I have no issue watching BBC iPlayer, ITV players, Channel 4 etc. on my VPN without a UK tv license.For business reasons I recently purchased VPN access (ProtonVPN) to give me an online presence in a small European country, one not served by the free VPN services, for a few weeks to conclude some business transactions online. I got a very large discount as a new subscriber, 2 year subscription, but now, having fulfilled it's original purpose, I don't know what to do with it. And 23 months remaining.
I understand the general benefits of a VPN - security, anonymity, watch foreign streaming services, etc. But I can't identify a useful "use case" for me at the moment.
At first I thought I could use it to watch the BBC iPlayer but discovered that one needs a UK tv license too - and even then it might not work if the BBC recognise the IP address as a VPN.
Any suggestions?
In hindsight I agree, but it was cheap at slightly under 80 Eur total for 2 years and I expected to find uses for it.If the 30 day get your money back is up, then you will just have to pay the € 4.50 per month for the next 23 months
Why didn't you just buy the € 9.99 per month service ?
I read by a quick googling that it simply asks you to declare you have a license. I'll see if I can get it to work.I have no issue watching BBC iPlayer, ITV players, Channel 4 etc. on my VPN without a UK tv license.
Why is that relevant?Is watching BBC iPlayer part of your business work?
I couldn't get it to work despite trying any suggestions I could find online. TV licence doesn't seem to be a real issue. Rather, I suspect the BBC is very active at identifying and blocking IP addresses associated with VPN providers. Which VPN do you use?I have no issue watching BBC iPlayer, ITV players, Channel 4 etc. on my VPN without a UK tv license.
Nord VPN works fine for me. Sometimes I'll need to change the UK server to get it to work but mostly works first time.I couldn't get it to work despite trying any suggestions I could find online. TV licence doesn't seem to be a real issue. Rather, I suspect the BBC is very active at identifying and blocking IP addresses associated with VPN providers. Which VPN do you use?
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