Netskrt - ISP-colo CDN

Paul Bradford pbradford at breezeline.com
Thu Apr 4 23:08:42 UTC 2024


I have some on my network.  I don't think they populate content from their
own cdn network, but it comes from Amazon.   interestingly for the NFL
super bowl, while paramount+ streamed the game, on Amazon Prime Video you
could "Watch super bowl on paramount+ Via Prime.".  that did actually drive
users to using the netskrt caches.

They seem to work OK.  TNF in 6 months will tell us more.  :)



On Thu, Apr 4, 2024 at 6:14 PM John Stitt <jstitt at hop-electric.com> wrote:

> The website says they are part of the Streaming Video Technology Alliance.
>
>
>
> I wonder if this is a prepackaged Open Cache box.
>
>
>
> https://opencaching.svta.org/
>
>
>
> We also don’t appear to have had any traffic from them.  Not much on the
> peeringdb for the USA ASN either.
>
>
>
> BGP.tools shows they have upstreams with each ASN, and are on Ohio IX with
> AS53471, but not really any peers anywhere.  Looks like Cogent and Zayo for
> upstreams and only peer I see is AS1239 (Sprint Wireline (Cogent))
>
>
>
> John Stitt
>
>
>
> *From:* NANOG <nanog-bounces+jstitt=hop-electric.com at nanog.org> *On
> Behalf Of *Aaron Gould
> *Sent:* Thursday, April 4, 2024 4:36 PM
> *To:* Eric Dugas <edugas at unknowndevice.ca>
> *Cc:* nanog at nanog.org
> *Subject:* Re: Netskrt - ISP-colo CDN
>
>
>
> You don't often get email from aaron1 at gvtc.com. Learn why this is
> important <https://aka.ms/LearnAboutSenderIdentification>
>
> 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 <https://www.peeringdb.com/org/36226>) 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.
>
>
> Eric
>
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 4, 2024 at 4:00 PM Aaron Gould <aaron1 at gvtc.com> wrote:
>
> 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
>
>
>
> CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not
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>
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