Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-04 Thread Jay R. Ashworth
On Mon, Sep 01, 2008 at 11:08:20AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  What is your price for cocaine?
 
 No, seriously.. If, as some estimates have it, 80% of the traffic is P2P, and
 as other estimates have it, 90% of that is copyright-infringing, then if that
 traffic disappears, anybody who was selling transit for that traffic is
 going to take a *big* revenue hit.

Not for long.  The *problem* is edge customers having to continually
increase the size of their pipes to make room for the good stuff amongst
the crap.

If the crap goes away, there will then be room for the chicken and egg
problem with the steady march of IPTV etc to finally take off for real, I
should think...

 I think it's very disingenuous to pretend that there have been *no* providers
 that haven't said to themselves We're selling to scum, but it pays the bills,
 and we'd be in bankruptcy court otherwise...

Sure.

And those are the people we don't *care* if they take it in the wallet, no?

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth   Baylink  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com '87 e24
St Petersburg FL USA  http://photo.imageinc.us +1 727 647 1274

 Those who cast the vote decide nothing.
 Those who count the vote decide everything.
   -- (Josef Stalin)



Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-02 Thread Justin Shore

Paul Ferguson wrote:

My next question to the peanut gallery is: What do you
suggest we should do on other hosting IP blocks are are continuing
to host criminal activity, even in the face of abuse reports, etc.?

Seriously -- I think this is an issue which needs to be addressed
here. ISPs cannot continue to sweep this issue under the proverbial
carpet.

Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
about?


IMHO policy should only be dictated by the edge, never upstream of that 
point.  Now whether the edge is defined as the edge provider or the 
actual end-user is up for debate.  I don't want my upstreams to make a 
decision what my SP and thus my customers can get to.  My customers 
can't contact my upstream and argue for listing or delisting a given IP 
like they can with me.  They can't speak with their dollars to my 
upstream like that can with me, their edge provider.  Then again should 
I as the edge provider filter for my customers?  Value-add service or a 
bonus service?  It depends on your point of view.


Justin



Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-02 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
There's this concept known as dual criminality in such situations,
when you're looking at international prosecutions (or whatever).

So, while lesé majesté - insult to the king - is a crime in thailand
(liable to get you lynched before you get prosecuted, at that) that
doesnt mean the thai authorities can do much about youtube videos ..

On the other hand, child pornography, malware, illegal sale of
prescription narcotics etc are generally criminal acts around the
world.

regards
srs

On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 9:03 PM, Steven M. Bellovin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I mostly agree with you -- but I get very worried about who defines
 scum.  Consider the following cases, which I will assert are not very
 far-fetched:

 (a) China labels Falun Gong as scum and demands that international
 ISPs not carry it if they want to do business in China



Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-02 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

Suresh,

In a parallel universe we're considering profiles for licit use of 
some mechanism. One element of a multi-part test to distinguish licit 
from illicit was the presence or absence of known signatures for 
malware. After some thought it was understood that this test was 
equivalent to the node subject to the test being cleaner than the 
average for network attached consumer devices, and therefore not realistic.


Cheers,
Eric

Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:

There's this concept known as dual criminality in such situations,
when you're looking at international prosecutions (or whatever).

So, while lesé majesté - insult to the king - is a crime in thailand
(liable to get you lynched before you get prosecuted, at that) that
doesnt mean the thai authorities can do much about youtube videos ..

On the other hand, child pornography, malware, illegal sale of
prescription narcotics etc are generally criminal acts around the
world.

regards
srs

On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 9:03 PM, Steven M. Bellovin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  

I mostly agree with you -- but I get very worried about who defines
scum.  Consider the following cases, which I will assert are not very
far-fetched:

(a) China labels Falun Gong as scum and demands that international
ISPs not carry it if they want to do business in China





  






Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Paul Ferguson
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- -- Paul Ferguson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

-- Marc Sachs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

http://cidr-report.org/cgi-bin/as-report?as=AS27595v=4view=2.0


My only concern here is that by the publicity this issue continues
to receive, these activities will just move else where, like
scurrying cockroaches (like what happened with AS40989).


[some elided]

I guess my effort to evoke commentary on NANOG failed.

My next question to the peanut gallery is: What do you
suggest we should do on other hosting IP blocks are are continuing
to host criminal activity, even in the face of abuse reports, etc.?

Seriously -- I think this is an issue which needs to be addressed
here. ISPs cannot continue to sweep this issue under the proverbial
carpet.

Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
about?

- - ferg

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--
Fergie, a.k.a. Paul Ferguson
 Engineering Architecture for the Internet
 fergdawg(at)netzero.net
 ferg's tech blog: http://fergdawg.blogspot.com/




Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 08:48:12 -, Paul Ferguson said:

 My next question to the peanut gallery is: What do you
 suggest we should do on other hosting IP blocks are are continuing
 to host criminal activity, even in the face of abuse reports, etc.?
 
 Seriously -- I think this is an issue which needs to be addressed
 here. ISPs cannot continue to sweep this issue under the proverbial
 carpet.
 
 Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
 about?

If somebody's paying you $n/megabyte for transit/connectivity, what's your
incentive to make them clean up their act and get rid of their P2P filesharing
traffic, spam traffic, and so on?

Serious question, that - how many long-haul providers would be in serious
trouble if all the spam and filesharing suddenly stopped and only legitimate
traffic travelled through their pipes?


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Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Gadi Evron

On Mon, 1 Sep 2008, Paul Ferguson wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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- -- Paul Ferguson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


-- Marc Sachs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:



http://cidr-report.org/cgi-bin/as-report?as=AS27595v=4view=2.0




My only concern here is that by the publicity this issue continues
to receive, these activities will just move else where, like
scurrying cockroaches (like what happened with AS40989).



[some elided]

I guess my effort to evoke commentary on NANOG failed.

My next question to the peanut gallery is: What do you
suggest we should do on other hosting IP blocks are are continuing
to host criminal activity, even in the face of abuse reports, etc.?

Seriously -- I think this is an issue which needs to be addressed
here. ISPs cannot continue to sweep this issue under the proverbial
carpet.

Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
about?


NANOG is on vacation. Wait one more day. :)



- - ferg

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--
Fergie, a.k.a. Paul Ferguson
Engineering Architecture for the Internet
fergdawg(at)netzero.net
ferg's tech blog: http://fergdawg.blogspot.com/







Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread bmanning
On Mon, Sep 01, 2008 at 05:36:47AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 Serious question, that - how many long-haul providers would be in serious
 trouble if all the spam and filesharing suddenly stopped and only legitimate
 traffic travelled through their pipes?

define legitimate

--bill




Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Laurence F. Sheldon, Jr.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 08:48:12 -, Paul Ferguson said:



Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
about?


If somebody's paying you $n/megabyte for transit/connectivity, what's your
incentive to make them clean up their act and get rid of their P2P filesharing
traffic, spam traffic, and so on?


What is your price for cocaine?





Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 09:21:24 CDT, Laurence F. Sheldon, Jr. said:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 08:48:12 -, Paul Ferguson said:
 
  Is this an issue that network operations folk don't really care
  about?
  
  If somebody's paying you $n/megabyte for transit/connectivity, what's your
  incentive to make them clean up their act and get rid of their P2P 
  filesharing
  traffic, spam traffic, and so on?
 
 What is your price for cocaine?

No, seriously.. If, as some estimates have it, 80% of the traffic is P2P, and
as other estimates have it, 90% of that is copyright-infringing, then if that
traffic disappears, anybody who was selling transit for that traffic is
going to take a *big* revenue hit.

And similarly, if you're selling transit to somebody who's then (eventually)
reselling a pipe to Atrivio/Intercage or the RBN, turning that somebody off
because they won't turn off the bad guys is going to make a dent in the
bottom line.

I think it's very disingenuous to pretend that there have been *no* providers
that haven't said to themselves We're selling to scum, but it pays the bills,
and we'd be in bankruptcy court otherwise...

The fact that bad guys don't seem to have *any* trouble getting connectivity
once they finally *do* get kicked off a provider is proof enough that:

a) There exist providers that are willing to take money from scum.
b) We won't get rid of the scum until we admit (a) is true.


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Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 11:08:20 -0400
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 a) There exist providers that are willing to take money from scum.
 b) We won't get rid of the scum until we admit (a) is true.

I mostly agree with you -- but I get very worried about who defines
scum.  Consider the following cases, which I will assert are not very
far-fetched:

(a) China labels Falun Gong as scum and demands that international
ISPs not carry it if they want to do business in China

(b) Russia labels critics of Putin and Medvedev as scum and demands
that international ISPs bar their traffic if they want to do business
in Russia

(c) Saudi Arabia denounces Internet pornographers as scum and demands
that ISPs bar their traffic if they want their countries to be able to
purchase oil

(c) France and Germany label EBay as scum for not barring sales of
Nazi memorabilia and demands that international ISPs not carry it if
they want to do business in the EU

(d) The RIAA and MPAA label file-sharers as scum and deny combined
TV/ISP companies (cable ISPs, Verizon FIOS, etc.) access to any
*broadcast* content if the ISP side doesn't crack down on file-sharing.

These are slightly far-fetched, but only slightly.  I have a nice
real-world example that I need to verify is public first, but it's
directly on this point.


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb



Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Laurence F. Sheldon, Jr.

Steven M. Bellovin wrote:

On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 11:08:20 -0400
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


a) There exist providers that are willing to take money from scum.
b) We won't get rid of the scum until we admit (a) is true.


I mostly agree with you -- but I get very worried about who defines
scum.


Who defines scum when you get the email announcing a solution to your 
most urgent sexual problems?


Who defines scum when the guy shows up at your office with a lot of 
the world's finest wrist watches for sale at unbelievably low prices?


Who defines scum when you get the pallet of toner nobody remembers 
ordering?


Who defines scum when the seedy character you never met before shows 
up to take your daughter out?




Re: GLBX De-Peers Intercage [Was: RE: Washington Post: Atrivo/Intercag e, w hy are we peering with the American RBN?]

2008-09-01 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 11:33:21 EDT, Steven M. Bellovin said:
 On Mon, 01 Sep 2008 11:08:20 -0400
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  a) There exist providers that are willing to take money from scum.
  b) We won't get rid of the scum until we admit (a) is true.
 
 I mostly agree with you -- but I get very worried about who defines
 scum.  Consider the following cases, which I will assert are not very
 far-fetched:

For the sake of discussion, I was calling scum any entity that your
morals say you shouldn't accept money from, but your accountant says
you should

What that makes your accountant... is another discussion entirely :)

However, I *do* agree with the problem of scum with politico-economic
leverage


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