Anonymous ID: b04173 Oct. 25, 2020, 11:34 p.m. No.11282892   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3155

>>11282732

 

Great IT Anon, can you hang on and entertain our questions?

 

-Are there radio internet options

-Are there ways to use power lines as data connections

-Any direct satellite options, i.e. Elon Musk

-something like a dial up modem, could it bypass ISP's lets say like direct IP connection?

 

dumbfag don't know, just asking

Anonymous ID: b04173 Oct. 25, 2020, 11:45 p.m. No.11283065   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Copied from Stack Exchange:

 

However, large end-point sites can use the same type of setup that those Internet service providers (that in the previous two examples you'd be connecting to) themselves use. Technically, what they do is known as peering with multiple upstream peers (or in some cases, simply peering with multiple peers in the parts of the Internet where the concept of "upstream" does not exist: in core routing, this is the default-free zone). This option is generally not available to individuals and it usually requires being willing to plunk down a fair amount of money on the table. At the very least, you will need to come to a "peering agreement" with at least two large ISPs in your area (you can do it with one, but that's rather pointless except perhaps as a stepping stone), and in order to do so you will likely need a subscriber edge router (this is not the same thing as the home or small business NAT "routers" which are often referred to as just routers, but are really more like gateways than they are like the core routers of the Internet, and are in some contexts referred to as residential gateways even though they aren't used only in residential settings) that can speak the Border Gateway Protocol, and in order to speak BGP you will need to apply for and receive an autonomous system (AS) number. You will also need to contact the Internet Registry in your region (RIPE, ARIN, APNIC, etc.), apply for and receive a globally routable block of IP addresses, and especially if you want IPv4, you are going to have to demonstrate your need for a sufficiently large block of addresses that people aren't going to balk at having that in their routers, possibly even in the default-free zone, as well as demonstrate willingness to pay for the privilege of having those IP addresses assigned to you.