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It involves three elements:
Most peering points are located in colocation centres, where the different network operators 'co-locate' their Points of Presence.
In the early days of the Internet, a single backbone network existed in the form of first the ARPANET and later the NSFNET. All other networks connected with one another via the Internet backbone, and routing information was conveyed between the backbone and the other networks via the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP).
The modern Internet no longer has a single backbone in the traditional sense. Rather, it has many backbones, consisting of the individuals backbones of various commercial ISPs and private networks. They are all connected at many different peering points. Their operations all rely upon the Border gateway protocol (BGP) which allows them to coordinate the operation of the Internet without the need for any central authority.
The act of peering can be done as:
Providers with large traffic volumes, often known as Tier 1 carriers, tend to peer without charge with other large providers, and charge for peering with smaller ISPs.
Providers with smaller traffic tend to converge at Internet exchange points, which provides them with a commercially neutral venue for peering.
Peering as a customer-provider relationship is most common at the bottom tiers of the Internet business. The latter is not a true peering relationship; rather, the customer pays for transit via their upstream ISP.