On Monday, 2002-04-29 at 08:43 MST, Beckmeyer <beck@pacbell.net> wrote:
Is anybody here doing NAT for their customers?
Tony Rall:
If you're NATing your customers you're no longer an ISP. You're a sort-of-tcp-service-provider (maybe a little udp too). NAT (PAT even more
Depends on scale and application. We have lots of customers that we NAT, one way or another. And a lot more that we don't. Some customers WANT to 'just see out' and they like all the 'weird stuff turned off'. Sometimes it's a box at the customers end, sometimes it's nat'd IP's on the dial-up/ISDN/FracT1/T1/Wireless connection itself. Saying we are not an ISP because we do some NAT is a little harsh. Giving the customer options and making things work (when done right, and explained properly.... we have no sales droids) is good business and I think good for the 'net. It gives the clueless (and sometimes cluefull) just a little more isolation. What is wrong is NAT'ing when you should not.