Agnieszka Osipa

seen from Mexico

seen from Netherlands

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from Germany

seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Canada
seen from United States
Agnieszka Osipa
PLDT IP Peering agreement with PHOpenIX published on TechnoGraphics.org
PLDT IP Peering agreement with PHOpenIX published on http://www.technographics.org/pldt-ip-peering-agreement-with-phopenix/
PLDT IP Peering agreement with PHOpenIX
PLDTIP Peering agreement with PHOpenIX
Earlier last week, we witnessed the MOA signing between PLDT and DOST-ASTI that details the local IP Peering of PLDT with PHOpenIX. The same event also officially designated the PHOpenIX as the government’s official IP exchange (G/IPX).
Top brass of PLDT were there to sign along with DOST Sec. Monje and Sen. Bam Aquino. It is worth to note that it was Sen. Aquino who’s been instrumental in getting both parties together and encouraging PLDT to join PHOpenIX.
We asked some specific questions about this agreement and here are the responses we got from both parties:
PLDT has donated dark fiber to DOST which spans from ASTI in Diliman to the ePLDT Vitro Data Center in Pasig. This donation (fiber connection and rack space) is worth Php21 Million (Php21,745,920 to be exact) with a coverage of 2 years. Hopefully, after 2 years, PLDT will continue to provide this for free or the government will try to allocate budget for this as explained by Sen. Bam Aquino.
While the physical connections are in place, PLDT has yet to implement the proper IP routing in order for the traffic to be re-routed locally. PLDT has promised this will be done in 30 to 45 days from today.
PLDT is initially allocating 1Gbps for this connection but promised to provide more if ASTI deems more bandwidth is needed.
The local peering is currently limited to websites and online services of government agencies. This means consumers’ access to sites like SSS online, BIR eFPS, and related agency sites will pass thru the exchange.
The underlying policy for this development is AO39 (Administrative Order No. 39) signed in June 12, 2013. AO39 mandates all government agencies to migrate to the Government Web Hosting Service (GWHS) of the DOST-ICTO. DOST has currently migrated around 80% of all government websites to the GWHS.
Section 5 of AO39 states:
Government IP Exchange and Data Peering. The DOST-ICTO shall establish a Government Internet Protocol (IP) Exchange (G/IPX) facility. All government agencies shall ensure that they exchange data traffic with other government agencies and external stakeholders through this G/IPX facility.
This provision requires that any gov’t agency that wants to access or connect to other government websites and e-services must be able to access them thru the G/IPX facility. If an ISP or internet provider is not part of the G/IPX, then that agency will need to subscribe to another ISP that is part of the local IP peering to comply with Section 5. This means PLDT will need to be part of that local IP peering in order to retain their various government contracts.
Likewise, the recent DOST-ICT Project on Free WiFi in Public Places also includes a requirement that bidders are only qualified if they are part of the G/IPX. The Commision on Audit (COA) is tasked to monitor and enforce Section 5 and will disallow budgets for contractors and suppliers if they are not part of G/IPX.
In a way, this is one of the many motivations why PLDT has finally decided to join the group.
Source
Article: PLDT IP Peering agreement with PHOpenIX
TechnoGraphics | Philippine Tech News & Reviews, How to Tips