Section VI - Service Level Agreement

This Service Level Agreement (SLA) applies only to orders for GDL Service (i) received by Company on or after January 1, 2004, and (ii) for which the committed Term is at least twelve (12) months.

 

1. Definitions: For purposes of this SLA, the following definitions will apply:

 

1.1 "End-to-End Network Availability" is determined monthly and is calculated by multiplying 100 times a fraction, the numerator of which is the Total Minutes in a Calendar Month less the total minutes of Non-Availability, and the denominator of which is the Total Minutes in a Calendar Month, which formula is shown immediately below:

100 x Total Minutes in a Calendar Month - Total Minutes of Non-Availability

Total Minutes in a Calendar Month

1.1.1 "Total Minutes in Calendar Month" is deemed to be the following, based on the number of days in the applicable month:

Month in Days

Total Minutes*

31 Day Month

44,640

30 Day Month

43,200

29 Day Month

41,760

28 Day Month

40,320

* 24 hours x number of days x 60 minutes.

1.1.2 "Non-availability" is defined as a Priority 1 Network Outage as described in Section 3 of this SLA.

1.2 "Mean Time To Repair" or "MTTR" is defined as the average time to restore GDL Service during a Network Outage. MTTR only applies to Priority 1 Network Outages. MTTR is measured as a monthly average of the time taken to repair all Priority 1 Trouble Tickets on a specific GDL circuit. The length of each Network Outage on a specific circuit is totaled at the end of each billing month and divided by the corresponding number of Network Outages for that circuit for which a Priority 1 Trouble Ticket was opened during that billing month. MTTR is calculated as follows:

Cumulative length of Network Outage(s) per circuit

Total Number of Trouble Tickets per billing month per circuit

1.3 "Customer Provided Access" refers to situations where the local loop is purchased by Customer through a provider other than Company and is billed directly to the Customer.

1.4 "Outage" is an unscheduled period in which GDL Service is interrupted or unavailable for use.

1.5 "Type 1 Access" is when the local access portion ("local loop") of the GDL Service is furnished by Company.

1.6 "Type 3 Access" is when Company orders the local loop from a local access provider.

1.7 "GDL Service" for the purpose of this SLA includes all network elements provided or ordered by Company to complete an end-to-end digitalinternational private line service provisioned on Company's global network.

1.8 "Service Degradation" means that the GDL Service is degraded to some extent but not to the point of being completely unavailable (e.g., slow data transmission).

1.9 "Trouble Ticket" is the official method used by Customer to communicate an Outage or Service Degradation to Company.

 

2. Eligibility: GDL ordered on or after January 1, 2004, and subject to at least a twelve (12) month minimum Term commitment are eligible for this SLA. This SLA applies only to point-to-point circuits in Global Tier A, Global Tier B, and Global Tier C locations and excludes non-standard services such as International Cable Leases, Minimum Investment Units (MIUs), International Backhaul, Linear and unprotected service. A list of current Global Tier A, Global Tier B, and Global Tier C locations are listed below, which locations are subject to change at Company's sole discretion. Further, this SLA only applies to Type 1 Access and Type 3 Access (i.e., Customer Provided Access is not covered by this SLA). Customers co-located with Company are deemed to have Type 1 Access.

GLOBAL TIER A LOCATIONS

Australia

Hong Kong, China

Singapore

Austria

Ireland

South Korea

Belgium

Italy

Spain

Canada

Japan

Sweden

Denmark

Luxembourg

Switzerland

France

Netherlands

United Kingdom

Finland

New Zealand

U.S. Mainland and Hawaii

Germany

Norway

 

GLOBAL TIER B LOCATIONS

Czech Republic

Malaysia

Portugal

Greece

Philippines

Puerto Rico

Guam

Poland

Russia

Hungary

 

Taiwan

 

GLOBAL TIER C LOCATIONS

Argentina

Colombia

Venezuela

Brazil

Panama

Mexico

Chile

Peru

US Virgin Islands

 

3. Reporting of an Outage

 

3.1 If Customer experiences an Outage, Customer must notify the appropriate Company Customer Service Center and open a Trouble Ticket as further described herein. The SLAs described herein only apply to Trouble Tickets that are designated as "Priority 1" in accordance with Section 3.2 below. If the Outage carries over to the next month, the Outage period is applied in the month in which GDL Service was restored. In order to receive a credit, Customer must (a) report the Outage by immediately opening a Priority 1 Trouble Ticket in order to receive the highest level of the SLAs described herein, and (b) submit in writing the following information no later than fifteen (15) days from the end of the calendar month in which GDL Service was restored:

  • Ticket ID number
  • Location A and Location B Addresses
  • Date and time Trouble Ticket was opened and GDL Service was restored by Company
  • Circuit/ ID(s) for the corresponding Outage

3.2 Outage and Service Degradation Priorities

Priority

Criteria

Priority 1

Total loss of GDL Service.

Degraded GDL Service (GDL Service is degraded to the extent where the Customer is unable to use it and is prepared to release it for immediate testing).

Priority 2

Degraded GDL Service (GDL Service is degraded but Customer is able/still wants to use it and is not prepared to release it for immediate testing).

Priority 3

Non-GDL Service affecting (a single non-circuit specific quality of service inquiry).

3.3 If the Customer does not initiate a Trouble Ticket with Company in accordance with this Section 3 and/ or does not release the circuit to Company for testing, Company will not be obligated to issue, and Customer will not be entitled to receive, an SLA Credit (as defined below) for the Outage.

 

4. Service Levels

 

4.1 SLAs include End-to-End Network Availability and MTTR performance objectives. Both performance objectives are subject to qualification as organized by global tier and access type. Performance is measured by the degree of Company's control of the circuit and stability of the ocean and terrestrial cable systems. Examples include -

Country Pairing

Global Tier Pairing

Access Type Pairing

Service Level

Australia & Singapore

A/A

Type1/Type1

Platinum

Ireland & United Kingdom

A/A

Type1/Type3

Gold

France & Germany

A/A

Type3/Type3

Gold

Japan & Malaysia

A/B

Type1/Type3

Silver

United States & Brazil

A/C

Type1/Type3

Bronze

Taiwan & Philippines

B/B

Type3/Type3

Silver

Russia & Mexico

B/C

Type3/Type3

Bronze

Panama & Peru

C/C

Type3/Type3

Bronze

4.2 Service Levels

 

Platinum

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Access Type Pairing

Type1/Type1

Type1/Type3
Type3/Type3

Type3/Type3

Type3/Type3

Global Tier Pairing

A/A

A/A

B/A or B/B

C/A, C/B, C/C

 

 

 

 

 

End-to-End Network Availability

100%*

99.8%*

99.8%*

99.5%*

 

 

 

 

 

MTTR

4 Hours

5 Hours

8 Hours

8 Hours

*Circuit Availability % Translated to Available Minutes

Percentage by Days per Month

Minutes of Availability

Minutes of Non-Availability

99.8% for 31 days

44,551

89

99.8% for 30 Days

43,114

86

99.8% for 29 Days

41,676

84

99.8% for 28 Days

40,239

81

 

 

 

99.5% for 31 days

44,417

223

99.5% for 30 Days

42,984

216

99.5% for 29 Days

41,551

209

99.5% for 28 Days

40,118

202

4.3 For any billing month in which Company fails to meet an SLA and Customer is entitled to an SLA Credit, the SLA Credit will be applied against the circuit's monthly recurring charges (MRC) excluding all taxes and Type 3 access charges. Customer may claim Network Availability and/or MTTR credits in a given month. SLA Credits will accrue up to a maximum of forty percent (40%) of the MRC associated with the affected circuit. CPE charges are excluded from the SLAs.

 

5. Credits

 

5.1 End-to-End Network Availability Credit Schedule ("Availability Credits"):

Non-Availability

Credit as a % of MRC

From Minutes

To Minutes

Platinum

Gold

Silver

Bronze

0

86

10%

0%

0%

0%

87

120

15%

10%

5%

0%

121

216

20%

10%

5%

0%

217

360

25%

15%

10%

5%

361

640

30%

20%

10%

5%

641

720

30%

20%

10%

10%

> 720

 

30%

20%

10%

10%

5.2 Mean Time to Repair Credit Schedule ("MTTR Credits")

Outage to Repair Time

Credit as a % of MRC

From Hour: Min: Sec

To Hour: Min: Sec

Platinum

Gold

Silver

Bronze

4:00:00

4:59:59

4%

0%

0%

0%

5:00:00

7:59:59

10%

4%

0%

0%

8 Plus

 

10%

4%

4%

4%

NOTE: MTTR Credit(s) can be applied in addition to the Availability Credit(s), provided, however, the total amount of all Credits (i.e., both Availability Credits and MTTR credits relative to a particular GDL circuit) cannot exceed forty percent (40%) of the MRC associated with such circuit.

EXAMPLE: Assume a GDL circuit links (or pairs) two Global Tier A countries with Type 1 Access at both ends of the circuits. Customer experiences two outages equal to non-availability of 490 minutes (8 hours and 16 minutes) during a calendar month. Assume further that the MTTR was as follows:

MTTR Trouble Ticket 1 = 4.7 hrs
MTTR Trouble Ticket 2 = 3.46 hrs
Average MTTR = 4.08

Customer would be entitled to the following Credit percentage against the MRC associated with the affected circuit: 30% (Network Availability Credit Percentage) + 4% (MTTR Credit Percentage) = 34% Credit.

5.3 At any time following the third consecutive month of Company's failure to meet the SLAs, Customer may terminate the affected circuit without liability except for charges incurred prior to termination of such circuit by providing Company at least thirty (30) daysprior written notice. Further, at any time following the third consecutive month of Company's failure to meet the SLAs, Company may terminate this SLA with respect to the affected circuit by providing Customer with at least thirty (30) daysprior written notice.

 

6. Exclusions

 

6.1 The SLAs described herein do not include Outages resulting in whole or in part from one or more of the following causes:

  • Any act or omission on the part of the Customer, its contractors or vendors, or any other entity over which the Customer exercises control or has the right to exercise control.
  • Labor strikes.
  • Natural disasters.
  • Scheduled maintenance on the part of the Customer, its contractors or vendors.
  • Scheduled maintenance on the part of Company that is within Company's maintenance windows.
  • Lapses of Service associated with new installations (i.e., before new Service acceptances by Customer).
  • Lapses of Service or performance issues related to Customer Premises Equipment (CPE).
  • A force majeure event as defined in the Service Agreement between Customer and Company under which the GDL Service is provided.
  • Interruptions during any period where Company or its agent are not allowed access to Customer premises where the access lines are terminated.
  • Master Trouble Tickets opened by Company or by a qualified third party on behalf of Company (e.g., fiber cuts).
  • Customer's use of GDL Service in an unauthorized or unlawful manner.
  • Company disconnects a circuit for non-payment.
  • Periods of Service Degradation.
  • With respect to End-to-End Network Availability (Type 1 Access), any act or omission on the part of any third party including, but not limited to, any local access provider.
  • With respect to End-to-End Network Availability (Type 3 Access) and MTTR, any act or omission on the part of any third party other than a local access provider.
  • Customer inquiry for circuit monitoring purposes only.

 

6.2 In addition to the exclusions described in Section 6.1 above, with respect to International GDL Service, the SLAs described herein do not include Outages resulting in whole or in part from one or both of the following situations:

  • GDL service cross-connected to an IPL circuit.
  • GDL service used to provide access to services like ATM, Frame Relay Service, or Internet services, etc.