Packet Clearing House (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Packet Clearing House" in English language version.

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ca.gov

businesssearch.sos.ca.gov

  • Kish, Rob. "Corporation Statement of Information". California Secretary of State. Retrieved 11 January 2022.

census.gov

harvester.census.gov

cybilportal.org

guidestar.org

icann.org

gnso.icann.org

oecd.org

pch.net

peeringdb.com

  • "Packet Clearing House". PeeringDB. Retrieved 8 July 2021. AS 3856 handles research traffic for a global network of BGP and DNS looking glasses, and a variety of networking research projects hosted on behalf of academic and industry research labs. AS 42 handles production DNS traffic for several root servers, about 400 TLDs including 130 ccTLDs, and the Quad9 recursive resolver.

ripe.net

soros.org

  • "ICT Toolsets Announces Winners of 2003 Grant Competition". Open Society Institute. 23 August 2004. Archived from the original on 2008-06-12. Retrieved 8 July 2021. OSI is supporting Packet Clearing House in the development of open-source software tools which assist Internet service providers in optimizing the routing of their traffic, reducing the cost and increasing the performance of Internet service as delivered to the public. The 'PeerMaster' toolset functions as a matchmaking service for ISPs, allowing the individuals within each ISP who are responsible for negotiating network interconnections to find each other quickly and easily, and facilitating the interconnection transaction. The NetFlow analysis portion of the toolset goes one step further, analyzing ISPs' traffic flow and prioritizing the other ISPs, other countries, and other regions with which the ISP has the greatest degree of mutual traffic, allowing them to make better-informed network interconnection choices.

thd.tn

twitter.com

  • Alan, Christopher (22 September 1994). "New multi-lateral peering group". A group of Internet service providers have proposed the creation of a new multi-lateral, no-settlement IP peering organization. The working name for the group is Packet Clearing House (PCH). The meeting will be moderated by Christopher Alan, president of ElectriCiti Incorporated, and Mark Kent, Ph.D., Director of network operations of Internet Main Street.

ustti.org

web.archive.org

  • "ICT Toolsets Announces Winners of 2003 Grant Competition". Open Society Institute. 23 August 2004. Archived from the original on 2008-06-12. Retrieved 8 July 2021. OSI is supporting Packet Clearing House in the development of open-source software tools which assist Internet service providers in optimizing the routing of their traffic, reducing the cost and increasing the performance of Internet service as delivered to the public. The 'PeerMaster' toolset functions as a matchmaking service for ISPs, allowing the individuals within each ISP who are responsible for negotiating network interconnections to find each other quickly and easily, and facilitating the interconnection transaction. The NetFlow analysis portion of the toolset goes one step further, analyzing ISPs' traffic flow and prioritizing the other ISPs, other countries, and other regions with which the ISP has the greatest degree of mutual traffic, allowing them to make better-informed network interconnection choices.