top | item 45701145 (no title) fiatpandas | 4 months ago Eventually airlines will just whitelist IP ranges for free messaging-only access. discuss order hn newest unixfox|4 months ago Almost impossible task. The public IPs change every time. Usually they are on CDN that have a very large IP range.And if they allow large IP ranges, one could try to spin up a virtual machine on the same cloud provider as the messaging platform. Nextgrid|4 months ago > Almost impossible taskExcept if the messengers happily collude with you, which Facebook does - they have a website (can't remember the link) where network providers can get IP ranges and other information to enable "zero rating" for Facebook's properties. load replies (2)
unixfox|4 months ago Almost impossible task. The public IPs change every time. Usually they are on CDN that have a very large IP range.And if they allow large IP ranges, one could try to spin up a virtual machine on the same cloud provider as the messaging platform. Nextgrid|4 months ago > Almost impossible taskExcept if the messengers happily collude with you, which Facebook does - they have a website (can't remember the link) where network providers can get IP ranges and other information to enable "zero rating" for Facebook's properties. load replies (2)
Nextgrid|4 months ago > Almost impossible taskExcept if the messengers happily collude with you, which Facebook does - they have a website (can't remember the link) where network providers can get IP ranges and other information to enable "zero rating" for Facebook's properties. load replies (2)
unixfox|4 months ago
And if they allow large IP ranges, one could try to spin up a virtual machine on the same cloud provider as the messaging platform.
Nextgrid|4 months ago
Except if the messengers happily collude with you, which Facebook does - they have a website (can't remember the link) where network providers can get IP ranges and other information to enable "zero rating" for Facebook's properties.