Company snapshot

CategoryDeutsche TelekomGoogle Cloud CDN
Statusactiveactive
Founded
Headquarters
Website
Docs

Overview

Deutsche Telekom, a major telecommunications provider based in Bonn, Germany, offers CDN services as part of its broader network infrastructure. The company leverages its extensive European network to provide content delivery, primarily targeting businesses in the EMEA region. Its CDN services focus on reliable delivery for web content and applications, with a strong emphasis on security features like DDoS protection and WAF. Deutsche Telekom serves enterprises, media companies, and public sector clients, particularly those requiring robust connectivity within Europe. The service is integrated with its telecom offerings, making it a natural choice for customers already within its ecosystem.
Google Cloud CDN is a content delivery network integrated with Google Cloud. It sits behind Google Cloud Load Balancing to cache and serve HTTP(S) content from edge locations. Typical users are teams already running workloads on Google Cloud that want CDN caching, signed URLs, modern TLS, and consistent operations across the platform. The service emphasizes policy-driven caching, fast invalidation, and security integration through Cloud Armor. Pricing follows a pay-as-you-go model that varies by region and usage.

Network & Architecture

Deutsche Telekom operates a network with points of presence (PoPs) primarily concentrated in Europe, with limited public details on the exact number or global reach. Its infrastructure benefits from deep peering relationships and high-capacity backbone networks, ensuring low-latency delivery in the EMEA region. The CDN is optimized for European markets but may lack the global footprint of providers like Cloudflare or Akamai. It leverages its telecom-grade infrastructure for reliability but is less focused on regions like APAC or LATAM.
Google Cloud CDN uses Google’s global edge and backbone to terminate HTTP(S) traffic close to end users and fetch from origins over Google’s private network. Coverage spans major regions in North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific, with additional presence in other geographies. Strengths include integration with Google Cloud Load Balancing, Anycast routing, and private backbone connectivity from edge to origin. Limitations can include fewer CDN-specific knobs than specialist CDNs and feature gaps for advanced video packaging.

Feature comparison

FeatureDeutsche TelekomGoogle Cloud CDN
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 for Deutsche Telekom’s CDN are not publicly disclosed and typically require enterprise-level contracts. The model appears to be commitment-based, tailored to large organizations rather than offering pay-as-you-go or free-tier options. For specific pricing, contact their sales team via the official website.
Pay-as-you-go pricing with regional rates for cache egress and request charges. Total cost depends on geography, volume, and cache behavior. See cloud.google.com/cdn/pricing for current details.

Integrations & DevEx

The CDN supports API-first integrations, allowing programmatic control and monitoring. Realtime logs are available for performance tracking. However, there is no public support for Terraform, SDKs, or advanced CI/CD integrations. Migration tools or import capabilities are not well-documented, suggesting a focus on enterprise customers with custom onboarding.
Deep integrations include Google Cloud Load Balancing for traffic ingress, Cloud Armor for WAF and DDoS protections, Cloud Storage and Compute Engine for origins, and Cloud Logging and Monitoring for observability. Infrastructure as code is supported via Terraform, and a REST API enables CI/CD automation.

When it fits

  • Enterprises already using Deutsche Telekom’s telecom services, seeking integrated CDN solutions.
  • Businesses focused on the EMEA region needing reliable, low-latency content delivery.
  • Organizations prioritizing telecom-grade security with WAF and DDoS protection.
  • Workloads already hosted on Google Cloud that need an integrated CDN layer.
  • Teams standardizing on Cloud Load Balancing, Cloud Armor, and Cloud Logging.
  • Organizations that want signed URLs, HTTP/3, fast purge, and policy-driven caching.
  • Buyers who prefer Terraform and API-first management across cloud services.

When it doesn’t

  • Companies requiring extensive global PoP coverage, especially in APAC, LATAM, or Africa.
  • Small businesses or startups looking for pay-as-you-go or free-tier CDN options.
  • Users needing advanced features like image optimization, video streaming, or edge compute.
  • Multi-cloud environments seeking provider-neutral or MultiCDN routing.
  • Advanced video workflows needing packaging, DRM, or low-lency live features.
  • Use cases requiring built-in image optimization pipelines.
  • Projects that rely on WebSocket-heavy bidirectional traffic at the edge.

History & Notes