I have Hulu Plus and Amazon Prime. The only thing I would miss from Netflix is their Marvel original series. And I can live with that. I can't live without my IPv6 enabled home network and Internet connection since that's an essential part of my job. (I'm the IPv6 transition technical lead for a large organization.) While I actually manage my home internet gateway through a linux server and have fine-grained control over the firewall rules, I'm still debating whether I care enough about a handful of series to continue paying a company that is deliberately acting against its users' interests. Right now I'm leaning toward no. But I'll discuss it with my wife before making a final decision.
Scott On Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 8:03 AM, Mark Tinka <mark.ti...@seacom.mu> wrote: > > > On 6/Jun/16 01:45, Damian Menscher wrote: > > > > > Who are these non-technical Netflix users who accidentally stumbled into > > having a HE tunnel broker connection without their knowledge? I wasn't > > aware this sort of thing could happen without user consent, and would > like > > to know if I'm wrong. Only thing I can imagine is if ISPs are using HE > as > > a form of CGN. > > There are several networks around the world that rely on 6-in-4 because > their local provider does not offer IPv6. > > Mark. >