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Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: articles/peering-service/about.md
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ms.service: peering-service
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ms.topic: overview
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ms.workload: Infrastructure-services
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ms.date: 01/15/2023
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ms.date: 01/19/2023
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ms.author: halkazwini
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ms.custom: template-overview, engagement-fy23
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---
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With Peering Service, customers can select a well-connected partner service provider in a given region. Public connectivity is optimized for high reliability and minimal latency from cloud services to the end-user location.
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:::image type="content" source="./media/peering-service-about/peering-service-what.png" alt-text="Diagram showing distributed connectivity to Microsoft cloud.":::
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:::image type="content" source="./media/about/peering-service-what.png" alt-text="Diagram showing distributed connectivity to Microsoft cloud.":::
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Customers can also opt for Peering Service telemetry such as user latency measures to the Microsoft network, BGP route monitoring, and alerts against leaks and hijacks by registering the Peering Service connection in the Azure portal.
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Microsoft and partner service providers ensure that the traffic for the prefixes registered with a Peering Service connection enters and exits the nearest Microsoft Edge PoP locations on the Microsoft global network. Microsoft ensures that the networking traffic egressing from the prefixes registered with Peering Service connections takes the nearest Microsoft Edge PoP locations on the Microsoft global network.
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:::image type="content" source="./media/peering-service-about/peering-service-background-final.png" alt-text="Diagram showing Microsoft network and public connectivity.":::
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:::image type="content" source="./media/about/peering-service-background-final.png" alt-text="Diagram showing Microsoft network and public connectivity.":::
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> [!NOTE]
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> For more information about the Microsoft global network, see [Microsoft global network](../networking/microsoft-global-network.md).
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This type of redundancy uses the shortest routing path by always choosing the nearest Microsoft Edge PoP to the end user and ensures that the customer is one network hop (AS hops) away from Microsoft.
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Routing that doesn't use the cold-potato technique is referred to as hot-potato routing. With hot-potato routing, traffic that originates from the Microsoft cloud then goes over the internet.
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