+1 on Bryan's message.

TL;DR

It seems lots of ISPs are struggling to figure out the why and the where of 
many IP addresses or blocks that are suddenly being blacklisted or flagged as 
VPNs or as out of service area.




I would really love to find, as Bryan said, if there is one particular IP 
reputation data provider who either got real aggressive recently or some 
(contaminated?) data was shared around. If there is I have no problem wading 
through their support processes to get it sorted but as it stands I just don't 
know who to call. It just has been very difficult to glean any actionable info 
and of course the normal support teams at the respective streaming providers 
mostly just are telling customers to call their ISP.... as if every random ISP 
has some special backdoor contact to every streaming provider where we can just 
get problems resolved quickly and easily while we all have a good laugh at 
people being able to watch their preferred movies and shows.


At least with email DNSBL filtering you usually get informed which DNSBL you 
are listed on and you can sort that out directly. In this case, the overall 
system of IP reputation based filtering seems still comparatively immature. The 
most I have gotten is after a very long phone call with someone at Hulu, they 
confirmed there is some issue affecting multiple networks and they are working 
on the issue and suggested I go through a whitelisting request process which 
may solve the problems but just for Hulu obviously.


I have published and tried to register our own geofeed data as defined in 
RFC8805 with as many IP geolocation providers as possible. I have checked 
around to as many IP geolocation and IP reputations sites as I can find and 
everything is either clean/accurate or there is no query method open to the 
public for troubleshooting that I can find. This is just yet another example to 
me of immaturity on dealing with geolocation problems: just spinning my wheels 
in the dark with mud spraying everywhere. There does not appear to be any 
consistency on handling issues by the content providers using IP geolocation 
and reputation to filter. If the content providers want to reject client 
connections they ought to provide more actionable information in their errors 
messages for ISPs since they are all just telling the users to call their ISPs. 
It just feels like a vicious circle.


So currently we are left with multiple video streaming providers that all 
started to flag many customers across many of our IP blocks all beginning 
earlier this month affecting customers, many of whom have been using the same 
IP address for years without issue until now. Do we try and decommission 
multiple IP subnets shuffle users over to new subnets and risk contaminating 
more subnets if this is an ongoing and regularly updated blacklist data set. 
This would further exacerbate the problem across yet more subnets that are 
getting scarcer. As a tangent, I am curious to see how IP geolocation and 
reputation systems are handling IPv6, I suppose they are just grouping larger 
and larger networks together into the same listings.


Someone who knows something concrete about this current issue, please throw us 
ISPs a bone.


With this email I feel like Leia recording a video plea for help addressed to 
Obi-Wan Kenobi.... help me Nanog Community... you're my only hope.




________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+jkrejci=usinternet....@nanog.org> on behalf of Bryan 
Holloway <br...@shout.net>
Sent: Friday, August 27, 2021 4:56 PM
To: Mike Hammett; John Alcock
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: The great Netflix vpn debacle!

Is there some new DB that major CDNs are using?

We've been getting several reports of prefixes of ours being blocked,
claiming to be VPNs, even though we've been using those subnets without
incident for years.

HBO, Netflix, and Hulu appear to be common denominators. I have to
wonder if they're all siphoning misinformation off of some new DB
somewhere ...


On 8/14/21 1:45 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
> https://thebrotherswisp.com/index.php/geo-and-vpn/
>
>
>
> -----
> Mike Hammett
> Intelligent Computing Solutions <http://www.ics-il.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/ICSIL><https://plus.google.com/+IntelligentComputingSolutionsDeKalb><https://www.linkedin.com/company/intelligent-computing-solutions><https://twitter.com/ICSIL>
> Midwest Internet Exchange <http://www.midwest-ix.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/mdwestix><https://www.linkedin.com/company/midwest-internet-exchange><https://twitter.com/mdwestix>
> The Brothers WISP <http://www.thebrotherswisp.com/>
> <https://www.facebook.com/thebrotherswisp><https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXSdfxQv7SpoRQYNyLwntZg>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From: *"John Alcock" <j...@alcock.org>
> *To: *nanog@nanog.org
> *Sent: *Friday, August 13, 2021 2:11:16 PM
> *Subject: *The great Netflix vpn debacle!
>
> Well,
>
> It happened. I have multiple subscribers calling in. They can not access
> Netflix.
>
> Any contacts on list for Netflix that I can use to get my up blocks
> whitelisted?
>
> John
>

Reply via email to