Both Comcast and CenturyLink have similar “features” if you use their DNS 
servers. But they don’t override you if you choose another DNS server…

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Richard Stovall
Sent: Friday, January 22, 2016 12:48 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] HughesNet and AWS

That is so friggin' awesome it hurts.



On Fri, Jan 22, 2016 at 12:19 PM, Damien Solodow 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Having a fun issue, and figured I’d see if anyone else has run into something 
like it and has a solution. ☺

One of our SaaS apps is hosted on AWS, and AWS has the lovely habit of using 
very short DNS TTLs and changing IPs frequently. Normally not that big a deal.
However, it looks like a satellite provider used by a number of our users 
(HughesNet) has a wonderful little “feature” called DNS Acceleration.

This looks to be a local DNS caching server (which ignores the provided TTL) 
that runs on their modem. This means that the user almost always gets outdated 
information from DNS for this SaaS app, which prevents them from accessing it.

There doesn’t appear to be a way in the modem UI to turn off this “feature”, 
and it looks to intercept *all* outbound DNS traffic, so even if I set the 
client or their router to use a different DNS server it still gets intercepted.

Anyone run into this or have a useful contact at HughesNet to sort this out?

DAMIEN SOLODOW
Senior Systems Engineer
317.447.6033<tel:317.447.6033> (office)
317.447.6014<tel:317.447.6014> (fax)
HARRISON COLLEGE
500 North Meridian St
Suite 500
Indianapolis, IN 46204-1213
www.harrison.edu<http://www.harrison.edu/>


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