nanog mailing list archives

Re: Leasing /22


From: Lee Howard <lee () asgard org>
Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2018 17:05:10 -0500

IPv6 still solves your problem if you add any of NAT64, DS-Lite, 464xlat,
MAP-T, MAP-E. 

Yes, you’re NATing, but only the traffic to places like Hulu, and it will
decrease over time. And while you need addresses for the outside of the
translator, you don’t need as many (or to get more as frequently).

Lee

On 1/20/18, 10:20 AM, "NANOG on behalf of Mike Hammett"
<nanog-bounces () nanog org on behalf of nanog () ics-il net> wrote:

It's not really scraping the bottom of the barrel if your customers are
using Hulu and they're complaining because Hulu isn't responsive to
fixing their problems (geo-location, v6, etc.).




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com

----- Original Message -----

From: "Ca By" <cb.list6 () gmail com>
To: "Michael Crapse" <michael () wi-fiber io>
Cc: "NANOG list" <nanog () nanog org>
Sent: Friday, January 19, 2018 9:54:23 PM
Subject: Re: Leasing /22

On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 5:48 PM Michael Crapse <michael () wi-fiber io>
wrote: 

Has Hulu, or a thousand other content distributors considered IPv6?
Because 
you can't even tunnel to ipv4 without setting off VPN alarms with HULU.


Hulu? Really scraping the bottom of the barrel of content providers that
dont use ipv6 these days.

Netflix and Youtube support v6 ... and thousand of others (thousands just
on Cloudflare where v6 is default on)

About 80% of my traffic is native e2e v6, mostly google / youtube / fb /
netflix / apple / amazon — but your mix may vary.





On 19 January 2018 at 18:38, Andrew Kirch <trelane () trelane net> wrote:

On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 4:59 PM Ryan Gard <ryangard () gmail com> wrote:

We're on the hunt yet again for an additional /22 to lease, and are
wondering what the best options are out there?

Our usual suspects that we've reached out to in the past seem to be
plum 
out... Any recommendations?

Thanks! 

-- 
Ryan Gard 

Have you considered IPv6?







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