Impact of Prefix Hijacking on Payments of Providers
Date
2011-01-04Abstract
Whereas prefix hijacking is usually examined from
security perspectives, this paper looks at it from a novel economic
angle. Our study stems from an observation that a transit AS
(Autonomous System) has a financial interest in attracting extra
traffic to the links with its customers. Based on real data about the
actual hijacking incident in the Internet, we conduct simulations
in the real AS-level Internet topology with synthetic demands for
the hijacked traffic. Then, we measure traffic on all inter-AS links
and compute the payments of all providers. The analysis of our
results from technical, business, and legal viewpoints suggests
that hijacking-based traffic attraction is a viable strategy that
can create a fertile ground for tussles between providers. In
particular, giant top-tier providers appear to have the strongest
financial incentives to hijack popular prefixes and then deliver
the intercepted traffic to the proper destinations. We also discuss
directions for future research in the area of hijacking-based
traffic attraction.
Subject
Q Science::Q Science (General)Q Science::QA Mathematics::QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
T Technology::T Technology (General)
T Technology::TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
T Technology::TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering