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akamai yesterday - what in the world was that



All,
There has been some initial discussions about beyond 400G for Ethernet.  It would be interesting to better understand how often this problem is now occurring - because I would imagine the problem is only going to get worse as the "binary blob" blobs out, which will only stress networks more.

Regards

John

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces at nanog.org> On Behalf Of tim at pelican.org
Sent: Friday, February 14, 2020 4:46 AM
To: NANOG list <nanog at nanog.org>
Subject: Re: akamai yesterday - what in the world was that

On Friday, 14 February, 2020 09:17, "Valdis KlÄ?tnieks" <valdis.kletnieks at vt.edu> said:

> After all - it's not like *they* are going to feel the pain of a 
> single 106G upload, it's somebody else who feels the pain of 5 million 
> downloads of a 106G image refresh.
> 
> Economists call this sort of thing an "externality".

I must admit, I'm blissfully unaware of CDN commercials, but I'd have expected that if I give a CDN my binary 100G binary blob and six people download it, I'd be billed a different amount to if six million people download it - and similarly if that blob is 1G vs 100G.

I guess I'm asking if there's an underlying problem with the model here, or if it's just the details of the numbers that are "wrong" in encouraging / discouraging certain behaviou

Regards,
Tim.