| 1) The ISPs are willing to interconnect, they just aren't willing to interconnect in an unbalanced fashion without being compensated. Settlement free peering is free because the two sides transfer the same amount so it's a net of roughly zero. In these cases, the net is heavily on the Cogent or L3 side. Now I think there is a decent argument that ISPs should have to have free peering available at their local loop level. If congent wants to peer at the CO office of the local telecom, it should be able to do it. The issue is that Verizon is not just a local ISP, it's a nationwide T1 provider. It sells transit service. It should be allowed to charge for transit to it's own local loop networks. 2) There are no enforced monopolies anymore, and haven't been for a long time. Damn near all profitable areas have a telecom and a cable provider. Congress banned monopoly franchise agreements for cable and fiber in 1992. Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 (1992). 3) I believe ISPs should have to meet some benchmarks for speed compared what they advertise, but you can't force them to maintain speed on specific interconnects. If Cogent has a shitty network that isn't on Verizon. |
That's what the whole dispute is about. "Verizon is a Tier 1 provider" is some kind of meaningless talking point with no relevance to anything. Cogent and Level 3 are already transit providers with national networks, they don't need to use Verizon's transit network because they have their own. The problem is that they have traffic they want to pass to Verizon in LA for Verizon's LA customers and Verizon won't give them access without paying a toll. The fact that Verizon also has fiber going from LA to Houston and San Francisco has no effect on any part of that.