Agreed. I find it silly that as a US citizen on my US-bank-paid-for Netflix account with US physical address information suddenly cannot watch things when travelling I legally could if I were standing in another place. On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 4:09 PM, Cryptographrix <cryptographrix@gmail.com> wrote:
I have a VPN connection at my house. There's no way for them to know the difference between me using my home network connection from Hong Kong or my home network connection from my house.
Are they going to disable connectivity from everywhere they can detect an open VPN port to, also?
If they trust my v4 address, they can use that to establish historical reference. Additionally, they can fail over to v4 if they do not trust the v6 address.
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 4:05 PM Spencer Ryan <sryan@arbor.net> wrote:
There is no way for Netflix to know the difference between you being in NY and using the tunnel, and you living in Hong Kong and using the tunnel.
*Spencer Ryan* | Senior Systems Administrator | sryan@arbor.net *Arbor Networks* +1.734.794.5033 (d) | +1.734.846.2053 (m) www.arbornetworks.com
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 4:03 PM, Cryptographrix <cryptographrix@gmail.com
wrote:
Same, but until there's a real IPv6 presence in the US, it's really annoying that they haven't come up with some fix for this.
I have no plans to turn off IPv6 at home - I actually have many uses for it, and as much as I dislike the controversy around it, think that adoption needs to be prioritized, not penalized.
Additionally, I think that discussing content provider control over regional decisions isn't productive to the conversation, as they didn't build the banhammer (wouldn't you want to control your own content if you had made content specific to regional laws etc?).
I.e. - not all shows need to have regional restrictions between New York (where I live) and California (where my IPv6 /64 says I live).
I'm able to watch House in the any state in the U.S.? Great - ignore my intra-US proxy connection.
My Netflix account randomly tries to connect from Tokyo because I forgot to shut off my work VPN? Fine....let me know and I'll turn *that* off.
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 3:49 PM Spencer Ryan <sryan@arbor.net> wrote:
I don't blame them for blocking a (effectively) anonymous tunnel broker. I'm sure their content providers are forcing their hand. On Jun 3, 2016 3:46 PM, "Cryptographrix" <cryptographrix@gmail.com> wrote:
Netflix needs to figure out a fix for this until ISPs actually provide IPv6 natively.
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 3:13 PM Blair Trosper <blair.trosper@gmail.com
wrote:
Confirmed that Hurricane Electric's TunnelBroker is now blocked by Netflix. Anyone nice people from Netflix perhaps want to take a crack at this?
On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 2:15 PM, <mike.hyde1@gmail.com> wrote:
> Had the same problem at my house, but it was caused by the IPv6 connection > to HE. Turned of V6 and the device worked. > > > -- > > Sent with Airmail > > On June 1, 2016 at 10:29:03 PM, Matthew Kaufman ( matthew@matthew.at ) > wrote: > > Every device in my house is blocked from Netflix this evening due to > their new "VPN blocker". My house is on my own IP space, and the outside > of the NAT that the family devices are on is 198.202.199.254, announced > by AS 11994. A simple ping from Netflix HQ in Los Gatos to my house > should show that I'm no farther away than Santa Cruz, CA as microwaves > fly. > > Unfortunately, when one calls Netflix support to talk about this, the > only response is to say "call your ISP and have them turn off the VPN > software they've added to your account". And they absolutely refuse to > escalate. Even if you tell them that you are essentially your own ISP. > > So... where's the Netflix network engineer on the list who all of us can > send these issues to directly? > > Matthew Kaufman >