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RE: The FCC is planning new net neutrality rules. And they couldenshrine pay-for-play. - The Washington Post


From: <bedard.phil () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 28 Apr 2014 11:56:55 -0400

If it was Netflix connected to say Cogent and Comcast connected to Level3 you would have the same unbalanced ratios 
between Cogent/Level3 for the same reasons.  Level3 would likely be wanting compensation from Cogent for it...  It is 
such a large amount of bandwidth these days it's not made up by other traffic.  

I am not saying any of it is right, but precedents in the past have led to this. 

Phil

-----Original Message-----
From: "Jack Bates" <jbates () paradoxnetworks net>
Sent: ‎4/‎28/‎2014 11:34 AM
To: "Phil Bedard" <bedard.phil () gmail com>; "Suresh Ramasubramanian" <ops.lists () gmail com>; "nanog () nanog org" 
<nanog () nanog org>
Subject: Re: The FCC is planning new net neutrality rules. And they couldenshrine pay-for-play. - The Washington Post

On 4/28/2014 9:18 AM, Phil Bedard wrote:
People seem to forget what Comcast is doing is nothing new. People have
been paying for unbalanced peering for as long as peering has been around.
It's a little different because Netflix doesn't have an end network
customer to bill to recoup those charges, they have customers on someone
else's network.
Yeah. It's a scam. Comcast can't do balanced peering. Their customers 
are not symmetrical.

It's not like all broadband providers are anti-Netflix, some are even
starting to include NF as an app on their STB.  There are also many who do
peer with Netflix settlement-free even with very unbalanced ratios.  The
key in the future is moving the bandwidth closer to the users, and we will
see more edge caching exist either within the broadband provider
facilities or at more localized 3rd party datacenters.


Netflix is happy to assist with caching. The thing is, Comcast doesn't 
care about that. What they care about is that their last mile is getting 
saturated and they have to pay money to upgrade it. Costs are being 
shoved onto netflix and similar to justify that.

This is compared to the small ISP who is just happy to get a peering or 
cache to save money only on their transit fees.


Jack


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