Room 4. 1F03, Telematics Department, Torres Quevedo Building, University Carlos III of Madrid, Avda. Universidad, 30, 28911 Leganes – Madrid
Abstract:
 ISPs (Internet Service Providers) typically operate as commercial ASes (Autonomous Systems) and obtain revenue by delivering IP (Internet Protocol) traffic of their customers. In particular, the provider-free ASes - which reach the entire Internet without paying anyone for the traffic delivery - sell IP transit to numerous other ASes. IP prefix deaggregation gives the deaggregator some control over Internet traffic flows but increases the memory requirements of IP routers. This paper offers a novel economic perspective on prefix deaggregation. In particular, we investigate whether provider-free ASes have financial incentives to deaggregate prefixes in order to attract additional IP traffic of their customers. Our study combines analysis with extensive simulations seeded by actual data. Using a realistic AS-level Internet topology, we derive a traffic-matrix model and then conduct simulations in our optimized version of C-BGP. The results show that a provider-free AS has strong incentives for traffic attraction by prefix deagregation, even if all provider-free ASes deaggregate prefixes simultaneously, or if other ASes filter out the deaggregated prefixes. We also demonstrate that the financial benefits from the attracted traffic significantly outweigh the extra router-memory costs imposed by the prefix deaggregation
ISPs (Internet Service Providers) typically operate as commercial ASes (Autonomous Systems) and obtain revenue by delivering IP (Internet Protocol) traffic of their customers. In particular, the provider-free ASes - which reach the entire Internet without paying anyone for the traffic delivery - sell IP transit to numerous other ASes. IP prefix deaggregation gives the deaggregator some control over Internet traffic flows but increases the memory requirements of IP routers. This paper offers a novel economic perspective on prefix deaggregation. In particular, we investigate whether provider-free ASes have financial incentives to deaggregate prefixes in order to attract additional IP traffic of their customers. Our study combines analysis with extensive simulations seeded by actual data. Using a realistic AS-level Internet topology, we derive a traffic-matrix model and then conduct simulations in our optimized version of C-BGP. The results show that a provider-free AS has strong incentives for traffic attraction by prefix deagregation, even if all provider-free ASes deaggregate prefixes simultaneously, or if other ASes filter out the deaggregated prefixes. We also demonstrate that the financial benefits from the attracted traffic significantly outweigh the extra router-memory costs imposed by the prefix deaggregation
The conference will be conducted in English

