Google as CDN – No Big Deal, But a Big Deal

Craig Labovitz, at Arbor Networks, a company that makes packet inspection gear, released a great article about how much traffic Google serves.

It has a few key points that the content delivery, content, and telco companies should note:

  1. Google is deploying cache servers in ISPs
  2. Google generates upwards of 5% of all internet traffic
  3. Upwards of 60% of Google’s traffic is delivered via peering

None of this should come to any surprise to anyone who has talked with me about how the Internet works, or how CDN works. Anyone who generates a lot of traffic is a good candidate to take advantage of peering with end-user ISPs. Doing so will help improve quality and reduce cost to the ISP. Google, by definition, is a CDN since they are routing traffic and server usage to a best server based on a user request and taking into account many factors in this decision.

But why is this controversial? Peering by large content owners and CDNs has been happening since the dawn of the internet. CDNs have been building and growing for over a decade.

The lesson here, if anything, is that we are still at the very beginning of the true revolution of internet usage, since we still get so little content, in such short bursts, at such low resolution compared to what could be possible in the future. Web pages are still small, the percentage of total video consumed at HD (1080p) resolution via the internet is still small. Interactivity and applications are still primitive compared to the immersive potential of the future – we still can’t watch a live broadcast of U2 in 1080p flawless quality from a concert in Europe, or have our doctors do a check up via videoconferencing so we don’t have to trek through a bad weather day to a doctor’s office.

Google’s efforts, while mildly interesting, are still really only the beginning. Good job to them for making large scale work to their, and our, advantage.

Steve Lerner

Written by Steve Lerner

As General Manager of RampRate, Steve leads client engagements that include sourcing of datacenters, IP transit, and content delivery (CDN). Steve runs benchmarking and operations analysis projects to help clients assess their current levels of spend, service, and efficiency. He is a noted speaker on internet infrastructure and media technology, and has advised hundreds of financial firms with analysis of technology markets. Prior to joining RampRate in 2006, Steve held a series of leadership positions at cutting edge internet infrastructure companies, including VP of Operations and Media Technology at Speedera Networks, the second largest pure-play CDN ever built, which was acquired by Akamai in 2005. Steve holds an MBA from Columbia University and a BA in Economics from the University of California at Santa Cruz.

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This entry was posted on Monday, March 22nd, 2010 at 6:04 pm and is filed under CDN & Streaming. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “Google as CDN – No Big Deal, But a Big Deal”

  1. April 3, 2010 at 1:17 pm

    The ISPs or telco dont benefit as the speed improve, there is more demand for video etc. what is needed is for the isp to localise the video cache

  2. April 7, 2010 at 3:44 pm

    A video cache is not a complete solution- media has rights, metadata, and quality management that need central administration- so a video cache alone won’t solve this. A more sophisticated CDN approach is needed.

  3. April 8, 2010 at 2:33 am

    Steve,

    1080p is only one of 19 HD formats. And the resolution is not what matters….what matters the most, regarding streaming video, is the compression / wrapper used.

    Most HD you watch on TV is 1080i or 720p. 1080p is coming…but slowly.

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