IXPN, Medallion DC Harp on Internet Peering, Interconnectivity

IXPN, Medallion DC Harp on Internet Peering, Interconnectivity

Emma Okonji

Internet eXchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN), a membership-based organisation that provides network interconnectivity platform and Medallion Datacenters, West Africa’s most connected facilities, last week in Abuja, had stakeholders workshop on internet peering and interconnectivity.

The workshop was centered around the impact of Internet eXchange Point of Nigeria and Medallion Datacenters on the ICT industry, and ultimately, the benefits of peering and interconnection to prospective organisations.

Explaining what peering and interconnectivity between various stakeholders will bring to the industry, the Chief Executive Officer of IXPN, Mr. Muhammed Rudman, noted that peering would enhance Internet connections for citizens and organisations alike, which would at the end of the day, help the economy to thrive.

“Peering and interconnectivity through internet exchanges address the challenges of traffic by ensuring the shortest possible route is used to reach a given destination. It keeps traffic as local as possible, which improves performance and enables faster connections between networks, facilitating high-speed data transfer, lower latency, increased bandwidth and improved fault tolerance,” he said at the workshop that attracted over 100 stakeholders, mostly network engineers and administrators.

He also called for a concerted effort to host of content locally, stressing that doing so will provide additional revenue opportunities to local Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and Datacenters, which in turn creates more jobs and serves as a driver for economic growth.

“Nigeria cannot continue to pay money to foreign hosting companies as it constitutes capital flight, puts more strain on Nigeria’s foreign earnings, slows the growth of local data centers and delays the development of new ones,” he said.

Warning that hosting data overseas has several implications on the economy, end users, Nigeria’s security, legal and businesses, Rudman argued that if the content would be hosted locally in any of the data centres, it would have direct and indirect impact on the economy in terms of job creation and revenue for the government.

Also speaking, the Chief Executive Officer of Medallion Datacenters, Ikechukwu Nnamani asserted that the strong growth of Africa’s digital economy would drive demand for more data centers on the continent. Thus, there is a need to have more data centers to be able to accommodate the surge.

“While we call for local hosting of content and data, there is also the need to build more data centers to be able to accommodate the strong growth of Africa’s digital economy,” Nnamani said.

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