ISP Interconnection and its Impact on Consumer Internet Performance

big-turtleThere’s a really interesting report on a recent study of broadband internet speeds that’s been released by Measurement Lab.  They studied the interconnections between various ISPs, and observed performance degradation to sub-broadband speeds during times of heavy traffic.  Network congestion?  Nope.  Interestingly, their conclusion is that the slower speeds were due to business relationships between ISPs, not network capacity.  Specifically, what sort of interconnection the ISPs have with each other, what the study refers to as “interconnection-related performance degradation.”  These sorts of connections are relatively short fiber-optic cables running between routers owned by each ISP but located in the same physical facility…a relatively simple and low cost connection to upgrade (add more fiber cables!).

In researching our report, we found clear evidence that interconnection between major US access ISPs (AT&T, Comcast, CenturyLink, Time Warner Cable, and Verizon) and transit ISPs Cogent, Level 3, and potentially XO was correlated directly with degraded consumer performance throughout 2013 and into 2014 (in some cases, ongoing as of publication). Degraded performance was most pronounced during peak use hours, which points to insufficient capacity and congestion as a causal factor. Further, by noting patterns of performance degradation for access/transit ISP pairs that were synchronized across locations, we were able to conclude that in many cases degradation was not the result of major infrastructure failures at any specific point in a network, but rather connected with the business relationships between ISPs.

You can read more about this report at this link.

Comcast turning homes into public wifi hotspots

Comcast seems to be intent on solidifying their position as Worst Company in America (a title they somehow managed to beat Monsanto and Sea World for!).  Not only is there a public uproar over their attempt to take over Time-Warner cable, but now, as  TechCruch reports, Comcast plans to turn their customers’ homes into public wifi hotspots, by turning on that feature in their cable modems.  It’s an ‘opt-out’ feature too, so many customers may not even be aware that this is happening.

Why does this matter?  Maybe it doesn’t.  I use a ‘guest network’ feature in my own wireless router, and I have no concerns about this providing a backdoor into my personal network.  However, there are two things to consider.  First, the electricity being used to provide this feature is being paid for by the homeowner (though it’s probably pretty minimal).  Second, and more troubling, is what happens if someone on your public wifi hotspot uses that connection for illegal activity?  It’ll be traced back to your IP address, and will be your mess to deal with.  Your best case scenario there is that Comcast would have tracked the hotspot user’s MAC address and would be willing to provide you with an exceptional level of communication and support to help you defend yourself in court (good luck with that…).

I’m fortunate to live in a town not ‘serviced’ by Comcast…though with the way they’re growing, I fear it’s only a matter of time before they arrive.

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