I've had my dual-100g-connected Amazon ACEv2 caches for over a year now. With my ~55,000 subs I saw every Thursday night for NFL/TNF usage at 15 gbps X2 (so 30 gbps total) and one day in late November (thanksgiving probably) I saw 25 gbps x2 (so 50 gbps) usage! -Aaron On 4/4/2024 6:08 PM, Paul Bradford wrote:
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@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.
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@nanog.org> *On Behalf Of *Aaron Gould *Sent:* Thursday, April 4, 2024 4:36 PM *To:* Eric Dugas <edugas@unknowndevice.ca> *Cc:* nanog@nanog.org *Subject:* Re: Netskrt - ISP-colo CDN
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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@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/
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