Thanks… and does anyone know the benefit of Netskrt for ISPs that already have native Amazon ACEv2 servers installed?Aaron On Apr 4, 2024, at 4:50 PM, Jesse DuPont <jesse.dup...@celeritycorp.net> wrote:
Right now, Amazon Prime is sponsoring the
deployment of the caches. They deploy in your network and requests
from your IPs (v4 or v6) are redirected to your on-net caches. For
on-demand content, it's loaded nightly (as best they can predict)
and for live (like TNF), it's a one-to-many HLS media server for
participating content.
On 4/4/24 3:36 PM, Aaron Gould wrote:
Thanks... they told me it was free.
-Aaron
On 4/4/2024 4:12 PM, Eric Dugas
wrote:
That name rang a bell so I looked up my emails.
They contacted me last year, they were claiming to be
"working with some of the major streaming brands, such as
Amazon Prime Video, to improve the quality of both VOD and
live streaming while also reducing the load on ISP networks
such as your own.".
Based on my quick research, they have a few
registered ASNs (their peeringdb page) with a few
netblocks but I get 0 traffic from them (we're a sizable
eyeball network). Their origin network might still not be
ready but digging a little bit more, it seems they act as a
third-party video caching solution and not as an origin CDN
so in the end, they're really just trying to sell ISPs and
other types of customers their caching solutions.
Anyone
out there using Netskrt CDN? I mean, installed in your
network
for content delivery to your customers. I understand
Netskrt provides
caching for some well known online video streaming
services... just
wondering if there are any network operators that have
worked with
Netskrt and deployed their caching servers in your networks
and what
have you thought about it? What Internet uplink savings are
you seeing?
Netskrt - https://www.netskrt.io/
--
-Aaron
--
-Aaron
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