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With Australia’s newest domain namespace launching next month – .au direct – auDA will be holding a webinar to update users on tools and resources to help get their .au. The webinar will set out how to apply for a .au direct domain name, demonstrate the new tools designed to support .au direct decision making, and how auDA has been working to drive awareness of the new namespace.  

Members may need to make some DNS changes or could get extra calls to the helpdesks if customers start seeing these strange new URLs on the interwebs. 

Date: Thursday 3rd March 2022
Time: 1:15pm – 2:00pm AEDT
Location: Virtual 

If you are interested in attending the auDA webinar, register here 

We are excited to share with members news of the safe arrival of Nick’s baby girl – Aria Pratley – on Wednesday 16th February. Both mum and baby are doing well, and we wish their family all the very best with this new chapter! 

Thank you to all Corporate and Affiliate members who have completed our member survey. As a member-run association, your input is vital to ensuring that we provide the network you want and need. As we have seen a good amount of growth across the exchanges, we are wanting to expand our network into Hobart, Darwin and other data centres. We’re also keen to get your input on the content you would like to see on the network, so if you haven’t completed the survey yet, please get to it! The survey closes on Friday 4th March 2022, 5:00pm AEDT.  

One of our staff members caught up with founding member, James Bromberger, to learn more about the history of WA-IX. Here’s what James had to say: 

What was the fundamental reason for building WA-IX?
WAIA, the former name for IAA, was founded in 1995 principally to represent the civil liberties of Internet users and organisations that wished to have private communications. With network engineers and stakeholders from the fledgling ISP and Telco sector involved, it became clear there was a need for a non-profit, carrier-neutral peering exchange. Up until this point, the incumbent telco in Australia had been charging volume based carriage fees for inbound and outbound traffic; this was making connectivity expensive for those who received traffic – which possibly was not solicited or requested by them. For example, if someone sent you a large email, you’d be paying to receive it, and the sender may not have optimised the email down to cost less (think of attached images not being scaled to a smaller resolution/file size). 

Did you think that WA-IX would be as large as it is today? Why did you think that?
I recall the first organisations being the ISPs, as they were shouldering much of the comms bills from the growing ISP subscriber base, but it was when some of the commercial organisations, particularly in the mining sector, started to connect to the exchange we saw there was a real solid future for wider customer use. CoLo providers extended the peering fabric to multiple facilities, and then more and more end organisations started to swell the throughput. Given a fixed, predictable monthly cost, the service expanded rapidly. 

What was the uptake of the exchange like in the first ten years?
Within a few years, nearly all of the smaller ISPs had connected locally in Perth. It seemed to be a right of passage to connect in and then subsequently be consumed by iiNet! 

What would you say was WA-IX’s most significant contribution to the Internet in Australia today?
Ensuring that B-party charging was not extended to the Internet bill of consumers was a key element of opening up the Internet to consumers; in a country of the size of Australia, making communications more affordable with less personal cost risk to consumers meant the adoption surged in the community. This drove scale, and further reduced cost, to the point where consumers were being offered unlimited volume download (and upload) plans. Prior to this, traffic quotas were commonplace, and consumers would make decisions if it was worth sending or downloading content. With large content providers and CDNs putting cache nodes within the peering network meant that consumers would start to use large amounts of local traffic without making a conscious decision to do so, further driving the ISP-incurred bandwidth costs down. 

With the expansion to multiple peering fabrics across Australia, we saw the fundamental economics of the digital online ecosystem become more commodity, accessible, and thus spurring the digital skills; most people now have email, browse websites, do online banking, and order groceries. If the adoption of online services had continued to be throttled by a single organisation, then society would still be using fax machines, and the ability to comfortably isolate during the pandemic would have been much harder. 

There’s still progress to be done in the telecommunications space in Western Australia. For customers in the north of Western Australia, there is very little (i.e. no) peering locally between telcos; that traffic often comes down to Perth, jumps across providers, and then transits back to the North of Western Australia, a round trip time that is at times a performance impact on applications. Having a small community peering in Port Hedland, Carnarvon, Geraldton, Broome and asking the ISPs servicing these areas (typically via NBN these days) to exchange traffic locally could have a cost-saving and performance improvement, but thus far, we don’t see this happening. 

[CEO comment – if you agree with James’ view on the utility of regional peering, don’t forget to complete our survey!] 

A big thank you to all those members who responded to our survey on where our next IX should go. The survey is still open, and we are still keen to hear from you. We’re seeing good growth across all the exchanges, so it is definitely time to expand the footprint some more. Even if you aren’t likely to join us in Darwin or Hobart, please let us know which additional content or data centres on existing IXes you’d like to see. Our aggregate traffic is creeping closer and closer to daily heights of 800Gbps, so if there’s anything we can get on board that will boost us even further, let me know. VIC-IX participants have already noticed the recent increase in Google availability! 

More thanks also go to the members connected to NSW-IX that suffered through the rolling firmware upgrade we put through last weekend. Our technical team are most certainly glad to see the last of that bug (touch wood!) as it was darned inconvenient. It will be progressively rolled out across the rest of the exchanges as need, resourcing and notice allows. 

Over the last month, we’ve managed to hit our advocacy targets and coordinated a joint letter to the Minister for Home Affairs on the review of electronic surveillance legislation. With the upcoming election likely to have national security as a major theme, we thought it important to make sure industry took a united stance, so we teamed up with Communications Alliance, AIIA, Internet Australia, IoTAA, Digital Rights Watch and EFA. Other organisations were also approached who couldn’t make the short time frame for the letter, but as in the case of the ACS took an even stronger stance in their own submission. There are a number of issues with the proposal, from definitional problems with the meaning of ‘communications’ to the approaches to granting access to content and metadata. I’m sure we all agree the current regimen is fragmented, out of date and ridiculously complex, with holes the size of the last big pwnage. It’s a topic I’m sure we’ll hear more about over the coming months, so expect more FUD and noise. 

We’re also expanding the team some more to make sure we can deliver on the software development we have planned with the Member Portal. Check our careers page if you are looking for a coding job or know someone good to refer. This is a truly great place to work and makes a genuine contribution to the internet! 

Speaking of appointments, I have just joined the Advisory Board of the Electrical Engineering School at the University of NSW where I will contribute to the training program for telecommunications engineering and related disciplines. Apparently the number of students in this area has been going backwards (and not just for UNSW) for some time, despite the growth in industry need. It’s a discipline that has given me great joy and genuine career satisfaction, so how do we make it more attractive to students? 

Don’t forget to nominate for the Public Policy Advisory Panel, too. It’s a great way to give back to the association and the industry more broadly. Nominations are still open. 

Drop me a line if you want to follow up on anything. Or why not drop by our North Sydney office if you’re in the area? 

All the best
Narelle 

We are excited to announce that we’re currently exploring opportunities to expand our network. Based on the team’s strategic planning session earlier this month, we thought it best to ask our Corporate and Affiliate members directly – where should we expand?

The survey is designed to determine where you would like us to build the next IX and if you would like to see any new points of presence on existing IXes. We’re also thinking of expanding into regional areas and would appreciate your thoughts on the locations.

As a member-run association, this survey gives us clear input on the best upgrade and expansion paths for our network. If you are a Corporate or Affiliate member, please take the time to complete the survey by Friday 4th March 2022, 5:00pm AEDT. So, go on – tell us where to go!

 

As always, December is a crazy month! We managed to achieve many things as a team, including the successful recruitment of a new policy officer, organising several member events, making numerous submissions and planning for all the wonderful things we have coming up next year.

As we are currently down a peering engineer, the tech team have been working even harder to ensure our network runs smoothly. If you know anyone who may be interested in working with us, please get in contact at admin@internet.asn.au

In December, Sophia Joo joined our team as the new Policy Officer. A recent graduate from the University of Sydney with a combined bachelor’s degree in Law and Arts majoring in Political Economy, she is knowledgeable, hardworking and ready to make her mark on the Internet industry.

Her work experience as a paralegal for Yahoo Australia and completing an internship at the Environmental Defenders Office has equipped her really well for this new role.

When she’s not busy working, you will most likely find her at the beach enjoying the sun, surf and hot chips!

To kick off the year, our team got together online and mapped out what the year would look like for the association. It was a highly productive meeting looking at all areas of our work, including what we would like to achieve in 2022 and how we plan to achieve it.

This year, we look forward to improving our network through a series of upgrades, continuing to make submissions to government to represent your interests, continuing to provide educational opportunities and resources, and bringing you more valuable content through our social media channels, newsletter and website.

Our association will hit a very significant milestone this year, celebrating 25 years of WA-IX! Covid pending, we hope to host an event sometime this year to commemorate. If you are keen to help us celebrate this year, keep an eye out for our emails and social media announcements.

We take pride in being an association that cares for members. If you have any suggestions on how we can improve, please get in touch with us at admin@internet.asn.au

Here’s to a great 2022!

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