Actually, no, that won't work anyway. All of the services (except Akamai, and I will admit that both MTS and Shaw have their own Akamai caches anyway) use anycast IP addresses, so you literally "can't get there from here" unless you (or your ISP) peers at MBIX. If you use those IPs, you'll be magically directed at the "closest" node that your ISP has access to - usually in Calgary, Toronto, or Chicago.
As I said, MBIX is not intended for individual consumers; it's intended for the ISPs that serve individual consumers, and medium-to-large businesses that see value in having faster access to the various DNS services, NTP services, etc., and/or the other members' networks.
For a slightly artificial example, a Credit Union might consider joining MBIX in order to be able to say that your secure banking transactions never leave the province, never mind the country. I'm quite confident that neither the NSA nor CSE have installed a tap at MBIX - that would be difficult to hide from us. (Of course, since neither MTS nor Shaw peer at MBIX yet, it's still statistically very likely that the NSA is listening to your secure banking transactions no matter who you use. Of course, we all know HTTP/S is completely secure. And they only collect metadata anyway, right? *cough*) Mind you, at the same time, that hypothetical CU now has access to a high-accuracy, high-availability NTP cluster without having to acquire their own stratum-1 time source, and they could host their DNS on CIRA's D-ROOT system for guaranteed global availability, and... and... and...
One other thing to note about MBIX: it's what's called a "Default-Free Zone". MBIX is *not* an ISP. MBIX will not route your traffic to the internet at large. MBIX can only get your traffic from one MBIX member to another. Of course, many MBIX members are ISPs, so it's easy to make transit agreements with any number of them.
-Adam
On 2016-04-15 20:46, Hartmut W Sager wrote:
I suppose, with MBIX's permission (perhaps for a special "individual use only" fee), you could simply use MBIX's NS IP addresses in your NS settings. You would get some of the benefits, like avoiding the DNS query leaving Winnipeg if it's locally resolvable by MBIX.
But really, what business does the average joe have in using MBIX services for free, when MBIX is a clearly-stated "members only" service (at $1200 per year), not a public freebie. Sounds like a typical stingy Winnipegers' attitude.
Hartmut W Sager - Tel +1-204-339-8331, +1-204-515-1701, +1-204-515-1700, +1-810-471-4600, +1-909-361-6005
On 15 April 2016 at 16:10, Trevor Cordes <trevor@tecnopolis.ca mailto:trevor@tecnopolis.ca> wrote:
On 2016-04-15 Adam Thompson wrote: > For the average end user using their ISPs nameserver, it's... well, > out-of-scope. But MBIX isn't for individuals, it's for ISPs and Is there a way to leverage this (MBIX NS) for the average joe (me) who runs their own resolving/caching BIND on Shaw? _______________________________________________ Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca <mailto:Roundtable@muug.mb.ca> http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
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