Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Netflix Cracks Down On Proxy Services Used By Customers To Access Foreign Content

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2016 11:47 AM
  • Netflix Cracks Down On Proxy Services Used By Customers To Access Foreign Content
TORONTO — Netflix says it's planning on cracking down on users who use virtual private networks and proxy services to view content not available in their countries.
 
Many of the company's distribution deals with major studios and content providers are negotiated on a regional basis, meaning certain titles are only available to users in certain countries.
 
Some Canadians use VPN services to stream Netflix movies and TV shows available in the United States, which according to the website Netflixable has around twice as many available titles.
 
The U.S. version of Netflix also features more Hollywood blockbusters and recent seasons of popular network shows than its Canadian counterpart.
 
In a blog post, David Fullagar, Netflix's vice-president of content delivery, said the company is making progress in licensing content across borders but is now implementing new measures to end the use of so-called unblockers and other proxy services.
 
The company has always been against the use of such services and has said it takes measure to shut them down, but Fullagar said the company is "evolving" its approach to the problem and the new strategy will be in place in the coming weeks.
 
According to a April 2015 report by Media Technology Monitor, roughly two in five English-speaking Canadians has a subscription to the video-streaming service, with nearly one-third saying they had accessed the American version of the service.

MORE National ARTICLES

Group Representing 73 Businesses Calls On B.C. To Halt Logging Of Ancient Trees

  The valley is full of ancient old-growth trees, and the Chamber of Commerce says tourists who come to see them have created a multibillion-dollar economy along Vancouver Island's west coast.

Group Representing 73 Businesses Calls On B.C. To Halt Logging Of Ancient Trees

Flights To Canada Booked For Relatives Of Drowned Syrian Refugee Boy Alan Kurdi

Tima Kurdi said her brother Mohammad Kurdi, along with his wife and five children, are scheduled to arrive into Vancouver the morning of Dec. 28.

Flights To Canada Booked For Relatives Of Drowned Syrian Refugee Boy Alan Kurdi

Another Flood At Halifax Hospital Cancels Eye Surgeries, Postpones Others

Another Flood At Halifax Hospital Cancels Eye Surgeries, Postpones Others
HALIFAX — Eye surgeries at the QEII Health Sciences Centre in Halifax were cancelled Monday because of a flood.

Another Flood At Halifax Hospital Cancels Eye Surgeries, Postpones Others

Man Charged In Death Of New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared In Grenada

Man Charged In Death Of New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared In Grenada
ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Police in Grenada have charged a man in the death of a New Brunswick woman who disappeared more than a week ago after going jogging on the small Caribbean island.

Man Charged In Death Of New Brunswick Woman Who Disappeared In Grenada

Federal Government To Seek Advice From Abroad On How To Fire Up Economic Growth

Federal Government To Seek Advice From Abroad On How To Fire Up Economic Growth
TORONTO — Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau says the new Liberal government will seek advice from experts in Canada and abroad on how to boost economic growth.

Federal Government To Seek Advice From Abroad On How To Fire Up Economic Growth

Fifth Raccoon Rabies Case Confirmed In Ontario

Fifth Raccoon Rabies Case Confirmed In Ontario
TORONTO — More vaccine-laced baits will be dropped in Ontario after wildlife officials said a fifth case of raccoon rabies had been confirmed.

Fifth Raccoon Rabies Case Confirmed In Ontario