You may have run in to this, but Hulu also limits (or they were before I
canceled the service personally) the number of “homes” you can use it at,
and they tracked this by IP. So, if your customer’s IP changes more than a
few times a year they will not be able to use the service they’re paying
for.

Last time I was responsible for said problem I was looking at alternate
solutions to do CGNAT on, and reducing the domains from an architecture
perspective…obviously they both have big repercussions.

On Tue, Oct 8, 2024 at 7:10 PM Michael Thomas <m...@mtcc.com> wrote:

>
> On 10/8/24 1:19 PM, Jon Lewis wrote:
> > I'm not so sure about that.  Our customers are all offered dual-stack
> > (DHCPv6, DHCPv6-PD).  Do any of the common streaming services support
> > v6 yet?  Last I checked, Hulu did not.
>
> I just checked and it looks like Youtube and Netflix do which is a
> pretty good chunk. Not sure about Amazon Prime. I was actually thinking
> about social media which i think it's pretty well supported.
>
> Mike
>
>
> >
> > On Tue, 8 Oct 2024, Michael Thomas wrote:
> >
> >> Hi Jon,
> >>
> >> So is this easier than what the mobile carriers are doing -- 464xlat,
> >> isn't it? Probably a sizeable portion of the traffic would be running
> >> native v6, right? Obviously it wouldn't run into these sorts of
> >> problems.
> >>
> >> Mike
> >>
> >> On 10/8/24 12:19 PM, Jon Lewis wrote:
> >>>  We started rolling out CGNAT about 6 months ago.  It was smooth
> >>> sailing
> >>>  for the first few months, but we eventually did run into a number of
> >>>  issues.
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >  Jon Lewis, MCP :)              |  I route
> >  Blue Stream Fiber, Sr. Neteng  |  therefore you are
> > _________ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_________
>

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