I think probably yes, but as not routable beyond your network. It’s space that should never exist in customer networks or the public Internet. And since it’s not publicly routable, I can use it, you can use it, Comcast and Verizon can use it over and over.
So instead of picking some obscure range in RFC1918 space like 10.199.x.x to hand out to your customers and hoping none of them use those addresses internally, you could use the CGN space. I’m sure there is additional stuff that I don’t understand that makes it “carrier grade”. From: John Woodfield Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2015 9:17 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AFMUG] verizon wireless nat So is this address space available for our use? 100.64.0.0/10 John Woodfield, President Delmarva WiFi Inc. 410-870-WiFi -----Original Message----- From: "TJ Trout" <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2015 7:01pm To: [email protected] Subject: [AFMUG] verizon wireless nat Is it me or does verizon wireless nat customers and not allow inbound traffic? i.e. hosting a server, I just setup a mikrotik connected to the internet via a usb modem and I can't even ping or login to it's IP
