Hop-by-hop bottleneck localization showed that in more than 71% of measured paths the first lossy hop is located deep inside China (beyond the border), with only 34.45% of bottleneck hops coinciding with the GFW hop as detected by RST injection probing — suggesting Chinese ISP infrastructure underprovisioning rather than GFW intervention as the primary cause.
From 2020-zhu-characterizing — Characterizing Transnational Internet Performance and the Great Bottleneck of China
· §5, Figure 13
· 2020
· Measurement and Analysis of Computing Systems
Implications
Circumvention proxies placed at China's border (e.g., at IXPs or peering points) will not resolve the bottleneck for the majority of paths — relay traffic must be terminated inside China or routed via Hong Kong to avoid the deep-inland congestion.
AS-path selection matters: China Telecom's GIA tier (IP range 59.43.x.x) consistently outperforms standard ChinaNet Paid-Peer and China Access tiers; circumvention infrastructure vendors should specifically target GIA-capable upstream providers.