Apple TV Receives First Big Native VPN App (theverge.com) 11
ExpressVPN is the biggest VPN company so far to take advantage of the VPN support available in tvOS 17. According to The Verge, ExpressVPN will let Apple TV users connect to servers "in any of 105 countries around the world" so they can watch geo-restricted content around the world. From the report: To download it, you'll need to make sure you're on tvOS 17 -- earlier versions don't support native VPN apps at all. Once set up, the app will route your traffic through faraway servers before forwarding them to whatever streaming service or other internet server the Apple TV contacts. ExpressVPN on the Apple TV uses the company's Lightway protocol. Reddit users reported spotting the app last week. Most said they could switch countries to get around region restrictions, though some had issues logging in or getting it to work with specific apps. It's also a basic experience that lacks advanced VPN features like split tunneling, which dynamically applies the VPN connection to certain services as needed, freeing users from managing it manually.
From someone who knows nothing of Apple TVs (Score:2)
I assume you can sideload things into those devices, right? Because surely Apple doesn't allow THAT. Or if they do now, they won't for long when their entertainment corporate buddies start complaining.
Re:From someone who knows nothing of Apple TVs (Score:4, Interesting)
Do the "entertainment corporate buddies" complain to Amazon or Google that you can sideload things onto Fire Sticks or Android TVs?
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Re: From someone who knows nothing of Apple TVs (Score:4, Insightful)
What does that have to do with sideloading apps for pirate IPTV, which is clearly what the original poster was referring to?
Nobody cares about your home-made travel router, btw. I can open the OpenVPN client on my phone or my laptop and connect back to my home network without needing to worry about extra hardware.
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His point is some Apple services bypass VPNs on iDevices. Now, having researched that, I don't think it's anything nefarious. It's mostly network detection tools and things like automatic failover for non-functional DNS (Android does this too: Give it a DNS server you control via DHCP then shut that server off. It'll start going to 8.8.8.8) but the point remains. The only way to be sure 100% of your traffic goes through the VPN is to do the VPN upstream of the iDevice.
But that doesn't really matter in the context of this thread topic. As long as the VPN app on the device feeds the data for the specific apps over the connection the results will be what the user wants (bypassing geo-blocks). Personally I wouldn't travel with an Apple TV to begin with because it's already much bulkier and less-portable than a Fire Stick, Roku Stick, or a Chromecast. So needing to carry additional equipment to defeat perceived Apple-"spying" is a non-issue. It's interesting how Apple users g
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No more geofencing? (Score:3)
Can I use this to pretend that my ATV is in London so I can stream BBC content?
Progress (Score:1)
Wow one day it might even compete with NVidia Shields and other Android TVs