On Sun, 5 Jun 2016, Owen DeLong wrote:
What is non-standard about an HE tunnel? It conforms to the relevant RFCs and
is a very common configuration widely deployed to many thousands of locations
around the internet.
Itÿÿs not that Netflix happens to not work with these tunnels, the problem is
that they are taking deliberate active steps to specifically block them.
It's not a question of standard vs non-standard. If Netflix is blocking
HE IPv6 space (tunnel customers), I suspect they're doing so because this
is effectively an IPv6 VPN service that masks the end-user's real IP
making invalid any IP-based GEO assumptions Netflix would like to make
about customer connections in order to satisfy their content licenses.
Soÿÿ I donÿÿt know how many ÿÿnormal usersÿÿ use HE tunnels vs. ÿÿgeeksÿÿ or
how one
would go about defining the difference. I can tell you that there are an awful
lot of people using HE tunnels, and based on what I saw while working at HE,
I donÿÿt believe they are all geeks. While I would say that geeks are a larger
You have to be at least somewhat of a geek to even care about IPv6 and
know that HE provides free IPv6 tunnels for those who can't get it
natively from their own ISP. Ideally, HE's v6 tunnel service should
become more or less redundant as more service provider networks dual-stack
their customers.
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Jon Lewis, MCP :) | I route
| therefore you are
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