Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 2nd Sep 2008 16:46 UTC
Internet & Networking "In 2005, AT&T CEO Ed Whitacre famously told BusinessWeek, "What they [Google, Vonage, and others] would like to do is to use my pipes free. But I ain't going to let them do that... Why should they be allowed to use my pipes?" The story of how the Internet is structured economically is not so much a story about net neutrality, but rather it's a story about how ISPs actually do use AT&T's pipes for free, and about why AT&T actually wants them to do so. These inter-ISP sharing arrangements are known as 'peering' or 'transit', and they are the two mechanisms that underlie the interconnection of networks that form the Internet. In this article, I'll to take a look at the economics of peering of transit in order to give you a better sense of how traffic flows from point A to point B on the Internet, and how it does so mostly without problems, despite the fact that the Internet is a patchwork quilt of networks run by companies, schools, and governments."
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Morons?
by _txf_ on Tue 2nd Sep 2008 18:15 UTC
_txf_
Member since:
2008-03-17

Fascinating.

After reading that am I the only one who thinks Ed Whiteacre is a complete moron?

After all At&t is more than an end user isp. How would any isp that serves end users and has transit/peering arangements manage to institute charges to the likes of google (assuming google has some control at the network level) without losing peering and transit revenue?