• [telecom] ISP and CDN Peering

    From Harold Hallikainen@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 26 19:45:59 2022
    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4178682 is an
    interesting article on ISP and CDN peering. It is similar to reciprocal compensation between telecom carriers where one pays another for the "last mile" delivery of a call. Reciprocal compensation lead to traffic pumping
    free conference call services.

    On the Internet side (it's still telecom, right?), ISPs exchange traffic
    at IXP (Internet Exchange Points). To get free exchange, ISPs generally
    require a less than 2:1 imbalance in traffic (incoming vs outgoing) and
    require the ISP wishing to peer to peer at several IXPs. There's some interesting terminology used. In "hot potato" routing, traffic is handed
    off at the IXP that is closest to the originator of the traffic, requiring
    the one who is handed the traffic to transport it a longer distance (which increases cost) to the final customer. In "cold potato" routing, the
    carrier that wants to hand off the traffic hands it off at the IXP closest
    to the destination so the original carrier carries the traffic for a
    longer distance and incurs those costs.

    They then go on to discuss Content Delivery Networks that deliver content
    like Netflix. The paper appears to advocate free peering of CDNs
    regardless of the traffic imbalance if cold potato routing is used. The
    ISP the content is being handed to only has to carry the traffic a short distance to the customer.

    Division of cost of carriage is an OLD problem going back to the 1800s. As
    part of the General Postal Union, Each country should retain all money it
    has collected for international postage. The assumption was that there was balance between sending and receiving mail, so complex division of charges
    was not necessary. The originating country got the postage fee. In the
    return letter, the other country got the fee. So, today, as with then, we
    look at traffic imbalance to determine if peering should be free.

    Harold




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