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The Internet

Two Major ISPs Are Suffering Outages, Making the Internet Really Slow Right Now (slate.com) 131

Freshly Exhumed writes: Two major backbone internet service providers -- Level 3 and Cogent -- appear to be suffering from massive outages and downgraded service, according to ISP monitoring service Downdetector. Users in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Dallas, Atlanta, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. are apparently being hit the hardest. Comcast is also said to be affected to a lesser degree. "Backbone internet service providers work directly with large internet platforms like Netflix to deliver large amounts of data across networks, and also work behind the scenes of consumer-facing ISPs," reports Slate. "Since the internet is an interconnected mess of wires, disruptions with Level 3 and Cogent could impact service for Comcast and Verizon users in turn."
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Two Major ISPs Are Suffering Outages, Making the Internet Really Slow Right Now

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:03PM (#55764665)

    Damn it! This is exactly why we need net neutrality. Here we are now living in a world without net neutrality, and this happens so soon. Damn it, people, we need net neutrality!

    • by NicknameUnavailable ( 4134147 ) on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:40PM (#55764973)

      Damn it! This is exactly why we need net neutrality. Here we are now living in a world without net neutrality, and this happens so soon. Damn it, people, we need net neutrality!

      No, both reasons are why we need mesh nets. Moreover, lack of net neutrality will bring about mesh nets, the death of Silicon Valley marketing mega corps (e.g. Silicon Valley corporations,) the end of monopolistic control over the content people share online, etc. The death of net neutrality will be the greatest thing to happen on the internet since before the start of The Eternal Summer, by ending The Eternal Summer.

      • No, both reasons are why we need mesh nets. Moreover, lack of net neutrality will bring about mesh nets, the death of Silicon Valley marketing mega corps (e.g. Silicon Valley corporations,) the end of monopolistic control over the content people share online, etc. The death of net neutrality will be the greatest thing to happen on the internet since before the start of The Eternal Summer, by ending The Eternal Summer.

        So by your arguments, the death of net neutrality will spur community-based wireless mesh networks? Okay, I will buy that. However, at some point the users of the mesh network will want to get access to Facebook and Twitter. Thus, there has to be access to the internet at large.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      More likely that Cogent was playing games trying to hot-potato route onto the Level(3) network and Level(3) once again decided to shut them down route onto

      This happened in 2005, and Cogent still continues to think this dick move is a great idea

      http://www.lightreading.com/cable-video/ott/cogent-gearing-for-another-peering-battle/d/d-id/707831

    • Is it any surprise that both these backbones had each been NetFlix's ISP, and whichever one had NetFlix at the time also publicly demanded settlement free peering with added propaganda from the other when the traffic ratio no longer warranted settlement free peering?
      • Netflix content comes down a CDN so each of it's edge nodes has a different ISP. Would you care to clarify your statement. I've had a few beers so maybe I'm missing something.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Rockoon ( 1252108 )
          Thats today. Thats not 10 years ago. Thats not 5 years ago.

          NetFlix continually shopped around for the cheapest ISP and then had streaming issues which it pretender were not the result of going with the cheapest ISP. When Cogent was dumping more data on Level 3 due to NetFlix than vise-versa, a peering dispute ensued because Cogent no longer qualified for settlement free peering. Level 3 refused to upgrade the interlinks and occasionally shut them off entirely. Then NetFlix moved over to Level 3 and the sh
          • Thats today. Thats not 10 years ago. Thats not 5 years ago.

            No 5 years ago netflix was moving from AWS and akamai to their own hosting and CDN. Since this doesn't make sense I decided to look for myself and it's now obvious that they're just a bunch of bloodsucking mba cocksuckers pointing the finger at each other. The whining between these providers is bullshit each and every one of them is a new set of excuses every year.

            They simply want a check without providing service. Anyhow it turns out netflix went cdn'less for a short period of time. Fucking stupid id

  • by ruddk ( 5153113 ) on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:04PM (#55764677)

    It is not outages, it is neutrality freedom blackouts to ensure quality service. They need to add the Freedom package for full access.

  • I want to thank Beau for including the explanation of backbone providers for all of us who would have been scratching our heads about how a tier 1 outage could possibly be affecting us personally.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:19PM (#55764815)

      I think it's good that such information was included. While the readership of the early-2000s era Slashdot probably knows what a backbone provider is, there's a good portion of the late-2017 Slashdot readership that probably is not aware.

      Thanks to the rise of the cloud, as well as a decrease in the running of personal/independent web sites thanks to consolidation around platforms like Facebook and Twitter, many computer professionals today don't know much about network architecture, or even what in the past we would have considered to be the most basic elements of computer networking.

      While 15 years ago it was routine for us to set up our own routers, even to the point of stringing and crimping our own cables, there's a whole generation of professionals who doesn't have that experience. All they've ever known is wireless networking. Cloud platforms like AWS completely insulate them from anything more complex than whitelisting a TCP or UDP port.

      A good example of this lack of understanding with regards to networking is visible in much of the net neutrality discussion here. There are unfortunately too many people who don't understand the 7 layer OSI model [wikipedia.org] of networking. They say that net neutrality is important for levels 1 to 3, but then don't think that it should apply to levels 4 through 7.

      These people with limited knowledge of networking think it's wrong when telecom providers handle IP packets differently based on the content, but they refuse to apply that same standard to higher-level networking concepts like social media comments or social media accounts. They cry foul when telecom providers treat packets differently, but these same people are perfectly fine with anti-neutral actions like comments being hidden/deleted, or worse, users being banned, even when these comments or users are perfectly legal.

      Instead of supporting net neutrality, these people with limited understanding of networking actually support net partiality! They only want 43% of the OSI layers to be treated with neutrality, instead of 100% of the layers like true supporters of net neutrality want.

      So it's good when the editors here explain basic concepts. There are a lot of people here who have severely limited understanding of even the most basic aspects of computer networking.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        FYI, like any old-hand knows, Cogent has repeatedly abused peering agreements and sought to hot-potato route (slam traffic onto a competitors network as fast as possible without allowing for similar use of their own network) since Level(3) slammed their dick in the cookie jar in 2005 and effectively broke the internet just to get Cogent to cool their jets

        It never really stopped Cogent and they have played the same stupid game over and over again

  • by Anonymous Coward

    to enable those new fancy QOS features not that NN is deader than chivalry.

    • NN never banned QoS. Banning QoS 'breaks the internet'.

      But it put its definition into the hands of a group (uncle Charlie) that supporters of NN claim doesn't understand the internet. What could go wrong?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Banning QoS 'breaks the internet'.

        No, it doesn't. QoS is only "necessary" if there is congestion. If there is congestion, there need to be bandwidth upgrades, because you oversold your bandwidth too much. If you don't do the right thing, then that's going to be immediately apparent without QoS, and QoS can mask your cheapness for a while, but what 'breaks the internet' is not a lack of QoS but you not providing the bandwidth your customers use (and have a right to use!)

        • At this point NN supporters have lost their feeble fucking minds. A law that was never implemented is _needed_ and a necessary practice should be banned because 'rights'.

          QoS is needed, simple FIFOs at the routers will leave you gaming with terrible pings, even assuming infinite bandwidth. Ask someone to explain the words you don't understand.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The other AC is absolutely right. The old rules were not perfect, and should have banned all QoS as well. It doesn't even work, except as a means for artificial congestion. The very concept as applied to the Internet is broken, as there is no fair way to classify traffic. Any efforts to prioritize will disadvantage unknown traffic, which includes emerging protocols and otherwise opaque traffic. Not only does the practice harm innovation, it leads to excessive buffering in the network, which is damaging to a

  • Sounds familiar (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:07PM (#55764707)

    "Making the Internet Really Slow Right Now "

    Nice internet you had here, but if you'd pay us just 10 bucks more, nothing bad would ever happen to it, capisce?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Slate sez: "Since the internet is an interconnected mess of wires,"

    Next article on their website: Some dumass Trump supporter said the Internet has tubes! OMG don't we feel smug and superior!

  • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:18PM (#55764791) Homepage

    Since the internet is an interconnected mess of wires

    Bullshit. It's a series of tubes.

  • A) They were testing their "fast-access pay-only web filter" for rich people, and something went wrong; or

    B) They purposely created this problem to later say: "The lines were so over-used that made everything fall, that's a problem of Net Neutrality; if we could adapt the bandwidth this would have not happened".

  • Welcome to the new world of Comcast and Verizon being really really really really really slow.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I am as pro net neutrality as one could be, but this has nothing to do with net neutrality. Two Tier 1 providers decided to no longer have a peering agreement. Well, one of them decided they want something and the other didn't budge, so their interconnections have been shut down. That's like you switching from cable to DSL: You would expect to have a longer (and possibly congested) path to reach other cable customers. Traffic between Level3 customers and Cogent customers now takes a longer route, and since

  • This is just inpreparation for the new slow and fast lanes of the Republican internet.
  • Unbalance Peering (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Monday December 18, 2017 @06:37PM (#55764951)
    I run a small ISP that uses Cogent as my primary upstream provider. Cogent and Verizon have been fighting literally for years over "unbalanced peering". Meaning, Verizon was throwing a fit because a majority of Cogent's traffic comes from Netflix and Verizon wanted some pay-ola to balance the peering. When Net Neutrality was in place, Verizon was forced to allow traffic.... but now that our friend Pai has removed that requirement, any upstream provider is free to extort any amount they want to restore traffic.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Even with NN, if there's a large imbalance in peering data then some money should change hands. It's up to the peering contract the parties agreed to.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      When Net Neutrality was in place, Verizon was forced to allow traffic.

      No, that is not true. Nobody was forced to peer with anyone else. That was a bit of loophole in the net neutrality rules: You could just stall *everyone* by not buying enough transit, for example, or by not upgrading a peering with another Tier 1 provider, and then just tell people they should buy network access from you if they want to reach your customers without congestion. That is not and was not a net neutrality violation, just congestion. With net neutrality you couldn't selectively throttle someone's

    • by Burdell ( 228580 )

      Any clueful Internet provider would know not to have Cogent as a single (or even one of two) upstream, and how to route around them when they get in their pissing matches. Cogent will beat anybody's price on bandwidth, because what they lose on each contract, they'll make up in quantity!

    • This is not what Net Neutrality means. Net Neutrality means that ISPs may not discriminate based on the origin/destination/contents of a packet. It does not mean that ISPs have to treat 1000GB the same as 1GB.

      A byte is a byte is a byte, and Verizon ought to have the right to demand more money to transfer more bytes, so long as they do so in a neutral fashion. Cogent should pay the same rate to transfer a byte from Netflix as one from Hulu or iTunes or Amazon Streaming. That's neutrality over content.

      • Cogent should pay the same rate to transfer a byte from Netflix as one from Hulu or iTunes or Amazon Streaming.

        NO! Cogent should pay the same rate to transfer a byte from Netflix as one from "some random browser sending a SYN" .... THAT is Net Neutrality.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Except Verizon were already paid to deliver the traffic by their subscribers. They have no right to double dip. In fact they have obligations to their customers to deliver the traffic requested so Verizon should bear the cost of upgrade of the peering connection, or have peering for the balanced part + subscribe to Cogent for the overage and pay Cogent from the fees already collected from Verizon's subscribers.

    • When Net Neutrality was in place, Verizon was forced to allow traffic.... but now that our friend Pai has removed that requirement, any upstream provider is free to extort any amount they want to restore traffic.

      How does that fit in with the fact that the FCC change doesn't actually take effect for another couple of months?

      Hmm.... unlikely that stuff now is being impacted by something which hasn't even happened yet, or did you get that arrow of time backward again in your causality equation?

  • "Since the internet is an interconnected mess of wires,

    So now I'm confused. Did the dump truck overturn, or is a tube clogged up?

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
      In another forum discussion about a power outage, someone to wrote this:

      been on generator power for about 31 hours now (since early Saturday morning). About 900 PG&E customers are affected. The latest from PG&E is that they’re still “investigating”.

      My own extensive “investigation” concludes the following: no missile from N. Korea, no Coronal Mass Ejection, no Sun Spots (boo, hoo!), no earthquake, no mud slide, no strong winds, no snow/ice.

      So why? Who knows? Maybe vandalism. Maybe something failed.. Maybe someone screwed up.

  • Wasn't Level 3 having major issues just a couple weeks ago (ok, maybe it was 3-4 weeks ago...time flies when you don't pay attention)? I remember something was causing a shitstorm here on the west coast.
  • by mrbester ( 200927 ) on Monday December 18, 2017 @08:12PM (#55765569) Homepage

    "Comcast is also said to be affected to a lesser degree."

    So, 33.6k instead of the usual 56k then.

  • shame on me for thinking that ISPs suddenly struggling to maintain service and net neutrality now going to a senate vote is anything but a complete coincidence.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There's ISPs and ISPs. The ones we all love to hate are the "local loop" or retail ISPs providing service to the mass of residences and small businesses out there - usually one of a handful of big companies like Comcast, TWC, Cox, AT&T, or Verizon for broadband, or a big cellular provider for phone. There are a bunch of smaller local ISPs, many with quite good service and policies, but they aren't available to most of us.

      Then there are the "wholesale" ISPs like Level 3 and Cogent, that provide the "long

  • All this time I thought it was the

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