If devices behind an L3 proxy generate packets that end in the "public" 
Internet or if they get packets originated there, IMHO those devices are also 
part of the Internet not just the proxy, and you also may have that proxy for 
particular protocols but not all.

-Jorge

On Aug 15, 2013, at 9:05 AM, Leo Bicknell <bickn...@ufp.org> wrote:
> 
> That means behind a NAT counts, behind a firewall counts, but a true private 
> network (two PC's into an L2 switch with no other connections) does not, even 
> if they use IP protocols.  Note that devices behind a pure L3 proxy do not 
> count, but the L3 proxy itself counts.
> 

Jorge - CPB49 (Certified Packet Butcher)


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