Mark, That would be bad. At least in my case. My addresses (192.159.10.0/24, 192.124.40.0/23, 2620:0:930::/48) are not from a known residential ISP or mobile ISP. However, they are within my household and nowhere else. There’s no valid reason for Netflix to block them. They are not a server or proxy host. They are not being used to subvert geo-fencing. They’re just my home addresses that I have had for many years and use in order to have stable addressing across provider changes. Owen
On Jun 7, 2016, at 9:21 AM, Mark Felder <feld@feld.me> wrote:
On Jun 6, 2016, at 22:25, Spencer Ryan <sryan@arbor.net> wrote:
The tunnelbroker service acts exactly like a VPN. It allows you, from any arbitrary location in the world with an IPv4 address, to bring traffic out via one of HE's 4 POP's, while completely masking your actual location.
Perhaps Netflix should automatically block any connection that's not from a known residential ISP or mobile ISP as anything else could be a server someone is proxying through. It's very easy to get these subnets -- the spam filtering folks have these subnets well documented. /s
-- Mark Felder feld@feld.me