The new VPN and its locations
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A Former User last edited by
All servers are up and running? Really?
Then why am I still getting Russian-language ads on the NYT website with my VPN set to Americas? -
A Former User last edited by
So the NYT website does not recognize that the VPN address is located somewhere in the Americas, it just "assumes" it's located in Russia. That does not make any sense to me.
And, btw, I doubt very much that the majority of people looking up the NYT website are Russian. -
A Former User last edited by
Well, if a website usually don't know from where an IP is, it should not display ads in any other than it's native language.
Of course, that is not an Opera problem. -
A Former User last edited by
So, a third-party company decides that I want to see an ad in a foreign language on an American website. Based on what?
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rseiler last edited by
More oddities involving using the "Americas" proxy, these two resulting from GDPR but serve as handy examples for this ongoing weirdness. I, too, am baffled by the "Because the majority of people accessing X using the Opera VPN are from Y" explanation--I've never seen that behavior when using a proxy or VPN.
www.latimes.com blocks you because, you know, it thinks you're in the EU.
www.usatoday.com redirects you to eu.usatoday.com
Etc
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A Former User last edited by
We need VPN from the USA and England. The Americas seems to be in South America and Europe put me into Sweden.