Ever wondered how Internet works? Surely you did but did you actually figure out? Most often, people just understand it roughly how it works but sometimes details could be handy.
Plum consulting recently published a detailed study titled, "How the Internet works (and is paid for)". It is quite a detailed study and is divided into three parts:
- The first part explores how data and content move around the Internet, and how it is coordinated and governed;
- The second part focuses on the economics of the Internet and how the delivery of content is paid for;
- The third part provides cases studies of the economics of the Internet in five APAC countries: South Korea, Australia, Indonesia, Japan, and Singapore.
There is also a concise summary if that helps.
A recent article on Ookla titled "5 Critical Services that Keep the Internet Up and Running" described how the internet works and what causes an Outage. The article explains the role of Content delivery networks (CDNs), Domain Name System (DNS), Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), Services and their Application Programming Interfaces (API) and finally Downdetector.
BGP is an important service which has been in the news regularly after some major outage. Last year when Facebook disappeared from the Internet, BGP was responsible. Facebook (Meta) Engineering published a detailed post explaining it here. Cloudflare also looked at this Facebook BGP issue here and have a simple explanation about what BGP is:
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is the postal service of the Internet. When someone drops a letter into a mailbox, the Postal Service processes that piece of mail and chooses a fast, efficient route to deliver that letter to its recipient. Similarly, when someone submits data via the Internet, BGP is responsible for looking at all of the available paths that data could travel and picking the best route, which usually means hopping between autonomous systems.
BGP is the protocol that makes the Internet work by enabling data routing. When a user in Singapore loads a website with origin servers in Argentina, BGP is the protocol that enables that communication to happen quickly and efficiently.
This video below is also a good simple explanation
BGP can be a serious issue when Internet is hijacked, hence even the regulators are looking at it to ensure there is no country wide Internet failure. An example from Swedish Post and Telecommunications Board (PTS) here.
The Swedish Post and Telecommunications Board (PTS) @PTSse has reviewed how the five companies work to manage known vulnerabilities in the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) function, which is necessary for external traffic exchange on the Internet. https://t.co/1vogdTChmC
— Rudolf van der Berg (@internetthought) October 13, 2022
Similarly, UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has published a Technical report on "Responsible use of the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) for ISP interworking", which explains best practices for the use of this fundamental data routing protocol.
Telco sec is a huge space, so friends like Stuart Lyle are important. He pointed out that NCSC UK has published guidance on BGP and that it is referenced in the UK telco act:https://t.co/ysj7s88U4Z so that is for all of you, in case you also missed it
— Silke Holtmanns (@SHoltmanns) March 31, 2022
With all these ongoing conflicts and politics in the play, it is important for the Service Providers and Mobile Operators to ensure there is no failure because of lack of understanding of the fundamentals.
On the Large BGP Leak that hit European Mobile Carriers and rerouted data to China & Russia. We’ve seen this before says @Wired https://t.co/E0pO7F1XoD https://t.co/V39RciBGwV #decipher #deciphersec via @DrPippaM pic.twitter.com/bRnyroSI3W
— Telecomunicaciones e innovación tecnológica (@lastelecos) June 12, 2019
Related Posts:
- Connectivity Technology Blog: Different Types Of Service Providers
- 3G4G - MNO, MVNO, MVNA, MVNE: Different types of mobile operators
- The 3G4G Blog: The Journey from Communications Service Provider (CSP) to Digital Service Provider (DSP)
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