Netflix Denies There Was a Policy Change With VPNs 67
Dangerous_Minds writes "The other day, Slashdot linked to a TorrentFreak story saying that Netflix was cracking down on VPN users. But PCMag has a story that quotes a Netflix spokesperson saying that there was no change in their policy on VPNs. Freezenet also did some digging around and found very few reports saying there were VPN access issues and even more reports from users say that their VPN solution is working for the time being."
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Re:They don't do it now (Score:5, Insightful)
It probably won't happen unless content owners sue.
Re: They don't do it now (Score:3, Informative)
Unless Netflix is furnishing them with access logs.. They have no idea how many people are circumventing the access controls deployed by Netflix... And in the end Netflix doesn't care if people do as long as the courts agree Netflix is taking reasonable measures to restrict content to the licensed region..
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Re:They don't do it now (Score:5, Insightful)
Same here. Another thing to note is that the $5 I'm willing to pay unblock-us every month could go to Hollywood, but it turns out they don't want my money.
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OMG! The AC died while typing!
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Especially some techie sitting in his/her basement trying to make some extra cash by running a proxy server that improves my viewing experience.
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Let's say that I normally live in the USA and I have a Netflix subscription. If I travel to Europe, and I want to stream a movie from Netflix, I am out of luck.
Or, hypothetically, I share my subscription with a family member who doesn't live in the USA.
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I didn't realize Netflix was now outside the US at all.
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They have just started a service in Australia and probably view Australian customers of US netflix as competition they don't want. So they have started to clamp down on VPNs
Re: They don't do it now (Score:1)
Yes I forgot. America, the only country in the world that matters...... to Americans. You should probably travel a bit. There's a great big world out there outside of 'Murica.
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VM at home + NoMachine = using Netflix from anywhere without the need of VPN.
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It's just damned annoying as a consumer that I can't ge
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It probably won't happen unless content owners sue.
Or the contracts come up for renewal and the content owners require netflix to agree to more explicit terms about what exactly they will do to minimise out-of-region users come renewal time.
Plausible Deniability (Score:2)
It is in their best interests to have the impression that they are complying, and the plausibility that they are, so that content owners continue to maintain licence agreements with them, and don't sue or would have a hard time proving that Netflix isn't doing as much as it should be doing to prohibit access where required. That said, it is also in their best interest to do the bare minimum so as to allow some users to do this if they really want to so as to keep using the service.
Last year for example in C
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Just as long as you leave port 443 open. You'll have most of the Internet, just no Slashdot.
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Hollywood content is bad enough with a big budget. Imagine if everyone took your view and they had zero budget.
Whoa! (Score:2)
What, you mean TorrentFreak isn't a valid source of journalism that checks sources and facts before reporting something?
HOLY SHIT THAT'S SO SURPRISING :)
Nothing about proxy though (Score:1)
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Please explain how proxies are more convenient or "free" than a VPN. Neither tend to be free, and VPNs tend to be more convenient than proxies in that many VPNs come with an application that has a handy on/off switch, while proxies typically require you to change your browser proxy settings every time you want to use netflix.
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Please explain how proxies are more convenient or "free" than a VPN. Neither tend to be free, and VPNs tend to be more convenient than proxies in that many VPNs come with an application that has a handy on/off switch, while proxies typically require you to change your browser proxy settings every time you want to use netflix.
Please explain how proxies and VPNs are different.
(Hint: They're not - they're both just routes.)
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The real distinction is "partial coverage" vs "full coverage".
AIUI there have been soloutions that divert the authentication/setup traffic via a US ISP but still allow the bulk traffic to flow directly between the user and the netflix CDN. Presumablly this works because the CDN servers don't re-check the geo blocking. This is much cheaper than diverting everything through a proxy or VPN but also much easier for netflix to stop if they decide to do so.
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Proxy is loading your traffic through someone else's server. Only proxy aware and configured applications will communicate through the proxy.
VPN sets up an encrypted tunnel allowing your computer to be located at a different node when connecting to the internet. Virtually moving your PC to their network. All of your traffic will normally pass through that encrypted tunnel.
technology! (Score:2, Insightful)
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I use a VPN provider which does not care what I do with it, or how much data I transfer. They guarantee 4Mbps, minimum, of symmetric bandwidth availability. They actively encourage people to use the service as they see fit, and even offer (quite slow) services for free to people living in very restrictive jurisdictions.
And it's cheaper than $9.99/month.
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There are plenty of datacenters that offer cheap bandwidth that does doesn't come with 10ms
Words and meanings (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix spokesperson saying that there was no change in their policy on VPNs.
Might very well be true, but that statement says nothing about the frequency of enforcement; which might have changed.
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I know many non-technical people that are bypassing the restrictions. I think you will see a clamp down on any method that has a critical mass of people using it. Safe to say using your own VPS as a socks5 proxy will never be blocked. But if you are using goober's "geobypass4netflix.com" then it may get blocked.
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> "We use industry standard methods to block VPNs. Always have and always will," a Netflix spokesman said,
They're doing lip service, but much like the ISPs hounded into sending out angry letters to torrent swarms, they're not really interested in actively (and at expense) cannibal
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Oh I am sure this is the case, to a degree. I was just pointing out that their statement was basically meaningless.
To your point however, Netflix has more incentive to comply than the ISP did/do. In the case of the content industry vs. ISPs:
The ISPs just need to do enough to avoid legal responsibility. They had basically two options, they could claim to be common carriers and just say "we don't wiretap" so we don't know and are not responsible for what's on our network. Doing so would have limited their
Nothing New: Meaning we've always done it. (Score:5, Informative)
The quote is this:
"We use industry standard methods to block VPNs. Always have and always will"
They're just fixing the bug.
Im surprised they don't already (Score:2)
Just like Hulu, in a concession to content providers who are paranoid that someone from Qatar might use VPN to watch Family Guy if Hulu didn't pay for the licensing rights.
Netflix is the same. People from banned countries use VPN to make it seem they are in the US to watch content.
Solution is simply to get 10 people to buy in on a small hosted server in the US and run your own proxy. Small enough to avoid detection and people can still watch Family guy
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No the solution is to realize that the internet is designed to route around failures, and not being able to get content is seen as a failure. The only thing that this is actually doing is making it more difficult for legitimate users wanting legitimate content from getting it. They will route around the problem until the internet is broken by people who don't know how the internet actually works.
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Too much hassle. If the copyright maffia doesn't want my money, fine, then I'll just torrent the movies and series.
Hola on Android (Score:2)
I had issues with Hola on my Android, which got resolved after an upgrade of Hola itself. After that it got broken somehow again, where Netflix is unable to see a network connection. That then got resolved again by rebooting the device.
On my main desktop I've not seen any issues.
So I think this is an isolated issue where certain things broke as opposed to Netflix being responsible.
One of the things that make me quite convinced of that is that I still get the nice 'You're watching Netflix from a different co
Policy has always deterred against VPNs (Score:2)
-- CNET [cnet.com]
The reason it might still be working for many is that they
TorrentFreak, Wrong as Always. (Score:1)
"The Pirate Bay is dead!"
Yet the site is alive and something new is coming down the pipeline.
"Netflix is blocking VPNs!"
Have not and likely wil not.
Quit fucking reporting TorrentFreak stories.
Torrentfreak wrong? (Score:1)
Netflix releases seed story (Score:2)
I predict a surge in "netflix vpn how" google searches
followed by netflix "negotiations" with content owners to relax country restrictions that "obviously don't even work"
Weasel answer - of course it's not a policy change (Score:2)
Of course it's not a policy change. Their policy has always(?) been this isn't allowed. It's just a change in the enforcement.
It's all lies and spin (Score:1)
Netflix wants happy licence-holders to keep getting the content to encourage more subs.
IP holders divide up licences by region in order to sell them for the highest price so they have an interest in Netflix enforcing region based restrictions.
Netflix know they will lose many users and therefore subs if they are effective at stopping VPNs/proxies.