On the IP geoloc subject, we (EBOX) actually have multiple pools for QC-based and ON-based customers. When a customer is provisioned, his service address is validated in our system and it auto-populates the Radius profile with a different profile for each provinces e.g. fttn-on-50 or fttn-qc-50. I don't see why we couldn't do this on Telus in the west (we're currently only servicing QC and ON). On the TPIA side, it's a little bit less easy. I could automatically SWIP netblocks from reports we get from the operators to the POI they're configured in. I don't see this as a big issue. Eric On Mar 27 2018, at 6:10 pm, Jean-Francois Mezei <jfmezei_nanog@vaxination.ca> wrote:
Not quite networking but probably relevant. The Canadian province of Québec just introduced a new budget with basically the intent to force foreign digital companies who sell services to Québekers to collect the local value added sales tax and remit those to the QC government.
The goal is to capture tax from Netflix who has so far escaped taxation in Canada by having no legal/physical presence in Canada, no cache servers of its own etc. Netflix does not currently collect province information from customers (or any address info for that matter).
They based many of their arguments on an OECD study (which ironically the Canadian federal government says is not completed yet (as excuse for not proceeding with similar tax).
So foreign digital services will be required to require subscibers enter AND VALIDATE their address so that they have an accurate province field (validation remains to be finalized), and IF they sell more than $30,000 to Québec residents, will be required to self register with QC government to collect local sales tax (and remit to QC government).
The Québec budget expects that validation of address will be based on IP address geolocation or custoemrs send paper bills to prove place of residence.
(Although requiring full address/phone number and sendint this to credit card network for authorization might constitute a better means to validate address).
I suspect the big winners will be VPN services in the USA :-) Because many ISPs span multiple provinces, IP geolocation generally points to their HQ address, not necessarily the province of the subscriber. (This is especially true for DSL in bell Canada wholesale where currently a single point of connection between Bell and ISP allows full reach of all of its DSL territory in QC/ON. For Cable, ISPs require different IP pools for Rogers in Ontario and Vidéotron in Ontario (with a couple of exceptions where Vidéotron has service in a couple fo Ontario towns). In Western Canada, things are harder as Shaw serves BC, AB, SASK and MB.