Japanatron Logo

The Roku media player has Google's free public DNS (8.8.8.8) hard-coded into it.  This is great for DNS redundancy, but totally sucks if you use an unblock service to watch Netflix abroad (see this: How to Watch Netflix in Japan).  From time to time my Roku would insist on using Google's DNS, so Netflix would no longer work properly.  Boooo!  There are 2 comparable ways to fix this:

Add a Null Route to Your Router
Most basic home routers allow you to add custom routes.  Add a route to 8.8.8.8 that goes to the loopback address (127.0.0.1).  Called a "null route," all traffic going to Google's DNS will simply be dropped.  Problem solved.

Add a Rule to Your Firewall
If you have something more feature-rich than a basic home router, you can add a rule to your firewall that blocks access to 8.8.8.8.  Be sure to include UDP as that's what DNS uses.  The advantage of the rule approach is customizability.  You can still allow other PCs on your network access to Google's DNS if desired.

Related Articles

FreeNAS - Bi-Directional Rsync...

Go to /root on 1st server. ssh root@server1 cd /root FreeNAS OS drive is mounted read-only, so mount it RW. mount -o rw / Generate an RSA key & leave the ...

Building the Ultimate Media Ce...

Also known as a "home theater PC" (HTPC), a media center PC is connected to a TV and is built and configured for streaming / downloading media available on the ...

MS Outlook - None of your emai...

PROBLEMYou send email to a recipient, but immediately receive an error bounce-back message that says "None of your email accounts could send to this recipient."...

Nginx - How to Block or Redire...

I've been figuring out how to block or redirect web traffic in Nginx based on the country geoIP. NOTES* You need the package nginx-extras for this because this...