That sounds a little odd,
I have a DNS server hidden away in the network that allows all my
devices across multiple IP's to access iplayer,Netflix,Hulu etc etc with
only a simple DNS bypass, No tunnels required. As for the FYX service
and such if it becomes widespread it will be a lot easier for the
players like Netflix to just nullroute the ISP ranges. As it stands the
users bypassing their checks come from many ranges and many countries
making it very hard to do this but FYX has painted a big target on them
to have their ranges blocked by any content provider that doesn't want
to give them access to their content.
I honestly see the global mode service being effective in the long run,
The amount of publicity the service has gotten with a large client base
is very easy to stop from the content providers perspective and a good
way to show the content rights holders they *ARE* actually trying to
keep the geo-fence strong.....
--
Tristram Cheer
Network Architect - Most problems are the result of previous
solutions...
Tel. 09 438 5472 Ext 803 | Mobile. 022 412 1985 | PO Box 5083,
Whangarei, 0140
tristram.cheer(a)ubergroup.co.nz mailto:tristram.cheer(a)ubergroup.co.nz
|www.ubergroup.co.nz http://www.ubergroup.co.nz
http://ubergroup.co.nz/fb https://twitter.com/#!/ubergroupltd
From: nznog-bounces(a)list.waikato.ac.nz
[mailto:nznog-bounces(a)list.waikato.ac.nz] On Behalf Of Scott Pettit
Sent: Thursday, 10 May 2012 4:49 p.m.
To: Jonathan Brewer
Cc: nznog
Subject: Re: [nznog] Do you feel like a second class Internet citizen?
In my own/our users experience:
iTunes is available globally on Akamai, so if you stream US content it
all comes off NZ Akamai servers nice and quick
Netflix check IP's both when you login and when you stream, so you can't
just do DNS hacks to point Netflix via some US DNS servers to get logged
in. This is why we've had to deploy tunnels to stream from the US. The
hardware we've installed in the US has been positioned where we were
able to peer with Amazon as Netflix comes off a mixture Amazon AWS and
Akamai.
On 10/05/2012, at 4:30 PM, Jonathan Brewer wrote:
On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Scott Pettit