I have found Nina most helpful. Works out of Amsterdam I think
They should be able to open the prefixes ( temporarily at least) until
there are no more 'infrigments'


[email protected]


On Thu, 23 Aug 2018 at 09:09, Neil Dutton <[email protected]> wrote:

> In our case, it think, a US student in our halls of residence had given
> her login details to her brother in the US. She logged in to Netflix in the
> UK, and then her brother later on in the evening from the US. I guess using
> geo-locating tools they came to the conclusion that this could not be
> possible, so she “must” be using a proxy to hide her location. Rather than
> a specific IP block, they blocked a large swathe of IPs that happened to be
> in our proxy pools, so that blocked around 7500 students. They were not
> happy J
>
>
>
> Neil
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* uknof [mailto:[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Paul
> Mansfield
> *Sent:* 22 August 2018 17:04
> *To:* Chris Russell <[email protected]>
> *Cc:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* Re: [uknof] Netflix Contact
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, 22 Aug 2018, 14:37 Chris Russell, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>   From other feedback, seeing a number of people been hit by this
> recently, so just trying to understand what makes netflix believe these are
> VPN's or proxies and we can do to try and help each other ...
>
>
>
>
>
> There's a rather dodgy vpn "service" called Hola.
>
> AIUI, its a p2p system so that if you use it to access the USA, someone
> else can tunnel through you to get to, say, the UK.
>
>
>
> Could you have some well connected customers running Hola, and others are
> accessing BBC iPlayer and UK Netflix through them?
>
>
>
>
>


-- 
Regards

Gavin

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