I know who you have and it's easily found who you use. 

I was implying exactly what "ML" said". 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Matt Hoppes" <mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> 
To: "Mike Hammett" <na...@ics-il.net> 
Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2018 9:24:41 AM 
Subject: Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?) 

Multiple providers. I don’t think I should publicly name them for various 
reasons. You are a smart man though and can probably figure it out from BGP 
peering tables. 

> On May 29, 2018, at 10:17, Mike Hammett <na...@ics-il.net> wrote: 
> 
> Is that PennRen\Kinber? 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----- 
> Mike Hammett 
> Intelligent Computing Solutions 
> 
> Midwest Internet Exchange 
> 
> The Brothers WISP 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> 
> From: "Matt Hoppes" <mattli...@rivervalleyinternet.net> 
> To: "Lamar Owen" <lo...@pari.edu> 
> Cc: nanog@nanog.org 
> Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2018 8:27:17 AM 
> Subject: Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?) 
> 
> I am incredibly rural in Pennsylvania and pay about $.50 per megabit. 
> 
>>> On May 29, 2018, at 09:23, Lamar Owen <lo...@pari.edu> wrote: 
>>> 
>>> On 05/28/2018 06:13 PM, Matthew Petach wrote: 
>>> Your 200mbit/sec link that costs you $300 in hardware 
>>> is going to cost you $4960/month to actually get IP traffic 
>>> across, in Nairobi. Yes, that's about $60,000/year. 
>> I live in the US of A, and this is what 200Mb/s roughly would cost me as 
>> well here in Rural Monopoly-land. Rural ILEC also has the CATV business, 
>> and, well, they are _not_ going to run cable up here. I've actually priced 
>> 150Mb/s bandwidth from the ILEC over the years; in 2003 the cost would have 
>> been about $100,000 per month. As of five years ago 10Mb/s symmetrical cost 
>> roughly $1,000 per month, the lion's share of that being per-mile NECA 
>> Tariff 5 transport costs. 
>> 
>> The terrain here prevents fixed wireless. The terrain also prevents 
>> satellite comms to the Clarke belt (mountain to the south with trees on US 
>> Forest Service property in the line of sight). I get 1XRTT in one room of my 
>> house when the humidity is below 70% and it's winter, and once in a blue 
>> moon 3G will light up, but it's not stable enough to actually use; it's the 
>> speed of dialup. If I traipse about a hundred yards up the mountain to the 
>> south (onto US Forest Service property, so, no repeater for me) I can get 
>> semi-usable 4G; nothing like being in the middle of the woods with an active 
>> black bear population trying to get a usable signal. 
>> 
>> I'm paying $50 per month for 7/0.5 DSL (I might add that they provide 
>> excellent DSL that has been extremely reliable) from the only ISP available 
>> in the area. 
>> 
>> I remember a usable web experience not too long ago on 28.8K/33.6K dialup 
>> (it was quite a while before said ILEC got a 56K-capable modem bank). DSL 
>> started out here at 384k/128k. On the positive side, we have a very low 
>> oversubscription ratio, so I actually get the full bandwidth the majority of 
>> the time, even video streaming. I also know all the network engineers there, 
>> too, and that also has its advantages. 
>> 
>> (Yes, I am aware that rural living is a choice, and there are things worth a 
>> great deal more than bandwidth, that it's a tradeoff, etc.) 
>> 
>> So it's not just '3rd-world' countries with expensive bandwidth. 
>> 
> 

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