UK Proxy Server preview
Monday, September 21st, 2009Homesickness can hit us all when we’re travelling or living abroad. Instead of trying to change my tastes though, I always have a jar of marmite and a few British TV shows to hand.
I prefer the BBC’s and ITV’s live-channel streaming service, as well as on-demand services, to downloading TV shows via Bittorrent (which can be a slow process if you’re in a hotel). This means BBC One and ITV live can be watched live on a computer, as long as it has a British IP address.
A proxy server gives you such an address even if you’re sat in outer-Mongolia, which means I can get my weekly dose of Match of the Day, Top Gear and England international football games anywhere in the world.
Setting up a proxy server is easy to do but, as many of these services, you have to change browser depending on what you want to view. BBC’s streaming and iPlayer services only work in Internet Explorer, while ITV’s only seemed to work in Firefox. There’s also an annoying bug in Internet Explorer 8 where it won’t remember your proxy password (even if you follow website guides to reduce IE’s logon security settings), so be prepared to enter it at least three times before you can reliably watch a show.
So, Scothosts sells a proxy for £9.99 per month via its UK Proxy Server website. This is, misleadingly, a Paypal subscription, so 60 quid will roll out of your account if you forget about it for half a year, say.
From Denmark with an 80Mbit/sec fiber connection, I downloaded a file at above 2Mbytes/sec from a private server in the UK without the Scothosts proxy enabled.. With the proxy enabled, this speed plummeted to 148Kbytes/sec. These speeds were typical of my experience, night and day.
Streaming HD content from BBC iPlayer – which goes above this bandwidth – was no problem though, suggesting Scothosts throttles speeds depending on usage.
I also got an error message a couple of times saying only 5 IP address are allowed. This happened when I accessed more than one website, which either brought browsing to a crawl or failed to load webpages at all.
I decided to cancel the service on the first day of my second month and politely asked for a refund, since I didn’t need it for a second month. However, Scothosts ignored my request, but did help me to cancel the rolling subscription. I’m not hugely bothered about paying for another month (because I’ll use the service), but I’m fairly sure Scothosts is breaking the Distant Selling Regulations – in particular the 7-day cooling off period required for all goods and services bought online.
Update: 16/10/2009
Scothosts got in touch to challenge my article (read its response in the comments section). I have therefore written a follow up article to this post.
