A Study of 28 Peering Policies
The following are snippets of Peering Policy Clauses found in the Peering Rules of the Road - A Study of 28 Peering Policies study. Clauses were categorized and put into rough categories for comparison.
The following are snippets of Peering Policy Clauses found in the Peering Rules of the Road - A Study of 28 Peering Policies study. Clauses were categorized and put into rough categories for comparison.
Here are the clauses we categorized as requirements for making Peering Requests.
AT&T and Comcast are the only ones to specify a "reasonable" time period for a response:
"Potential peers will be contacted within a reasonable timeframe to discuss their requests." --AT&T
"Applicants will be responded to within a reasonable timeframe to discuss their request." – Comcast
All requests for settlement-free peering must be submitted via e-mail to peering@above.net. The e-mail should include:
All requests for settlement-free interconnection should be submitted to Verizon Business via e-mail at peering@verizonbusiness.com. An Internet Network may submit a request for interconnection once per calendar quarter. – Verizon
An applicant may submit a request for interconnection once every six months. If the applicant has participated in a traffic evaluation trial, the six month window starts after the end of the trial. – ATDN
Please send all questions/inquiries about peering to peering@atdn.net. -- ATDN To request peering with tw telecom, please send email to peering@twtelecom.net -- TW Telecom
To request peering, please send the request to peering@dal.net. -- dalnet To apply for IPv4 or IPv6 settlement-free interconnection with Comcast an email must be sent to peering@comcast.com containing evidence of meeting all criteria listed in the policy. – Comcast
Applicants may apply for settlement-free interconnection once every six (6) months. – Comcast All peering requests shall be sent by email to peering@tinet.net. -- tinet Peering requests shall not be sent more than once in 3 months. – tinet
# A network may submit a peering request once every three months. – LambdaNet Please send all questions/inquiries about peering in English to: peering@lambdanet.net -- LambdaNet
All requests for settlement-free interconnection should be submitted to HWNG via e-mail at peering@hwng.net. -- Highwinds
Peering Requests should be sent to: peering@newedgenetworks.com -- NewEdge To request a Peering arrangement with Charter Communications, please send an email request including a network map, proposal of mutual points of interconnect and anticipated volumes to peering@charter.com --Charter Send peering inquiries to peering@qwest.com. -- Qwest
Applicants may apply for settlement-free peering once every six (6) months. – WVFiber
An ISP seeking peering with any of these ASNs should submit its request in writing, providing a description of its network including such information as:
Applications for peering in Canada should be submitted to peering@att.com; applications for Europe, Latin America, and Asia-Pacific should be submitted to peering@attglobal.net. AT&T Internet backbone providers wishing to initiate discussions with either AS7018 or AS7132 regarding potential establishment of new settlement-free peering in the US should contact peering@att.com with their requests, including evidence of meeting all criteria listed in the US policy below.
The criteria involving traffic measurements must be met by a prospective peer for three consecutive months.
Potential peers will be contacted within a reasonable timeframe to discuss their requests. --AT&T
To apply for IPv4 or IPv6 settlement-free interconnection with Comcast an email must be sent to peering@comcast.com containing evidence of meeting all criteria listed in the policy.
Applicants will be responded to within a reasonable timeframe to discuss their request. – Comcast
Mr Norton is Founder of DrPeering, an Internet Peering portal and consultancy, with over twenty years of Internet experience.
From 1998-2008, Mr. Norton’s title was Co-Founder and Chief Technical Liaison for Equinix. From the beginning, Mr. Norton focused on building a critical mass of carriers, ISPs and Content Providers. To this end, he created the white paper process, identifying interesting and important Internet peering operations topics, and documenting what he learned from the peering folks. He published and presented his research white papers in a variety of international operations and research forums. These activities helped establish the relationships necessary to atract the set of Tier 1 ISPs, Tier 2 ISPs, Cable Companies, and Content Providers necessary for a healthy Internet Exchange Point ecosystem.