Sprint has blocked all traffic to Cogent effective the other day. If you are having internet trouble, this may be why.
It seems they are unhappy that Cogent charges 70-90% less for bandwidth than Sprint (taking some of their corporate customers) or any other provider, and since Sprint's stock is at rock bottom, Sprint has decided to sue, as well as cut off their own customers.
Also, this fight is about peering. Cogent has/offers free peering to Sprint. Sprint however, does not like the influx of traffic from the Cogent network and wants Cogent to pay them for peering, while there are no fees for Sprint to connect to Cogent.. You see where this is going: Sprint wants the cake and the icing...
When Sprint blocked all traffic coming/going to the Cogent network, they decided not to peer with anyone else (to make up for the loss), or to do some reasonable routing to ensure that their customers service remained unaffected.
This is major folks, for Cogent is ranked number 2 in the world by connections, and number one in the world where traffic volume and distance/traffic ratio are concerned.
Here is a live graph showing current peering:
http://www.internetpulse.net/
Here is some background on Cogent (a good read):
http://www.forbes.com/technology/for.../1013/064.html
Disclosure: I was at one time a customer of Cogent, Level3, AT&T, Telia, and a few others. Cogent has indeed caused prices to drop where business connections are concerned, and they are still dropping. Notice how your internet rates are not though? That shows you how the end users are getting ripped a new one, with no upgrades done to infrastructure of the last mile, but that is a rant for another day.
It seems they are unhappy that Cogent charges 70-90% less for bandwidth than Sprint (taking some of their corporate customers) or any other provider, and since Sprint's stock is at rock bottom, Sprint has decided to sue, as well as cut off their own customers.
Also, this fight is about peering. Cogent has/offers free peering to Sprint. Sprint however, does not like the influx of traffic from the Cogent network and wants Cogent to pay them for peering, while there are no fees for Sprint to connect to Cogent.. You see where this is going: Sprint wants the cake and the icing...
When Sprint blocked all traffic coming/going to the Cogent network, they decided not to peer with anyone else (to make up for the loss), or to do some reasonable routing to ensure that their customers service remained unaffected.
This is major folks, for Cogent is ranked number 2 in the world by connections, and number one in the world where traffic volume and distance/traffic ratio are concerned.
Here is a live graph showing current peering:
http://www.internetpulse.net/
Here is some background on Cogent (a good read):
http://www.forbes.com/technology/for.../1013/064.html
Disclosure: I was at one time a customer of Cogent, Level3, AT&T, Telia, and a few others. Cogent has indeed caused prices to drop where business connections are concerned, and they are still dropping. Notice how your internet rates are not though? That shows you how the end users are getting ripped a new one, with no upgrades done to infrastructure of the last mile, but that is a rant for another day.
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