Who are the current members of ARISPA?
Fahad.
-----Original
Message-----
From: Abdulaziz Al. Helayyil
[mailto:ahelayyil@localhost]
Sent: 27 May 2006 13:47
To: Abdulla A. Hashim; Salman
Al-Mannai
Cc: Saleem Albalooshi; Fahad
AlShirawi; John Leong; ncc-regional-middle-east@localhost Anwar El Yafi; Khalid
Esmaeil; Waleed Al-Qallaf; Fahad Al-hussain; Feras Bakour; Aldubaikhi
Subject: RE:
[ncc-regional-middle-east] Regional Peering
It is my pleasure to introduce ARISPA (Arab Regional ISPs &
DSPs Association), it is a non profit independent organization acting in
the interests of Internet & Data Communications services providers in Arab
region. Arab Peering Project (ARPP) is one of the key projects in ARISPA, the
technical committee had their first meeting in Dubai last week and we are
expecting an implementation report based on the project plan mentioned in ARPP
document attached.
Also kindly find more information about ARISPA (the forms are under
process).
Regards,
Abdulaziz S. Al-Helayyil
________________________
ARISPA
Assistant Secretary General
www.arispa.org
Al
Faisaliah Group of Companies
AwalNet
Products & Marketing Manager
E-mail : ahelayyil@localhost
Tel. +966 (1) 460 0111 / Ext 1210
Mobile
: +966 (5) 0310-0301
FAX : +966 (1) 460 0148
From: Abdulla
A. Hashim [mailto:abdulla.hashim@localhost]
Sent: Friday, May 26, 2006 12:51
PM
To: Salman Al-Mannai
Cc: Saleem Albalooshi; Fahad
AlShirawi; John Leong; ncc-regional-middle-east@localhost Anwar El Yafi; Khalid
Esmaeil; Abdulaziz Al. Helayyil; Waleed Al-Qallaf; Fahad Al-hussain; Feras
Bakour
Subject: Re:
[ncc-regional-middle-east] Regional Peering
Dear All:
I believe all of us strongly support the peering concepts between various ISPs
and IXs in the region due to many benefits that such peering can bring.
Let me also advise you ; that the ARISPA ( Arab Regional ISPs Association )
which formally recently formed ; is discussing such topics but on the Arab
region level ; the objective of this initiative or idea is to establish first
exchange point in key geographical areas in the arab region and then establish
peering between these regional IXs.
I might ask Abdulaziz AL Helayyil ( the secretariat of ARISPA ) or Khalid
Esmaeil ( from Etisalat and one of the peering member of ARISPA ) to explain
more about this initiative.
Also; we officially through this email ; as a Vice President of ARISPA board
ask all the ISPs to join ARISPA ; such association is addressing all the
cooperation matters among the Arab ISPs with the objective to
improve and enhance the internet industry in the region.
Thanks and looking forward to see Qtel; Kanartel; Batelco and others joining
this Association.
Salman Al-Mannai wrote:
I do understand
Fahad's concenrs, that is why I'm for the IX-IX peering appraoch in the GCC,
this matter has been pursued by Saleem and Mr. Aabdulla Hashem. however, we
still need some political levrage in order to proceed (ea. to be put on the
agenda of one of the GCC telecom committees, and then to be enforced by the
respective regulator).
second, the idea of
pursuing a NAP/NSP, this is purely a commercial descission that is
typically assessed from financial feasiblity perspective, while peering
will make sense for the obvious reasons that have been mentioned in several
ocasions.
I also don't find
it proper to establish one common place for peer-ers to exchange traffic (ea.
GCC IXP) while it may save on linking costs, it may also become an operational
burden on the host, and may again add to the cost. my suggestion is to have
adjacent peering among niebourghing operators (ex.
Oman<->UAE<->Qatar<->Bahrain<->Kuwait<->Saudi
Arabia<->Oman - back)
I don't meen to set
you back by mentioning the above, I just wanted to illusterate situation, I've
already passed a presentation (which was done in part by Saleem, he has already
given references to his past work on this) which I don't mind sharing with you,
if Saleem does not mind.
NB: Fahad, we have
already discussed the contents of the presentation in January.
From:
on behalf of Saleem Albalooshi
Sent: Wed 5/24/2006 12:58 AM
To: Fahad AlShirawi
Cc: 'John Leong'; ncc-regional-middle-east@localhost
Subject: Re:
[ncc-regional-middle-east] Regional Peering
Dear Fahad,
Thank you very much for your valuable participation.
The good new is that all the main ISP's in the GCC countries are already
interconnected since 2004.
Below are some documents that may help in understanding the peering
status between the GCC countries.
http://www.gcc-itrc.ae/en/Meetings/first/Presentations.html
http://www.gcc-itrc.ae/wgs/ae_kw.html
http://www.gcc-itrc.ae/Files/gcc_peering_update.ppt
What I now is that Etisalat has built an excellent peering connectivity
with most of the countries in the region, for example:
1. All GCC countries (Saudi, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman)
2. India
3. Singapore
4. Malaysia
5. Cypris
6. Taiwan
7. Japan
8. Hong Kong
9. Sudan
Also with some international Exchange points i.e LINEX and NYIIX.
and Much more,
Mr. Moeen Aqrabawi, could you please help in updating us on the status
of the Peering connectivity from the UAE.
We need to here from other members in this list on the peering
connectivity from their countries.
Best Regards,
Saleem
UAEnic
Fahad AlShirawi wrote:
>My first contribution to this mailing list:
>
>John,
>
>While I definitely agree with your assessment, there are issues in the
>GCC that sadly make peering a dream we are all waiting for but are very
>unlikely to realize any time soon. On one hand, the PTTs are all looking
>to peer with each other, while at the same time are wary of each other.
>The only two countries I know off that have appropriate direct peering
>are the Emarites and Qatar. Even that is only something I heard and I am
>not actually sure off. In any case, when a new player indicates interest
>in a peering arrangement, the propose IP Transit. It's the mentality of:
>We are big and you are small, why do you need peering? Just take IP
>Transit from us.
>
>On the other hand, bandwidth to the US, once you hit a landing point, is
>a lot cheaper than bandwidth controlled by monopolies in the GCC. There
>are no IRUs currently between GCC countries and the first cable system
>of its kind that will allow someone other than the monopolies to own
>capacity is... Well, Falcon, but god knows when Falcon will be complete.
>It's over a year late now. Additionally, in some countries, because FLAG
>partnered with the PTTs there, they will not sell capacity directly to a
>competitor of the PTT but will leave it up to the PTT to control. Their
>argument, said in private, is that they can't anger their partners by
>selling to a competitor of theirs. Publicly, their position is this: You
>don't need the capacity. We are trying to help you. Don't take it.
>
>When you insist you do, you are ignored.
>
>As to the NAP issue, there are people working on building one and then
>attempting to attract the business. I know Mr. Ahmad AlHujairi who I
>believe is a member of this list is doing just that with Gulf Gateway
>Internet. I wish them all the luck and success. I would like to see this
>happen and I would like to see peering become a reality. Still, I think
>they are a long way away from that kind of success.
>
>In any case, so far, I feel that STC in Saudi is the most open to
>negotiations and discussion.
>
>
>
>Regards,
>
>
>Fahad.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From:
>[]
On Behalf Of John Leong
>Sent: 22 May 2006 11:58
>To: Saleem Albalooshi; ncc-regional-middle-east@localhost
>Subject: Re: [ncc-regional-middle-east] Regional Peering
>
>
>Sorry for the late response. Yes, it is totally inefficient (and
>strange)
>to have traffic between the GCC countries to go through the US.
>
>Not only will it add latency you are also unecessary using up some very
>expensive long haul bandwidth. BTW: On latency, while the
longer round
>
>trip propagation delay is clearly a factor, the real pain is additional
>router hops. Routers are real nasty since besides queueing delay,
they
>are
>congestion points. The impact of packet loss [on TCP] is orders of
>magnitude more than any propagation delay, since you will have to pay
>the
>direct penality of time out [to discover you have lost a packet] as well
>as
>suffer longer term side effect of having you transmission window
>reduced.
>
>In any event, you should peer with each other within the GCC. From
>engineering point of view, NAP makes a lot of sense. However,
>practically,
>most of the ISPs do bi-lateral rather than multilateral peering at a
>single
>location so the NAP's role is somewhat diminished.
>
>Best regards,
>John
>
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Saleem Albalooshi"
>To: ncc-regional-middle-east@localhost
>Sent: Friday, May 12, 2006 2:26 AM
>Subject: [ncc-regional-middle-east] Regional Peering
>
>
>
>
>>Dear All,
>>Kindly find below a writeup about the importance of establishing
>>
>>
>peering
>
>
>>connectivity between the regional ISP's, please feel free to correct
>>
>>
>or
>
>
>>comment on any technical or linguistic information in the writeup
>>
>>
>below.
>
>
>>Saleem Al-Balooshi
>>UAEnic
>>
>>
>>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>-----------------
>
>
>
>
>
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