a clue about what they were attempting
> to regulate, I might be inclined to agree with you.

Self-regulation is still possible. Network operators meet regularly
in a number of venues such as MAAWG Messaging AntiAbuse Workking
Group http://www.maawg.org and our own beloved NANOG. It only takes
a bit of willpower and elbow grease to start up an industry association
with the aims of monitoring, regulating, improving and reporting on
Internet operator interconnects.

> Sure, but, the likelihood of any of the large ISPs agreeing to such a
> model is very close to zero, 

That's where people like the politicians, and the FCC come in.
When the end-users want to see change, they bother the politicians
and FCC who in turn threaten to impose regulation. The wisest
network operators see the writing on the wall and organize self
regulation as a preemptive strike.

Look at how commodities exchanges and stock exchanges publish the
detailed prices of transactions. Most people have this idea that
price data is "sensitive" and that one does not disclose the 
prices negotiated in contracts. But at the same time, the exchanges
are an accepted part of the business world.

Today we live in a world where peering agreements are "sensitive" 
and both parties are bound by NDAs. The result is that a lot of
garbage is hidden from public view and this garbage does have 
negative impacts on the end users who rely on the Internet as 
a mission critical component of their business plan. Get rid of
the secrecy and you will also get rid of the garbage.

--Michael Dillon



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Henry Linneweh

Reading some of this is rather disturbing, like if we
live in some kind of control freak society, where
every
comment is we are trying to control terrorism so we
must eliminate everyones right of expression and
distort every means of communication including the
internet. 

I disagree that companies should be harmed because of
elements within a given state of these United States
should have any power to regulate what any corporation
like google does or does not do, just because they
lack any talent to compete at all and I support now
more than ever this effort...

Google lobbies Congress for a 'free' internet

http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2143440/google-beefs-lobbying-efforts

-Henry



--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 13:26:54 EDT, Sean Donelan said:
> > rankings of its search results, I assume a
> government regulatory agency
> > will be able to issue orders and control how
> Google operates its
> > bottleneck search infrastructure to provide fair,
> neutral and transparent,
> > in the government agency's opinion, of google's
> operations?
> 
> Go to Google.  Enter "googlebombing".  Follow the
> first link.  Read what
> happened on June 2, 2005.
> 
> Evaluate the chances of the government enforcing
> *actual* "fair, neutral, and
> transparent" operations.
> 
> 



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 13:26:54 EDT, Sean Donelan said:
> rankings of its search results, I assume a government regulatory agency
> will be able to issue orders and control how Google operates its
> bottleneck search infrastructure to provide fair, neutral and transparent,
> in the government agency's opinion, of google's operations?

Go to Google.  Enter "googlebombing".  Follow the first link.  Read what
happened on June 2, 2005.

Evaluate the chances of the government enforcing *actual* "fair, neutral, and
transparent" operations.



pgpMqZ2d1GLga.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Fri, 2005-10-07 at 13:32 -0400, Todd Vierling wrote:
> On Fri, 7 Oct 2005, Erik Haagsman wrote:
> > Ahhhthey feel they shouldn't sensor, and there I was thinking that
> > was Google's task in life. Very generous and what a great idea for new
> > laws that firmly put the blame on anyone but Google.
> 
> That wasn't my reason for citing it.  Neither Google *nor* intermediaries
> should be responsible for illegal content -- to them, it's just bits moving.
> 
> The only responsibility that *either* one should bear is the ability to
> provide an audit trail to the real culprit, no more.

Correct. Holding a dial-up ISP responsible for content on one of it's
customer's machines (or perhaps even a warez server on the other side of
the globe?) is complete nonsense. Having them provide forensic info is
another (more sensible) matter.

-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Todd Vierling

On Fri, 7 Oct 2005, Erik Haagsman wrote:

> > Google will also push for laws that make ISPs and intermediaries liable for
> > the content contained on their servers. Google just indexes the information,
> > the search engine argued, and feels it is not its place to censor
> > information contained throughout the Web.

> Ahhhthey feel they shouldn't sensor, and there I was thinking that
> was Google's task in life. Very generous and what a great idea for new
> laws that firmly put the blame on anyone but Google.

That wasn't my reason for citing it.  Neither Google *nor* intermediaries
should be responsible for illegal content -- to them, it's just bits moving.

The only responsibility that *either* one should bear is the ability to
provide an audit trail to the real culprit, no more.

-- 
-- Todd Vierling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Sean Donelan

On Fri, 7 Oct 2005, Daniel Golding wrote:
> > Google Goes to Washington
> > http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070
>
> Google also has a responsibility not to bite the hand that feeds it - the
> laise faire, unregulated Internet.
>
> Shame on them. Google is not suffering at all from this.

Will the same regulations Google wants, also provide better oversight into
how Google operates?  When Google unilaterally removes or changes the
rankings of its search results, I assume a government regulatory agency
will be able to issue orders and control how Google operates its
bottleneck search infrastructure to provide fair, neutral and transparent,
in the government agency's opinion, of google's operations?



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Owen DeLong


--On October 7, 2005 2:56:10 PM +0100 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> 
>> Even those IXs with MPLA policy have to rely on law and courts for
>> enforcement -- that is, those with guns.
> 
> In the United States, as in most countries, there is an
> explicit separation of the courts from the enforcement
> of laws. For instance, in the United States, the Executive
> Branch is in charge of the guys with guns, while the Judicial
> branch only deals with making decisions about the application
> of the laws created by the Legislative branch. The laws
> are executed and enforced by the Executive branch, hence
> the name.
> 
Not exactly.  I'll speak only of the US Federal structure, since
the states each have somewhat different ways in which they manage
their own collections of guys with guns.

At the federal level in the US, the executive branch has
(theoretically) limited charge over the guys with
guns which can (theoretically easily) be overridden by the
legislative branch.  Additionally, the Judicial branch has a
whole collection of guys with guns under their own direction
(we call them "Marshalls").  In terms of getting a guy
with a gun to assist you in resolving a civil dispute
(aka enforcing a contract), the process is thus:

1.  Demand offending party comply with contract
in writing (send appropriate demand letters, etc.)
2.  Ask appropriate court for relief. (file suit)
3.  Serve notice to offending party (process service)
4.  Prosecute your case in court (the trial)
5.  If court finds in your favor, receive judgment.
6.  Provide certified copy of judgment to appropriate
enforcement agency (the guys with guns), if any.
7.  Enforcement agency takes appropriate action based
on court order.

This is a bit of an oversimplification, but, in Civil
cases, I think it shows that the judicial branch has
a slightly broader scope than you implied.

> Regulations also do not imply the involvement of governments.
> It is possible for industries to self-regulate such as the
> ARIN policies which are a product of the ARIN membership,
> i.e. companies who use IP addresses in their networks.
> 
Mostly true.  However, ARIN policies are a product of both
the ARIN membership and the IP using community at large.
It is an important and good thing that the policy process is
not limited to ARIN members.

> If the press would truly understand this event then they would
> be reporting this as a *MAJOR* flaw in the business model of 
> the largest ISPs. The absence of regulation in Internet peering
> allows this type of situation to come about. It is my opinion
> that the network and the Internet business would both be stronger
> if there was some regulation of peering and IP/MPLS network 
> interconnection. 
> 
If I had faith in any of the regulatory organizations that are likely
to attempt to do this having half a clue about what they were attempting
to regulate, I might be inclined to agree with you.  However, given
experience to date with any of the agencies I think are likely to
attempt this, I suspect your cure would likely turn out worse than
the current disease.  Now, if 3 or 4 more large ISPs were to start
approaching things the way this is going, things might get bad
enough to change my mind.

> A couple of good things can come out of this "open peering" model.
> One is that disclosure of the technical details, including packet
> drop, buffer consumption, and bandwidth, would lead to more reliable
> interconnects and the ability to provide quality of service SLAs 
> across provider networks. The other possible benefit is to develop
> more sophisticated interconnect variants such as MPLS VPN interconnects
> and CDN or multicast interconnects.
> 
Sure, but, the likelihood of any of the large ISPs agreeing to such a
model is very close to zero, and, none of the potentially competent
regulators you describe stand a chance of meaningful regulation without
the participation of the large ISPs.  Don't get me started on the mess
that occurs when laws "Incorporate by reference" the policies of an
outside regulatory agency in order to give that agency the power
to regulate.  Generally, this does not turn out well.  (Look at
the mess that is the fire code/NFPA interconnect in many jurisdictions
within the US).  It is my considered opinion that any text which
shall have the force of law MUST meet the following criteria:

+   Text must be available in the public domain without
charge (nominal printing costs excepted where
applicable).

+   Text shall not be copyrighted except to the public
domain.

+   Text, in its entirety shall have been reviewed and
approved by an appropriate legislative body and
any changes should require review and approval by
said legislative body.


Owen

-- 
If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me.


pgpJ4Vc2pXgxJ.

Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Robert E . Seastrom


Daniel Golding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> On 10/7/05 11:02 AM, "Ross Hosman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> 
>> Google Goes to Washington
>> 
>> One of the issues Google will tackle has become news
>> this week: Level 3 and Cogent Communications are
>> involved in a spat that has made Web sites on each
>> network inaccessible or very slow to users on the
>> opposite network. Google said the government has a
>> responsibility to monitor the Internet so events like
>> this do not occur.
>> 
>> http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070
>> 
>
> Google also has a responsibility not to bite the hand that feeds it - the
> laise faire, unregulated Internet.
>
> Shame on them. Google is not suffering at all from this.

"Don't be evil" surrenders.  Film at 11.

---Rob



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Daniel Golding


On 10/7/05 11:02 AM, "Ross Hosman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> Google Goes to Washington
> 
> One of the issues Google will tackle has become news
> this week: Level 3 and Cogent Communications are
> involved in a spat that has made Web sites on each
> network inaccessible or very slow to users on the
> opposite network. Google said the government has a
> responsibility to monitor the Internet so events like
> this do not occur.
> 
> http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070
> 

Google also has a responsibility not to bite the hand that feeds it - the
laise faire, unregulated Internet.

Shame on them. Google is not suffering at all from this.

> Ross Hosman
> 
> 

-- 
Daniel Golding




Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Joel Rowbottom


At 16:26 07/10/2005, Erik Haagsman wrote:


> Google will also push for laws that make ISPs and intermediaries liable for
> the content contained on their servers.
> Well, isn't that "fun"?

Ahhhthey feel they shouldn't sensor, and there I was thinking that
was Google's task in life. Very generous and what a great idea for new
laws that firmly put the blame on anyone but Google.


...and how does that affect Google caching? ;)



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Fri, 2005-10-07 at 11:21 -0400, Todd Vierling wrote: 
> Another snippet from same article:
> 
> =
> Google will also push for laws that make ISPs and intermediaries liable for
> the content contained on their servers. Google just indexes the information,
> the search engine argued, and feels it is not its place to censor
> information contained throughout the Web.
> =
> 
> Well, isn't that "fun"?

Ahhhthey feel they shouldn't sensor, and there I was thinking that
was Google's task in life. Very generous and what a great idea for new
laws that firmly put the blame on anyone but Google.

-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Ross Hosman

Also:

US Representative Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts
Democrat and ranking member of the House
Telecommunications Subcommittee, hinted that the
Federal Communications Commission might interfere in
the matter. ''Obviously, I hope the parties will reach
a timely commercial arrangement to resolve this
dispute," said Markey, ''but the FCC must be prepared
to take steps to assure continuity of service to
consumers in the event that the parties fail to reach
an agreement."

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2005/10/07/dispute_threatens_to_snarl_internet/?page=2



--- Ross Hosman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> Google Goes to Washington
> 
> One of the issues Google will tackle has become news
> this week: Level 3 and Cogent Communications are
> involved in a spat that has made Web sites on each
> network inaccessible or very slow to users on the
> opposite network. Google said the government has a
> responsibility to monitor the Internet so events
> like
> this do not occur.
> 
>
http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070
> 
> Ross Hosman
> 
> 
> 





Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Fri, 2005-10-07 at 14:56 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Laws only need to be enforced when there is a dispute.
> Laws and regulations, do not necessarily imply that
> enforcement action is needed. Many people and organizations
> comply with laws for reasons other than the existence of
> enforcers. For instance, an organization may feel that it
> is in the industry's best interests to comply with regulations
> and therefore it does so in order to set an example for
> its competitors and to attract customers.
> 
> Regulations also do not imply the involvement of governments.
> It is possible for industries to self-regulate such as the
> ARIN policies which are a product of the ARIN membership,
> i.e. companies who use IP addresses in their networks.

Very good point and IMHO the preferred way of dealing with these kinds
of issues without the overhead of specific legislation and often
stifling governmental intervention. The approach you outline below seems
very plausible, with a regulatory organisation of some sort driven by
the industry itself protecting both ourselves as well as our customers
from idiocy like the whole Cogent/L(3) thing. It would improve both
better interconnections and network coverage (and thus network quality
IMO) as well as more transparency in peering and interconnection
relations. Both good things for end-users and xSP's alike.

> If the press would truly understand this event then they would
> be reporting this as a *MAJOR* flaw in the business model of 
> the largest ISPs. The absence of regulation in Internet peering
> allows this type of situation to come about. It is my opinion
> that the network and the Internet business would both be stronger
> if there was some regulation of peering and IP/MPLS network 
> interconnection. 
>
> This could be done in a couple of ways. One is to have an industry
> association develop self-regulation in conjunction with major end
> users of network services. The other would be for regulation to be
> imposed from without by some kind of interconnect or monitoring
> business like Equinix or Keynote. The analogy here is the New York
> Stock Exchange which is a 3rd party which monitors and interconnects
> the buyers and sellers of shares. In the case of Internet operators
> I don't foresee the need for an SEC equivalent unless operators
> cannot agree to disclose their peering agreements and the technical
> details of their interconnects.
> 
> A couple of good things can come out of this "open peering" model.
> One is that disclosure of the technical details, including packet
> drop, buffer consumption, and bandwidth, would lead to more reliable
> interconnects and the ability to provide quality of service SLAs 
> across provider networks. The other possible benefit is to develop
> more sophisticated interconnect variants such as MPLS VPN interconnects
> and CDN or multicast interconnects.
> 
> --Michael Dillon
> 
-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Todd Vierling

On Fri, 7 Oct 2005, Ross Hosman wrote:

> Google Goes to Washington

> http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070

Another snippet from same article:

=
Google will also push for laws that make ISPs and intermediaries liable for
the content contained on their servers. Google just indexes the information,
the search engine argued, and feels it is not its place to censor
information contained throughout the Web.
=

Well, isn't that "fun"?

-- 
-- Todd Vierling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Ross Hosman

Google Goes to Washington

One of the issues Google will tackle has become news
this week: Level 3 and Cogent Communications are
involved in a spat that has made Web sites on each
network inaccessible or very slow to users on the
opposite network. Google said the government has a
responsibility to monitor the Internet so events like
this do not occur.

http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Goes_to_Washington/1128691070

Ross Hosman




Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Tom Vest


Growing mainstream press today, e.g.,

http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2005/10/07/ 
dispute_threatens_to_snarl_internet/


Note the title:
"Dispute threatens to snarl Internet: Service providers' row may spur  
push for global regulation"


Quick showing of hands:
How many people think that the disputants are not-so-secretly hoping  
that the title is accurate, because it represents a far better future  
for them than what our newly re-engineered "market" for transport  
services is likely to provide?


(a conspiratorially good morning to all)

TV



Re: Regulatory intervention

2005-10-07 Thread Michael . Dillon

> Even those IXs with MPLA policy have to rely on law and courts for
> enforcement -- that is, those with guns.

In the United States, as in most countries, there is an
explicit separation of the courts from the enforcement
of laws. For instance, in the United States, the Executive
Branch is in charge of the guys with guns, while the Judicial
branch only deals with making decisions about the application
of the laws created by the Legislative branch. The laws
are executed and enforced by the Executive branch, hence
the name.

Laws only need to be enforced when there is a dispute.
Laws and regulations, do not necessarily imply that
enforcement action is needed. Many people and organizations
comply with laws for reasons other than the existence of
enforcers. For instance, an organization may feel that it
is in the industry's best interests to comply with regulations
and therefore it does so in order to set an example for
its competitors and to attract customers.

Regulations also do not imply the involvement of governments.
It is possible for industries to self-regulate such as the
ARIN policies which are a product of the ARIN membership,
i.e. companies who use IP addresses in their networks.

There are also currently attempts to establish self-regulation
in the email industry. In the past there was some regulation
of Internet peering by the members of an industry organization
in the USA called CIX.

> I'm afraid your head-in-the-sand approach doesn't appear to be working
> well at this time.  Major network partition, affecting thousands of
> networks and tens (or hundreds) of thousands of actual people, 48 hours
> and counting.

If the press would truly understand this event then they would
be reporting this as a *MAJOR* flaw in the business model of 
the largest ISPs. The absence of regulation in Internet peering
allows this type of situation to come about. It is my opinion
that the network and the Internet business would both be stronger
if there was some regulation of peering and IP/MPLS network 
interconnection. 

This could be done in a couple of ways. One is to have an industry
association develop self-regulation in conjunction with major end
users of network services. The other would be for regulation to be
imposed from without by some kind of interconnect or monitoring
business like Equinix or Keynote. The analogy here is the New York
Stock Exchange which is a 3rd party which monitors and interconnects
the buyers and sellers of shares. In the case of Internet operators
I don't foresee the need for an SEC equivalent unless operators
cannot agree to disclose their peering agreements and the technical
details of their interconnects.

A couple of good things can come out of this "open peering" model.
One is that disclosure of the technical details, including packet
drop, buffer consumption, and bandwidth, would lead to more reliable
interconnects and the ability to provide quality of service SLAs 
across provider networks. The other possible benefit is to develop
more sophisticated interconnect variants such as MPLS VPN interconnects
and CDN or multicast interconnects.

--Michael Dillon



Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Fri, 2005-10-07 at 07:44 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote:

> I repeat my initial assertion, to wit:
>  >> This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
>  >> discussi[ng] the terms of the contracts.
>  >>
>  >> Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.
> 
> When the "internal policies" -- which in this case are not technical,
> but rather commercial advantage -- are against public policy, that is
> the realm of governments.

So we want to revert to a model where the goverment starts influencing
company policy based on what criteria...? Networks are commercial
endeavours by default, since they cost money to run and need to generate
revenue stay in existence, at least last time I checked. Unless you'd
like the entire Internet to be under governmental control I don't see
how you'd want a government to enforce any policy. This sounds very much
like trying to turn ISP's into semi-public companies, which they're not
and IMO shouldn't be.

> > One
> > network only peers with a select few, the other only on basis of
> > bandwidth profile and some with as many peers as possible. Without one
> > telling the other what to do or someone sitting behind a desk trying to
> > come up with a Grand Unified Peering Policy that everyone should adhere
> > to. Fine by me.
> > 
> I'm afraid your head-in-the-sand approach doesn't appear to be working
> well at this time.  Major network partition, affecting thousands of
> networks and tens (or hundreds) of thousands of actual people, 48 hours
> and counting.

This is definitely a bad thing but not a problem for governments to
solve. Bringing the government to the table will create more problems
than solve them.

> Moreover, I thought it might be worthwhile to check what you might have 
> posted previously, and found that you started posting on NANOG in 2004,
> during another L(3) partition. 

Glad you take an interest.

>  Methinks thou doeth protest too much.

Perhaps, but I'd like companies and market forces to solve these
problems, not governments. ISP's are free to choose (multiple) upstreams
they wish for, people are free to choose whichever ISP they want, and
SLA's and contracts *should* be there to protect people from stupidity
like this Cogent/L(3) pissing contest.

> I'm not entirely sure that you are a shill for L(3), but please explain
> your personal interest?  Especially as a Northern European posting on a
> North American operator's list?

I never knew I was Swedish, but thanks for telling me.
We've got L(3) as one of our transits, so I do take an interest. Most of
my larger upstreams are fully or partly NA based and we send quite a bit
of traffic to these parts so I *thought* I'd follow the list and pitch
in when I felt like doing so. 


-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-07 Thread William Allen Simpson


Erik Haagsman wrote:

On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 14:51 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote:

Arguably a very good thing.  IXs shouldn't be in the "enforcement"
business.  That's for governments.


Exactly the reason I don't want governments anywhere near an IX. Every
network connected to an IX should be allowed to enforce it's own
internal policies when connecting with other networks *without* a
governmental body trying to enforce certain rules and regulations. 


Networks should not be in the enforcement business.  They have no guns.

IXs should not be in the enforcement business.  They have no guns.

Even those IXs with MPLA policy have to rely on law and courts for
enforcement -- that is, those with guns.

I repeat my initial assertion, to wit:
>> This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
>> discussi[ng] the terms of the contracts.
>>
>> Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.

When the "internal policies" -- which in this case are not technical,
but rather commercial advantage -- are against public policy, that is
the realm of governments.



One
network only peers with a select few, the other only on basis of
bandwidth profile and some with as many peers as possible. Without one
telling the other what to do or someone sitting behind a desk trying to
come up with a Grand Unified Peering Policy that everyone should adhere
to. Fine by me.


I'm afraid your head-in-the-sand approach doesn't appear to be working
well at this time.  Major network partition, affecting thousands of
networks and tens (or hundreds) of thousands of actual people, 48 hours
and counting.

Moreover, I thought it might be worthwhile to check what you might have 
posted previously, and found that you started posting on NANOG in 2004,

during another L(3) partition.  Methinks thou doeth protest too much.

I'm not entirely sure that you are a shill for L(3), but please explain
your personal interest?  Especially as a Northern European posting on a
North American operator's list?

--
William Allen Simpson
Key fingerprint =  17 40 5E 67 15 6F 31 26  DD 0D B9 9B 6A 15 2C 32


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 12:44 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote:
> Erik Haagsman wrote:
> > On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 11:56 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote: 
> >>This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
> >>discussion the terms of the contracts.
> >>
> >>Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.
> > 
> > 
> > How does replacing non-profit organisations (which most public IX'es
> > are) with government bodies and governmental legislation improve
> > anything...?
> > 
> Government _is_ a non-profit organization, with generally broader
> representation.
> 
> How does replacing a representative government with a smaller feudal
> organization improve anything?

The current status quo has IX's in the hands of private but open
organisations, run by it's members. Replacing govermental organisations
by now is purely hypothetical, it's already happened and in most
countries outside the US there never were government controlled IX's for
IMO very good reasons, with member's freedom to formulate their own
policies as number one.

> >>Idiot laissez-faire pseudo-libertarians forget that all markets require
> >>regulation and politics.
> > 
> > 
> > But why government regulated instead of IX member regulated...?
> > 
> Because as much as it's best not to rely on thugs with guns, I really
> don't want the thugs with guns to be private armies.

Ah yes, we want public armies with guns to rely on, just like we rely on
them at the moment regulating software patents, ISP and telco data
tapping, all those nifty little ideas that make our lives so much
better.


-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-07 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 14:51 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote:

> >>  Cogent, Open
> >>  Level(3), Not public
> >>  We Dare B.V., Open
> >>
> >> So, what did your member organization do to resolve this partition.  
> >> Cut off Level(3)?  Sue them?
> > 
> > 
> > That particular member organisation has a policy of not interfering with 
> > its members' peering policies.  It expects its members to send packets 
> > only to people who explicitly asked for it over the shared 
> > infrastructure (via announcements of prefixes via BGP), and to pay their 
> > bills on time.
> > 
> Arguably a very good thing.  IXs shouldn't be in the "enforcement"
> business.  That's for governments.

Exactly the reason I don't want governments anywhere near an IX. Every
network connected to an IX should be allowed to enforce it's own
internal policies when connecting with other networks *without* a
governmental body trying to enforce certain rules and regulations. One
network only peers with a select few, the other only on basis of
bandwidth profile and some with as many peers as possible. Without one
telling the other what to do or someone sitting behind a desk trying to
come up with a Grand Unified Peering Policy that everyone should adhere
to. Fine by me.

> (As you will remember, I was refuting his generalization that "private"
> organizations are somehow preferable to "public" organizations.  It has
> always been my preference to argue with specifics in hand.)

I never generalised, I merely pointed out that creating governmental
IX's has nog benefits compared to the current IX's. AMS-IX, DE-CIX,
LINX, etc. etc are open to everyone wanting to connect, that's public
enough for me, without having to be goverment controlled. 


-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread Hank Nussbacher

On Thu, 6 Oct 2005, William Allen Simpson wrote:

> >> Following up on my own post, according to
> >>   http://www.ams-ix.net/connected/
> >
> > Useful page, isn't it?
> >
> I wish that all IXs had one.

I wish everyones was as complete as LINX's:
https://www.linx.net/www_public/our_members/peering_matrix/
http://green.linx.net/cgi-bin/peering_matrix2.cgi

-Hank


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread William Allen Simpson


Niels Bakker wrote:


* [EMAIL PROTECTED] (William Allen Simpson) [Thu 06 Oct 2005, 
19:10 CEST]:



Following up on my own post, according to
  http://www.ams-ix.net/connected/



Useful page, isn't it?


I wish that all IXs had one.



 Cogent, Open
 Level(3), Not public
 We Dare B.V., Open

So, what did your member organization do to resolve this partition.  
Cut off Level(3)?  Sue them?



That particular member organisation has a policy of not interfering with 
its members' peering policies.  It expects its members to send packets 
only to people who explicitly asked for it over the shared 
infrastructure (via announcements of prefixes via BGP), and to pay their 
bills on time.



Arguably a very good thing.  IXs shouldn't be in the "enforcement"
business.  That's for governments.

(As you will remember, I was refuting his generalization that "private"
organizations are somehow preferable to "public" organizations.  It has
always been my preference to argue with specifics in hand.)

--
William Allen Simpson
Key fingerprint =  17 40 5E 67 15 6F 31 26  DD 0D B9 9B 6A 15 2C 32


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread Niels Bakker


* [EMAIL PROTECTED] (William Allen Simpson) [Thu 06 Oct 2005, 19:10 CEST]:

Following up on my own post, according to
  http://www.ams-ix.net/connected/


Useful page, isn't it?



 Cogent, Open
 Level(3), Not public
 We Dare B.V., Open

So, what did your member organization do to resolve this partition.  Cut 
off Level(3)?  Sue them?


That particular member organisation has a policy of not interfering with 
its members' peering policies.  It expects its members to send packets 
only to people who explicitly asked for it over the shared infrastructure 
(via announcements of prefixes via BGP), and to pay their bills on time.



-- Niels.

--
"Calling religion a drug is an insult to drugs everywhere. 
Religion is more like the placebo of the masses."

-- MeFi user boaz


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore


On Oct 6, 2005, at 11:56 AM, William Allen Simpson wrote:

Let me be the punching bag for pondering this on NANOG... What  
about the
roles of governments building a consortium with Teir-1 NSP's where  
those

backbone Tiers are regulated and have predefined, strictly enforced
rulesets they'd have to follow. The irony of this is that it  
sounds both

like a nightmare and a dream.


Congratulations, you've reinvented the Internet.  This is exactly what
we did when we built the original (NSFnet).  It worked!


I would argue the NSFnet would not scale to today's Internet.  Not to  
mention today's Internet has the added value of not sucking up 90% of  
NSF's budget.



We specified regional interconnection.  If you wanted to connect,  
that's
where you had to connect, and you were required to take the traffic  
from

everybody else at the point of interconnection.  No arguments.

This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
discussion the terms of the contracts.


I'm wondering why "this partitioning" - predicted or not - is a "bad  
thing"?




Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.


Strangely, the Internet has not tended toward monopoly.  If you think  
otherwise, you have been reading too many press releases.



Idiot laissez-faire pseudo-libertarians forget that all markets  
require

regulation and politics.


Politics are a natural part of human interaction.  Regulation  
sometimes follows.


The Internet is fairly unregulated.  It works fairly well - better  
than many regulated industries.


I guess I'm missing your point?

--
TTFN,
patrick


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread William Allen Simpson


William Allen Simpson wrote:

How do you expect to enforce your "member" regulations?

Again (to keep this on-topic), this partitioning is exactly what we 
predicted.  And I don't see your member regulations having any effect.



Following up on my own post, according to
  http://www.ams-ix.net/connected/

 Cogent, Open
 Level(3), Not public
 We Dare B.V., Open

So, what did your member organization do to resolve this partition.  Cut
off Level(3)?  Sue them?

And how quickly would you expect this resolution?

Compare and contrast with the well-respected Packet Clearing House:
  http://www.pch.net/

--
William Allen Simpson
Key fingerprint =  17 40 5E 67 15 6F 31 26  DD 0D B9 9B 6A 15 2C 32


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread William Allen Simpson


Erik Haagsman wrote:
On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 11:56 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote: 

This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
discussion the terms of the contracts.

Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.



How does replacing non-profit organisations (which most public IX'es
are) with government bodies and governmental legislation improve
anything...?


Government _is_ a non-profit organization, with generally broader
representation.

How does replacing a representative government with a smaller feudal
organization improve anything?



Idiot laissez-faire pseudo-libertarians forget that all markets require
regulation and politics.



But why government regulated instead of IX member regulated...?


Because as much as it's best not to rely on thugs with guns, I really
don't want the thugs with guns to be private armies.

How do you expect to enforce your "member" regulations?

Again (to keep this on-topic), this partitioning is exactly what we 
predicted.  And I don't see your member regulations having any effect.


--
William Allen Simpson
Key fingerprint =  17 40 5E 67 15 6F 31 26  DD 0D B9 9B 6A 15 2C 32


Re: Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread Erik Haagsman

On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 11:56 -0400, William Allen Simpson wrote:
> J. Oquendo wrote:
> 
> > Let me be the punching bag for pondering this on NANOG... What about the
> > roles of governments building a consortium with Teir-1 NSP's where those
> > backbone Tiers are regulated and have predefined, strictly enforced
> > rulesets they'd have to follow. The irony of this is that it sounds both
> > like a nightmare and a dream.
> > 



> This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
> discussion the terms of the contracts.
> 
> Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.

How does replacing non-profit organisations (which most public IX'es
are) with government bodies and governmental legislation improve
anything...?

> Idiot laissez-faire pseudo-libertarians forget that all markets require
> regulation and politics.

But why government regulated instead of IX member regulated...?


-- 
---
Erik Haagsman
Network Architect
We Dare BV
Tel: +31(0)10-7507008
Fax: +31(0)10-7507005
http://www.we-dare.nl




Regulatory intervention (Redux: Who is a Tier 1?)

2005-10-06 Thread William Allen Simpson


J. Oquendo wrote:


Let me be the punching bag for pondering this on NANOG... What about the
roles of governments building a consortium with Teir-1 NSP's where those
backbone Tiers are regulated and have predefined, strictly enforced
rulesets they'd have to follow. The irony of this is that it sounds both
like a nightmare and a dream.


Congratulations, you've reinvented the Internet.  This is exactly what
we did when we built the original (NSFnet).  It worked!

We specified regional interconnection.  If you wanted to connect, that's
where you had to connect, and you were required to take the traffic from
everybody else at the point of interconnection.  No arguments.

This partitioning is exactly what we predicted in many meetings when
discussion the terms of the contracts.

Markets are inefficient for infrastructure and tend toward monopoly.

Idiot laissez-faire pseudo-libertarians forget that all markets require
regulation and politics.

--
William Allen Simpson
Key fingerprint =  17 40 5E 67 15 6F 31 26  DD 0D B9 9B 6A 15 2C 32