Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?)

2018-06-16 Thread nanog
On 06/16/2018 10:13 PM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> Sadly, it's just falling on deaf ears. Silicon Valley will continue to think 
> they know better than everyone else and people outside of that bubble will 
> continue to be disadvantaged. 

What, again ?
Encryption is what is best for the most people.
The few that will not use it can disable it.

No issue then.


Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?)

2018-06-16 Thread Mike Hammett
But privacy! *sigh* 

People may just have to know how to turn the proxy on and off. It's a 
requirement we wouldn't dare consider in the US, but if you're in the middle of 
nowhere and you can get megabit or higher speeds (instead of dialup) if you 
learn how to turn a proxy on and off... you'll learn quickly. 

Sadly, it's just falling on deaf ears. Silicon Valley will continue to think 
they know better than everyone else and people outside of that bubble will 
continue to be disadvantaged. 




- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

- Original Message -

From: "Lee Howard"  
To: nanog@nanog.org 
Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2018 9:55:18 AM 
Subject: Re: Impacts of Encryption Everywhere (any solution?) 



On 05/28/2018 10:23 AM, Mike Hammett wrote: 
> Has anyone outside of tech media, Silicon Valley or academia (all places 
> wildly out of touch with the real world) put much thought into the impacts of 
> encryption everywhere? 
See "Effects of Pervasive Encryption on Operators." 
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-mm-wg-effect-encrypt/?include_text=1 

TLS1.3 uses ephemeral keys, so even if you own both endpoints and 
everything in the middle, you can't decrypt a flow without some 
yet-to-be-developed technology. 
QUIC encrypts everything, and of course, HTTPS. 



> So often we hear about how we need the best modern encryption on all forms of 
> communication because of whatever scary thing is trendy this week (Russia, 
> NSA, Google, whatever). HTTPS your marketing information and generic 
> education pieces because of the boogeyman! 
> 
> However, I recently came across a thread where someone was exploring getting 
> a one megabit connection into their village and sharing it among many. The 
> crowd I referenced earlier also believes you can't Internet under 100 
> megabit/s per home. 

Yeah. Too many people forget that most of the Internet is mobile, and 
mobile != LTE. People also assume packet loss < 0.1%, latency <100ms, 
and power reliability >99%. 
> However, this could be wildly improved with caching ala squid or something 
> similar. The problem is that encrypted content is difficult to impossible for 
> your average Joe to cache. The rewards for implementing caching are greatly 
> mitigated and people like this must suffer a worse Internet experience 
> because of some ideological high horse in a far-off land. 
> 
> Some things certainly do need to be encrypted, but encrypting everything 
> means people with limited Internet access get worse performance OR mechanisms 
> have to be out in place to break ALL encryption, this compromising security 
> and privacy when it's really needed. 
> 
> To circle back to being somewhat on-topic, what mechanisms are available to 
> maximize the amount of traffic someone in this situation could cache? The 
> performance of third-world Internet depends on you. 
> 
A proxy is all I've thought of. But it means everything is dependent on 
the proxy, and it's even in-path for things that really should be 
encrypted, like email and messaging. 
I can't imagine why the weather should be encrypted, when everyone in a 
location wants to know the forecast. 

Lee 




RE: WC 2018 impact on network yet

2018-06-16 Thread Keith Medcalf


People stream HD Video in the Water Closet?  I don't think my 80" HDTV would 
fit in there!

---
The fact that there's a Highway to Hell but only a Stairway to Heaven says a 
lot about anticipated traffic volume.

>-Original Message-
>From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces+kmedcalf=dessus@nanog.org] On
>Behalf Of Radu-Adrian Feurdean
>Sent: Saturday, 16 June, 2018 07:00
>To: nanog@nanog.org
>Subject: Re: WC 2018 impact on network yet
>
>On Fri, Jun 15, 2018, at 12:23, Ong Beng Hui wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> With every operators looking at high quality HD video stream,
>anyone
>> feeling the impact for WC 2018 yet ?
>
>It's too early. For now only minor changes (e.g. 2 hours ago, when
>local team had their first match we saw levels of traffic slightly
>higher then usual for that time of the day, but lower than usual
>prime-time). We expect things to change later in the competition.





Re: WC 2018 impact on network yet

2018-06-16 Thread Radu-Adrian Feurdean
On Fri, Jun 15, 2018, at 12:23, Ong Beng Hui wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> With every operators looking at high quality HD video stream, anyone 
> feeling the impact for WC 2018 yet ?

It's too early. For now only minor changes (e.g. 2 hours ago, when local team 
had their first match we saw levels of traffic slightly higher then usual for 
that time of the day, but lower than usual prime-time). We expect things to 
change later in the competition.