Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Albert Bierstadt Bridal Veil Falls Yosemite

Albert Bierstadt Bridal Veil Falls YosemiteJohannes Vermeer Woman with a Pearl NecklaceJohannes Vermeer Mistress and Maid
of the time, the unregulated heart of the global Internet is a mysterious place, governed by rules laid out in those confidential contracts between private parties. This time, though, Sprint took the unusual step of a filing lawsuit in Virginiaits roots back to 2002, when Cogent asked Sprint to exchange Internet traffic at no charge to either party, a common arrangement between similarly sized networks. At the time, Web traffic traveling between Cogent and Sprint was being sent through a third network, which Cogent found silly. A direct connection would be far more efficient.
Sprint said it would agree to a direct link--but only if Cogent paid for the privilege. No chance, retorted Cogent. A swap would benefit them both equally, Cogent argued, why should one side pay? state court, alleging that Cogent breached the terms of a previously secret contract that spelled out how the two companies would trade traffic between their networks. Cogent quickly counter-sued, laying out a very different version of events. The Cogent-Sprint feud traces

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