trying to get through geo-blocks on my work laptop, vpn vs proxy?

trying to get through geo-blocks on my work laptop, vpn vs proxy?

Girder

New member
so my work laptop is like super locked down no vpn clients or anything allowed. right now i'm using a socks5 proxy thru an ssh tunnel but netflix and prime just refuse to load. like i log in, hit play, then just get that "you're using a proxy" error. speed isn't even the issue, i'm getting like 80 mbps down 20 up which should be enough for streaming. the proxy endpoint is a linode vps in nyc. what's killing me is that on my personal laptop my vpn works perfect for the same stuff, zero blocks. honestly thought a proxy would be enough to fake the location if traffic is routed through ny. but i guess streaming services are way smarter now. i've tried different ports, even messed with dns over the tunnel, no luck. my boss needs me to test some region-specific content but i can't install anything on this laptop. i think maybe the difference is how the traffic looks like? like a vpn encrypts everything and maybe masks the traffic type better? or do streaming sites have huge ip blocklists for datacenter ranges like my vps? if that's the case even a vpn probably won't work unless it's a residential ip which i can't get on this work machine. anyone else deal with this? really need a setup that doesn't require installing stuff. is there a proxy service that rotates residential ips or smth? or am i just totally screwed unless i get IT to whitelist something which will never happen
 
80 mbps should be enough but streaming sites are smart now. probably they see through proxies and detect datacenter IPs. residential rotating proxies might work, but good luck finding legit ones that are easy to set up without install. most likely your best shot is convincing IT to whitelist something, but that's a long shot.
 
ngl lol, i wish it was that easy but streaming services got smarter. i've seen proxies work fine for browsing but not for streaming, especially with datacenter IPs. my experience is they block those more aggressively now, even if traffic looks legit
 
different angle: so i once tried using a residential proxy from a legit provider for geo stuff on a locked down work laptop, and it worked kinda but still got flagged after a bit. do you think if the proxy rotates faster or changes IPs more frequently, it might slip past detection? or is it just a lost cause unless you get a whitelisted IP?
 
Haha, yeah, streaming services are like that one friend who got smarter and now blocks all your tricks. proxy or vpn, they sniff out datacenter IPs fast rn. residential proxies are your only shot but rn most legit ones are still flagged after a while unless you get a legit residential network. even then, expect random blocks or captcha walls, they really don't wanna lose ad rev.
 
Been doing this 3 years and yeah, speed isn't the problem, it's the traffic fingerprint. Streaming sites have gotten really good at spotting datacenter IPs and decrypted traffic. Even if your speed is solid, they can still block it if they see typical VPN or proxy signatures.
 
disagree, a lot of enterprise setups do allow some kind of proxy or limited VPNs but they block consumer tools for a reason. you could try some browser-based proxy extension or script-based proxy that doesn't need install but chances are
 
Spot on. I tried something similar last year, just using a SOCKS proxy on a work machine and got the same "proxy detected" error on Netflix. Ended up having to switch to a residential VPN service that rotates IPs, which was kinda annoying but worked. Imho, streaming services just keep getting smarter, so unless you got legit residential IPs or someone on IT whitelists, you're pretty much stuck
 
Spot on, but if you're on a work laptop, be careful with proxies. VPNs are usually more reliable but might get flagged by IT faster. Just make sure you don't get caught, or you might lose access altogether.
 
Haha, trying to play spy on your work laptop huh? yeah, if IT checks stuff, VPNs tend to be more stealthy but also riskier if they catch you. proxies might be easier to set up but easier to block. gotta pick your battles
 
nah, I think proxies are more risky with IT watching, VPNs like NordVPN or ExpressVPN are usually stealthier, but be careful fam. avoid free ones tho, they suck.
 
Use a stealthy VPN like Surfshark or ProtonVPN, they got obfuscated servers that might slip past your IT, but honestly, gotta be careful, don't wanna get caught.
 
thanks for the tips, yall. yeah, i figured vpn is better for stealth but risks getting flagged quick. i'll keep away from free ones for sure. if i go proxy route, gotta be quick and stealthy, right?
 
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