> I've noticed it gets quite murky when dealing with fibre-to-the-premises, particularly in the UK. Although I don't think an ISP would disallow BYOD, I imagine they'd just not be as likely to support it.
In France, I've noticed that some ISPs (Free for FTTH and SFR for FTTC + cable attached to the router) they'll offer the possibility of configuring the provided router in "bridge" mode, where you basically get the external IP to whichever equipment is hooked up to their router.
I've also had FTTH with SFR, which have a separate device which terminates the optical connection (ONT) and speaks ethernet with the main router. I don't remember if the main router was able to work in bridge mode. It was possible to connect your own router to the ONT but you had to jump through hoops [0] to actually receive a working DHCP response.
Bouygues also had the separate device for terminating the optical connection, connected via ethernet to the main router. The only catch was that it talked over vlan 100 for some reason, but other than that it was smooth sailing.
I've never had Orange, but I hear it's a pain to replace the actual router with them.
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[0] IIRC you had to send some custom DHCP options pretending more or less to be an actual SFR router.
In France, I've noticed that some ISPs (Free for FTTH and SFR for FTTC + cable attached to the router) they'll offer the possibility of configuring the provided router in "bridge" mode, where you basically get the external IP to whichever equipment is hooked up to their router.
I've also had FTTH with SFR, which have a separate device which terminates the optical connection (ONT) and speaks ethernet with the main router. I don't remember if the main router was able to work in bridge mode. It was possible to connect your own router to the ONT but you had to jump through hoops [0] to actually receive a working DHCP response.
Bouygues also had the separate device for terminating the optical connection, connected via ethernet to the main router. The only catch was that it talked over vlan 100 for some reason, but other than that it was smooth sailing.
I've never had Orange, but I hear it's a pain to replace the actual router with them.
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[0] IIRC you had to send some custom DHCP options pretending more or less to be an actual SFR router.