When slow downloads hit an app developer, only Comcast customers suffered

When slow downloads hit an app developer, only Comcast customers suffered

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Aurich Lawson

App developer Panic Inc. knew it had a network problem when customers began complaining about trouble downloading and updating Panic apps.

“Geez, your downloads are really slow!” was the common complaint that started coming in a few months ago, Panic co-founder Cabel Sasser explained in a blog post titled, “The Mystery of the Slow Downloads.”

But once the mystery cleared up, it all made sense. Panic and its users were the innocent victims of a longstanding network interconnection battle between cable ISP Comcast and Cogent, which operates a global network that carries traffic across the Internet.

Not ancient history

Comcast/Cogent battles caused repeated problems for customers back in 2013 and 2014, as we documented in several articles at the time. For a refresher, Cogent carries Internet traffic on behalf of many businesses that need to reach the home Internet customers of residential ISPs like Comcast. Cogent exchanges traffic directly with Comcast at various data centers across the US.

The companies have long been exchanging traffic without Comcast paying Cogent or Cogent paying Comcast, to the mutual benefit of their customers. This is called “settlement-free interconnection.”

Comcast wanted Cogent to start paying for this interconnection (also known as peering), and Cogent refused. Comcast responded by delaying upgrades to the ports that allow traffic to flow swiftly between the companies, and customers suffered with poor Netflix quality and other Internet problems.

Tech

via Ars Technica https://arstechnica.com

March 9, 2018 at 12:04PM

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