RE: Issue with Geolocation in Virginia US

2019-03-09 Thread Raja Sekhar Gullapalli
Thanks Luke. Let me submit the request to maxmind to change it. How you got below know info. Is there a way to check. you should probably also seek out getting geo updated on at least 3 different ones you have 3 different results. 129.46.232.65 ip2location Raleigh NC neustar

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread bzs
I'm old. I was online @MIT-AI the night the pentagon (probably DISA?) started broadcasting messages that basically the ARPAnet was going down for "emergency testing" blah blah. I thought it was a prank so just kept working. Another message or two and it all went dead, CONNECTION LOST Couldn't

Re: Free Open Source Network Operating Systems

2019-03-09 Thread Tim Jackson
SONiC https://azure.github.io/SONiC/ On Sat, Mar 9, 2019, 10:09 AM Colton Conor wrote: > What free, opensouce, network operating systems currently exist that run > on whitebox broadcom or other merchant silicon switches? > > I know Cumulus is very popular, but I don't believe they have a free

Re: ICMPv6 "too-big" packets ignored (filtered ?) by Cloudflare farms

2019-03-09 Thread Masataka Ohta
Mark Andrews wrote: > Why should the rest of the world have to put up with their inability > to purchase devices that work with RFC compliant data streams. Because RFCs specifying IPv6 are broken. That is, as PTB is generated against multicast, we should block them. Then, not blocking PTB

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Tom Beecher
Business ask to create near real time, location aware notification system to increase user engagement and refine ad tracking : "That's a a great idea, we can do that!" Government ask to create near real time, location aware notification system for public safety warnings : "THAT IS A BRIDGE TOO

Re: SLAAC in renumbering events

2019-03-09 Thread Masataka Ohta
Fernando Gont wrote: There are a number of scenarios where SLAAC hosts may end up using stale configuration information. That's because SLAAC maintain address configuration state in fully distributed manner without any authority, which is the worst possible way to do so. The only reasonable

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Sean Donelan
On Sat, 9 Mar 2019, Seth Mattinen wrote: On 3/9/19 12:03 PM, Sean Donelan wrote: Automatically geo-locating indoor smart speakers and smart TVs is more difficult, but if advertisers can get geolocation information from AT, Amazon, Apple, Google, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, etc; why can't

Technical bandwidth requirements for Emergency Alerts

2019-03-09 Thread Sean Donelan
Some background information for network engineers unfamilar with emergency alerts. In the United States, there are approximately 500,000 emergency alerts nationwide a year, not counting another million or so test alerts. Only about 7,500 emergency alerts are severe enough to activate public

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Shivaram Mysore
I personally believe apps should not be emitting generic emergency alerts. Devices should - ex TV, mobile phone, etc. if one is watching Hulu, MLB, NFL, or any other app it should not matter as long as device is notifying the user. /Shivaram ::Sent from my mobile device:: > On Mar 9, 2019, at

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 3/9/19 12:03 PM, Sean Donelan wrote: Automatically geo-locating indoor smart speakers and smart TVs is more difficult, but if advertisers can get geolocation information from AT, Amazon, Apple, Google, Sprint, T-Mobile, Verizon, etc; why can't emergency alerts? There's no technical

Re: Free Open Source Network Operating Systems

2019-03-09 Thread Steve Noble
Brandon Martin wrote on 3/9/19 12:18 PM: On 3/9/19 11:36 AM, Jason Lixfeld wrote: I could be making this up, but my understanding is that the Broadcom SDK is not free, and without the SDK, hardware interaction is limited. It likely is not. What would be interesting to know, however, is if

Re: Free Open Source Network Operating Systems

2019-03-09 Thread Brandon Martin
On 3/9/19 11:36 AM, Jason Lixfeld wrote: I could be making this up, but my understanding is that the Broadcom SDK is not free, and without the SDK, hardware interaction is limited. It likely is not. What would be interesting to know, however, is if the terms under which it (or at least the

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Sean Donelan
On Sat, 9 Mar 2019, Brandon Martin wrote: Any reason the ISP has to be directly involved in this? The relevant government organization originating the alert could easily have a service to make that information available to the public via some standard API (maybe they do)? ISPs with Akamai

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread valdis . kletnieks
On Sat, 09 Mar 2019 14:14:27 -0500, Brandon Martin said: > I think the solution to this is perhaps maybe that network operators > could "help" by building in some useful features to their network > without explicitly supporting EAS or otherwise. After all, we (or at > least most of us)

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Brandon Martin
On 3/9/19 2:04 PM, Sean Donelan wrote: Cell phones have ATIS and 3GPP standard for emergency alerts. Cable set-top boxes have SCTE standards for emergency alerts. TVs with antennas have ATSC standards for emergency alerts.  Analog radio still relies on broadcasters transmitting emergency

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Sean Donelan
On Fri, 8 Mar 2019, Matt Erculiani wrote: The world is evolving and I don't think interrupting streaming is necessary given all the other ways there are to alert a population. The headline: TLDR; Technology changes, so should emergency alerts. Think ahead to 2029. The long story:

Re: Free Open Source Network Operating Systems

2019-03-09 Thread Jason Lixfeld
I could be making this up, but my understanding is that the Broadcom SDK is not free, and without the SDK, hardware interaction is limited. At one time ONL was a free ONIE NOS but sans SDK. https://github.com/opencomputeproject/OpenNetworkLinux

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Clayton Zekelman
I think the point is they should have built a system that doesn't need to be blocked - it should always effectively and appropriately deliver timely and relevant alert messages. As taxpayers and citizens, we deserve better. At 11:32 PM 08/03/2019, Peter Kristolaitis wrote: It can be

Free Open Source Network Operating Systems

2019-03-09 Thread Colton Conor
What free, opensouce, network operating systems currently exist that run on whitebox broadcom or other merchant silicon switches? I know Cumulus is very popular, but I don't believe they have a free version that runs on whitebox switches right? Only on a virtual machine from what I can tell. I

Re: SLAAC in renumbering events

2019-03-09 Thread William Allen Simpson
On 3/8/19 6:32 AM, Fernando Gont wrote: Folks, If you follow the 6man working group of the IETF you may have seen a bunch of emails on this topic, on a thread resulting from an IETF Internet-Draft we published with Jan Žorž about "Reaction of Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) to

Re: Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts?

2019-03-09 Thread Mike Hammett
Seems a bit extreme... - Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com Midwest-IX http://www.midwest-ix.com - Original Message - From: "Peter Kristolaitis" To: nanog@nanog.org Sent: Friday, March 8, 2019 10:32:18 PM Subject: Re: Should Netflix and