On Jun 7, 2016, at 10:22 AM, Ca By <cb.list6@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tuesday, June 7, 2016, Cryptographrix <cryptographrix@gmail.com> wrote:
As I said to Netflix's tech support - if they advocate for people to turn off IPv6 on their end, maybe Netflix should stop supporting it on their end.
It's in the air whether it's just an HE tunnel issue or an IPv6 issue at the moment, and if their tech support is telling people to turn off IPv6, maybe they should just instead remove their AAAA records.
(or fail back to ipv4 when v6 looks like a tunnel)
I think you need to reset your expectations of a free tunnel service.
he.net tunnels are a toy for geeks looking to play with v6. In terms of Netflix subcriber base, it is amazing insignificant number of users.
If it’s so insignificant, why did Netflix go to the effort to implement blocking based on address ranges associated with those tunnels?
At the end of the day, anonymous tunnels, just like linux, are not supported by Netflix. And, he.net tunnel users are hurting ipv6 overall just like 6to4 by injecting FUD and other nonesense complexity.... For a toy.
I disagree. Calling he.net tunnels a toy is absurd. It’s a link, just like any other link, over which IPv6 can be transmitted. You can argue that it’s a lower quality link than some alternatives, but I have to tell you I’ve gotten much more reliable service at higher bandwidth from that link than from my T-Mobile LTE service, so I’d argue that it is a higher quality service than T-Mobile. It’s not the only link I have for my IPv6 packets, in fact, it is one of three links over which my IPv6 packets are able to travel.
Move on to a real issue instead of beating this dead horse.
So we should start beating on unreliable LTE services instead? ;-) Owen
CB
On Tue, Jun 7, 2016 at 9:22 AM Mark Felder <feld@feld.me <javascript:;>> wrote:
On Jun 6, 2016, at 22:25, Spencer Ryan <sryan@arbor.net <javascript:;>>
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 <javascript:;>