[safnog] Fwd: PCH peering survey 2016

Nishal Goburdhan nishal at controlfreak.co.za
Mon Sep 19 21:42:07 UTC 2016


if you’re a peering network, please could you take the time to 
complete the survey below.


Forwarded message:

> From: Bill Woodcock <woody at pch.net>
> Subject: PCH peering survey 2016
> Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2016 17:04:16 -0700
>
> Background:
>
> Five years ago PCH conducted the first, and to date only, 
> comprehensive survey characterizing Internet peering agreements.
>
> The document that resulted can be found here: 
> https://www.pch.net/resources/Papers/peering-survey/PCH-Peering-Survey-2011.pdf 
> <https://www.pch.net/resources/Papers/peering-survey/PCH-Peering-Survey-2011.pdf>
>
> That document was one of the principal inputs to an important document 
> that the OECD publishes every five years, one that recommends 
> communications regulatory policy to OECD member nations: 
> http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=DSTI/ICCP/CISP(2011)2/FINAL&docLanguage=En 
> <http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=DSTI/ICCP/CISP(2011)2/FINAL&docLanguage=En>
>
> The survey had several useful findings which hadn’t previously been 
> established as fact—most notably the portion of peering 
> relationships that are “handshake” agreements, without written 
> contract. These findings have improved the regulatory environments in 
> which many of us operate our networks.
>
> At the time of the 2011 survey, we committed to repeating the survey 
> every five years, so as to provide an ongoing indication of the 
> direction peering trends take. It’s now five years later, so we’re 
> repeating the survey.
>
> The survey is global in scope, and our goal is to reflect the 
> diversity of peering agreements in the world; we’re interested in 
> large ISPs and small ISPs, ISPs in Afghanistan and in Zimbabwe, 
> bilateral agreements and multilateral, private and public. Our intent 
> is to be as comprehensive as possible. In 2011, the responses we 
> received represented 86% of all of the world’s ISPs and 96 
> countries. We would like to be at least as inclusive this time.
>
> Privacy:
>
> In 2011, we promised to collect the smallest set of data necessary to 
> answer the questions, to perform the analysis immediately, and not to 
> retain the data after the analysis was accomplished. In that way, we 
> ensured that the privacy of respondents was fully protected. We did as 
> we said, no data was leaked, and the whole community benefited from 
> the trust that was extended to us. We ask for your trust again now as 
> we make the same commitment to protect the privacy of all respondents, 
> using the same process as last time. We are asking for no more data 
> than is absolutely necessary. We will perform the analysis immediately 
> upon receiving all of the data. We will delete the data once the 
> analysis has been performed.
>
> The Survey:
>
> We would like to know the following five pieces of information 
> relative to each Autonomous System you peer with:
>
> • Your ASN
> • Your peer’s ASN (peers only, not upstream transit providers or 
> downstream customers)
> • Whether a written and signed peering agreement exists (the 
> alternative being a less formal arrangement, such as a "handshake 
> agreement")
> • Whether the terms are roughly symmetric (the alternative being 
> that they describe an agreement with different terms for each of the 
> two parties, such as one compensating the other, or one receiving more 
> or fewer than full customer routes)
> • Whether a jurisdiction of governing law is defined
> • Whether IPv6 routes are being exchanged (this year, we’ll still 
> assume that IPv4 are)
>
> The easiest way for us to receive the information is as a tab-text or 
> CSV file or an Excel spreadsheet, consisting of rows with the 
> following columns:
>
> Your ASN: Integer
> Peer ASN: Integer
> Written agreement: Boolean
> Symmetric: Boolean
> Governing Law: ISO 3166 two-digit country-code, or empty
> IPv6 Routes: Boolean
>
> For instance:
>
> 42 <tab> 715 <tab> false <tab> true <tab> us <tab> true <cr>
> 42 <tab> 3856 <tab> true <tab> true <tab> us <tab> true <cr>
>
> We are asking for the ASNs only so we can avoid double-counting a 
> single pair of peers when we hear from both of them, and so that when 
> we hear about a relationship in responses from both peers we can see 
> how closely the two responses match, an important check on the quality 
> of the survey.  As soon as we've collated the data, we'll strip the 
> ASNs to protect privacy, and only the final aggregate statistics will 
> be published. We will never disclose any ASN or any information about 
> any ASN. We already have more than 8,000 ASN-pair relationships 
> documented, and we hope to receive as many more as possible. We'd like 
> to finish collecting data by the end of September, about two weeks 
> from now.
>
> If you’re peering with an MLPA route-server, you’re welcome to 
> include just the route-server’s ASN, if that’s easiest, rather 
> than trying to include each of the peer ASNs on the other side of the 
> route-server. Either way is fine.
>
> If all of your sessions have the same characteristics, you can just 
> tell us what those characteristics are once, your own ASN once, and 
> give us a simple list of your peer ASNs.
>
> If your number of peers is small enough to be pasted or typed into an 
> email, rather than attached as a file, and that’s simpler, just go 
> ahead and do that.
>
> If you have written peering agreements that are covered by 
> non-disclosure agreements, or if your organizational policy precludes 
> disclosing your peers, but you’d still like to participate in the 
> survey, please let us know, and we’ll work with whatever information 
> you’re able to give us and try to ensure that your practices are 
> statistically represented in our results.
>
> If you're able to help us, please email me the data in whatever form 
> you can. If you need a non-disclosure, we're happy to sign one.
>
> Finally, if there are any other questions you’d like to see answered 
> in the future, please let us know so that we can consider addressing 
> them in the 2021 survey. The question about IPv6 routing in this 
> year’s survey is there because quite a few of the 2011 respondents 
> asked us to include it this time.
>
> Please respond by replying to this email, before the end of September.
>
> Thank you for considering participating. We very much appreciate it, 
> and we look forward to returning the results to the community.
>
>                                 -Bill Woodcock
>                                  Executive Director
>                                  Packet Clearing House



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