Company snapshot

CategoryChina TelecomNgenix
Statusactiveactive
Founded
Headquarters
Website
Docs

Overview

China Telecom Corporation Limited, a state-owned telecommunications provider, operates one of China’s largest content delivery networks, leveraging its extensive infrastructure to optimize content distribution. Founded in 2002, it serves major internet portals and enterprises, including Tencent QQ, Baidu, Sina, and Weibo. The CDN is integrated with China Telecom’s backbone networks, ChinaNet and CN2, to deliver low-latency services across China and globally. It caters to businesses requiring compliance with China’s strict internet regulations, such as ICP licensing, and supports a range of applications from web content to streaming media.
Ngenix is a Russian provider of CDN and cloud infrastructure services, focusing on web resource acceleration, DDoS protection, and video content delivery. Founded in 2007, it serves businesses primarily in Russia and CIS countries, offering solutions for e-commerce, media, and gaming industries. Its platform emphasizes high availability and security for web and streaming services. Customers include regional enterprises seeking localized CDN solutions with robust video streaming capabilities. Ngenix operates a public status page for real-time service monitoring.

Network & Architecture

China Telecom CDN operates points of presence (PoPs) across 11 countries, with 15 cities including Sydney, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Amsterdam. Its domestic strength lies in partnerships with local ISPs like China Unicom and Zenlayer, ensuring robust connectivity within mainland China. The network supports over 1–5 Tbps in traffic capacity, with 788 IP ranges in China alone. Limitations include restricted operations in the U.S. due to FCC orders citing national security concerns, impacting its ability to serve American customers directly. Its global reach is strong in APAC but less comprehensive in EMEA and LATAM compared to providers like Cloudflare or Akamai.
Ngenix operates points of presence (PoPs) across Russia, including Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Krasnoyarsk, and Vladivostok, as well as select locations in Europe (Germany, Belarus, Armenia) and Asia (Kazakhstan). Its network is optimized for the Russian market, with strong regional coverage in the Central, Siberian, and Far East Federal Districts. The architecture supports content caching, load balancing, and DDoS mitigation. Limited global reach may restrict performance for users outside Russia and CIS regions.

Feature comparison

FeatureChina TelecomNgenix
waf
bot_mitigation
ddos
rate_limit
http3_quic
tls13
tiered_cache
origin_shield
instant_purge
stale_while_revalidate
stale_if_error
image_optimization
video_vod
video_live
drm
hls_dash_packaging
websockets
signed_urls
edge_compute
functions
kv_storage
api_first
realtime_logs
log_push
terraform

Legend: ✓ = Supported, ✗ = Not supported, — = Not listed

Pricing

Pricing details are not publicly disclosed and typically involve enterprise-level contracts tailored to customer needs. No pay-as-you-go (PAYG) or free-tier options are documented. Businesses should contact China Telecom directly for quotes, as pricing varies based on traffic volume and service requirements.
Ngenix uses an enterprise-only pricing model with custom contracts based on traffic and service needs. No public per-GB pricing is available, and there is no free tier or pay-as-you-go option. Pricing details require contacting their sales team. For more information, visit https://ngenix.net/pricing/.

Integrations & DevEx

China Telecom CDN provides API-first access for configuration and management, with real-time logging for performance monitoring. Terraform or specific SDKs for CI/CD pipelines are not documented. Migration tools or support for transitioning from other CDNs are not publicly detailed, but partnerships with providers like Conversant suggest integration capabilities for international businesses.
Ngenix provides APIs for content routing, reporting, and partner integration (NGENIX Platform API, NGENIX Reports API). Real-time logs support monitoring, but there is no public support for Terraform or other IaC tools. SDKs and CI/CD integrations are not documented. The NGENIX Multidesk portal aids developers with service management, and a public status page (https://status.ngenix.net/) offers outage alerts.

When it fits

  • Businesses needing a China-licensed CDN to comply with ICP regulations for mainland China operations.
  • Enterprises serving high-traffic portals or streaming services in APAC, leveraging China Telecom’s ISP partnerships.
  • Organizations requiring robust DDoS protection and image/video optimization for Asia-centric audiences.
  • Businesses targeting Russia and CIS markets needing localized CDN and video streaming.
  • Enterprises requiring robust DDoS protection and web application firewall for regional traffic.
  • Media companies seeking video-on-demand and live streaming with HLS/DASH and RTMP support.

When it doesn’t

  • Companies primarily targeting U.S. markets, due to FCC restrictions and operational bans.
  • Small businesses or startups seeking transparent PAYG pricing or free-tier options.
  • Users needing extensive global PoP coverage outside APAC, where competitors like Cloudflare excel.
  • Companies needing global CDN coverage beyond Russia and CIS regions.
  • Small businesses or startups looking for pay-as-you-go or free-tier pricing models.
  • Developers requiring extensive IaC support like Terraform or broad SDK ecosystems.

History & Notes