14. Content & DNS analysis summary
Nowadays Internet „belongs” to Google & facebook
~60% total traffic
Messaging, video, voice services are Integrated in Google,
facebook
ISP’s may become shortly a „dumb pipes”
http://telecom.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/internet/funny-pictures-can-wait-facebook-now-says-content-is-the-king/47337649
15. Content & DNS analysis summary
cont.
Do you have IPv6-only customers?
Monitor IPv4/IPv6 latency on your end
Google can „control” your network
Google can blacklist ASN (No AAAA for Google services) in case
of „bad” IPv6 latency to Google services
It may lead to NAT64 storm (native IPv6 becomes IPv4 only!)
https://www.google.com/intl/en_ALL/ipv6/statistics/data/no_aaaa.txt
18. Net Neutrality? Not for ISP’s (wiki)
Net neutrality (also network neutrality, Internet neutrality, or net
equality) is the principle that Internet service providers and
governments should treat all data on the Internet the same, not
discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site,
platform, application, type of attached equipment, or mode of
communication. The term was coined by Columbia University
media law professor Tim Wu in 2003, as an extension of the
longstanding concept of a common carrier.[1][2][3][4]
A widely cited example of a violation of net neutrality principles was
the Internet service provider Comcast surreptitiously slowing uploads
from peer-to-peer file sharing applications using forged packets.[5]
Research suggests that a combination of policy instruments will help
realize the range of valued political and economic objectives central to
the network neutrality debate.[6]
Combined with strong public opinion,
this has led some governments to regulate broadband internet
services as a public utility, similar to electricity, gas and water supply.[7]
19. SixOrNot
Introduction
SixOrNot is a Firefox extension
which makes it easy for you to
identify when the website you're
connecting to supports the current
generation Internet Protocol
(version 6). It also allows you to see
a list of all the servers contacted to
load a page, along with the IP
address your browser connected to
to do so. DNS information about
each server is also available so that
you can see if a site could
potentially be loaded via IPv6.