Look at the Steam cache project, the generic downloader can also cache Windows 
Updates and most gaming services. I imagine Windows Updates would eat a lot of 
traffic.

https://github.com/steamcache



From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Mike Hammett
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2018 8:23 AM
To: 'NANOG list' <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?)

Has anyone outside of tech media, Silicon Valley or academia (all places wildly 
out of touch with the real world) put much thought into the impacts of 
encryption everywhere? So often we hear about how we need the best modern 
encryption on all forms of communication because of whatever scary thing is 
trendy this week (Russia, NSA, Google, whatever). HTTPS your marketing 
information and generic education pieces because of the boogeyman!

However, I recently came across a thread where someone was exploring getting a 
one megabit connection into their village and sharing it among many. The crowd 
I referenced earlier also believes you can't Internet under 100 megabit/s per 
home.

Apparently, the current best Internet the residents of the village can get is 
40 kilobit/s. Zero oversubscription gets a better service to up to 25 homes. 
Likely that could be stretched to at least 50 or 100 homes and be better than 
what they currently have. Forget about streaming video, let's just focus on web 
browsing and messaging.

However, this could be wildly improved with caching ala squid or something 
similar. The problem is that encrypted content is difficult to impossible for 
your average Joe to cache. The rewards for implementing caching are greatly 
mitigated and people like this must suffer a worse Internet experience because 
of some ideological high horse in a far-off land.

Some things certainly do need to be encrypted, but encrypting everything means 
people with limited Internet access get worse performance OR mechanisms have to 
be out in place to break ALL encryption, this compromising security and privacy 
when it's really needed.

To circle back to being somewhat on-topic, what mechanisms are available to 
maximize the amount of traffic someone in this situation could cache? The 
performance of third-world Internet depends on you.



-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com<http://www.ics-il.com>

Midwest-IX
http://www.midwest-ix.com<http://www.midwest-ix.com>

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