Some of them are related to the economy. How much traffic do you have? How much do you pay for transit? How much of this traffic could be easily moved to peering? How much will peering cost, including connectivity and people to manage it? Will you save money? These costs are easy to put in a calculation board and see how they stack up for you. Whether peering is the right thing to do depends on several factors. Maybe I couldn`t do it. Maybe I don`t have a pretty smile, good teeth, beautiful breasts, long legs, a cheeky ass, a sexy voice. Maybe I don`t know how to treat men and increase my market value so that the rewards are paid to me by the feminine. Again, maybe I`m tired of the masquerade. I`m tired of faking eternal youth. I`m tired of lying to my own intelligence, to my own willingness to lie to my own sex. I`m tired of looking at the world through false eyelashes, so everything I see is mixed with a shadow of bought hair; I`m tired of weighing my head with a dead mower, unable to move my neck, afraid of the rain, the wind, dancing too hard in case I sweat in my patent curls. I`m sick of the Powder Room.
I`m tired of pretending that the statements of some fat men are the objects of my undivided attention, I`m tired of filming and making plays when someone else wants, and I`m tired of not having personal opinions. I`m tired of being a transvestite. I refuse to be a woman imitator. I`m a woman, not a castro. You need someone to handle your peering for yourself. You need to know which networks you should call, contact these networks and make arrangements. Sometimes this means sending emails, and sometimes it`s about making phone calls or personally looking for employees of other network operators. Many peering agreements are facilitated by personal meetings, so that if you can, you go to peering forums and IXP meetings. Some networks will say yes or no without much discussion, but in some cases you may need to explain how much traffic is being exchanged between your network and your network and why peers would benefit them. Peering is the organization of data exchange between Internet service providers (Internet service providers, ISPs).
Larger RSIs with their own core networks agree to allow traffic from other large ISPs in exchange for data traffic on their backbone.