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Inevitable death, was Re: Verizon Public Policy on Netflix
- Subject: Inevitable death, was Re: Verizon Public Policy on Netflix
- From: nanog at brettglass.com (Brett Glass)
- Date: Mon, 14 Jul 2014 21:10:27 -0600
- In-reply-to: <[email protected] mail.com>
- References: <CAP4=VciHrbGRiNHAyyZPSTVNpabDOJuRLAmBUjK+hbnMgMBP1Q@mail.gmail.com> <CAMrdfRz_9ccn+wGay3_zUaP=xa=4RpjQ1Hp06M8xwF-kedSB-Q@mail.gmail.com> <CAEmG1=prUtD+6GTSQNNaRDs9T2JuCWYvaOp4o0UrE_VYAGr-jw@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CAEmG1=pR+5ioHiXVmh+BUMBCczTg1enDmkv9tkYF=t9p0cBS_w@mail.gmail.com> <CAMrdfRwzCj++ZrFL2ytBgW1SQVCCTxBqr3mGmh3ERUojR872NA@mail.gmail.com> <CAEmG1=oDB-cD6j1TnHicfL+ijAATs14y9LidbHD8VUys=MPNxQ@mail.gmail.com>
At 07:47 PM 7/14/2014, Matthew Petach wrote:
>And as long as they're happy with their single upstream
>connectivity picture, more power to them.
You're assuming that the only way to be multi-homed is to have an
ASN. That's not correct.
ARIN's fees are discriminatory; a small ISP must pay a much higher
percentage of its revenues than a large one for IPs, ASNs, etc.
Clever small ISPs find ways to work around that, and it makes them
more competitive.
--Brett Glass