F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Use browser extensions or local storage to save cached content from those sites.

Use browser extensions or local storage to save cached content from those sites.

Use browser extensions or local storage to save cached content from those sites.

J
JessDu67
Junior Member
33
07-29-2016, 11:50 AM
#1
Looking for a reliable caching solution suitable for an ISP that can handle YouTube, Facebook, websites, and streaming. You mentioned Squid Proxy didn’t work well for those sites. Consider exploring alternatives like Varnish Cache or Cloudflare, which are optimized for performance and stability across various content types.
J
JessDu67
07-29-2016, 11:50 AM #1

Looking for a reliable caching solution suitable for an ISP that can handle YouTube, Facebook, websites, and streaming. You mentioned Squid Proxy didn’t work well for those sites. Consider exploring alternatives like Varnish Cache or Cloudflare, which are optimized for performance and stability across various content types.

T
ToCuteForP0rn
Junior Member
10
07-31-2016, 05:31 PM
#2
It wouldn't be feasible to store every YouTube or Facebook video. That would require millions of terabytes of space.
T
ToCuteForP0rn
07-31-2016, 05:31 PM #2

It wouldn't be feasible to store every YouTube or Facebook video. That would require millions of terabytes of space.

W
WF_Catt
Posting Freak
761
07-31-2016, 06:41 PM
#3
Caching HTTPS isn't possible due to encryption. The ISP can't determine the content being transmitted. The only solution is to replace all site certificates with your own, which would alert the user and need their explicit approval before proceeding. Some strict HTTPS sites, such as most Google domains including YouTube, wouldn't function this way at all (especially in browsers that follow these security rules). In summary, full transparency isn't achievable.
W
WF_Catt
07-31-2016, 06:41 PM #3

Caching HTTPS isn't possible due to encryption. The ISP can't determine the content being transmitted. The only solution is to replace all site certificates with your own, which would alert the user and need their explicit approval before proceeding. Some strict HTTPS sites, such as most Google domains including YouTube, wouldn't function this way at all (especially in browsers that follow these security rules). In summary, full transparency isn't achievable.