> On Sep 11, 2018, at 21:58 , Christopher Morrow <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 9:06 PM Jerry Cloe <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: > OpenDNS, or anyone for that matter, should never see 100.64/10 ip's. If they > do, something is wrong at the source, and OpenDNS wouldn't be able to reply > anyway (or at least have the reply route back to the user). > > > maybeopendns peers directly with such an eyeball network? and in that case > maybe they have an agreement to accept traffic from the 100.64 space?
They’d only be able to do one such agreement per routing environment. Managing that would be _UGLY_ for the first one and __UGLY__ at scale for anything more than one. It also pretty much eliminates potential for geographic diversity and anycast for a provider in a local geography. Certainly not something I’d choose to do if I were OpenDNS unless someone arrived with a very large truck full of gold, diamonds, or other valuable hard assets. Owen

