Netflix is not supposed to be cacheable by third parties for legal reasons 
that have absolutely nothing to do with routing.
Similar with most streaming services including stupid geolocation usage.
If you have sufficient eyeballs, Netflix will work with you to get a local cache
set up using their devices.  If it is just you and a half dozen neighbors they 
won't.

A far larger problem than the encryption is website design that doesn't cater to
low bandwidth links.  HTML5 is cool but marking a 10mbyte animation as 
non-cachable
and putting it on the front page of a major bank website is a misuse of 
resources.

Mack

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of William Herrin
Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:34 AM
To: Lee Howard <lee.how...@retevia.net>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?)

On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 10:53 AM, Lee Howard <lee.how...@retevia.net> wrote:
> On 06/17/2018 02:53 PM, Brad wrote:
>> While I agree there are unintended consequences every time 
>> advancements are made in relation to the security and stability of 
>> the Internet- I disagree we should be rejecting their 
>> implementations. Instead, we should innovate further.
>
>
> I look forward to your innovations.

The innovation I'd like to see is a multi-level streaming cache.
Here's the basic idea:

Define a network protocol such as "mlcache"

mlcache://data.netflix.com/starwars/chunk12345 is a chunk of some video that 
netflix has. It's encrypted. The client got the decryption key for that chunk 
and instructions on how to load the chunks in what order in an authenticated 
http connection.

The client does not connect to data.netflix.com. Instead, it probes an anycast 
IP address to find the nearest cache. If there is no cache, then it falls back 
on contacting data.netflix.com directly.

If the cache probe returned a unicast IP address for a nearby cache then the 
client asks the cache to retrieve that chunk instead. If lots of folks using 
the cache are watching that particular video, the cache can supply the chunk 
without asking netflix for it again.

If the cache doesn't have the chunk, it contacts the next cache upstream. If 
there is no next cache upstream, it contacts data.netflix.com directly.


The cache is not application-specific. Anything willing to talk the cache 
protocol can use it to fetch chunks of data from any server.

In principle this should work for live streams too. The head end server either 
replies "not yet" or holds the request open until the next chunk of data is 
available. The cache requests the chunk once and supplies it to all clients 
once retrieved. Keep the chunks small enough that the caching process delays 
the live stream by a second or two, no different than the television broadcasts 
do.


Regards,
Bill Herrin



--
William Herrin ................ her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us Dirtside 
Systems ......... Web: <http://www.dirtside.com/>
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