Re: The Amazon CloudFront distribution is configured to block access from your country.
Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@aklaver.com>
From: Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@aklaver.com>
To: Jan Wieck <jan@wi3ck.info>, pgsql-general@lists.postgresql.org
Date: 2021-04-13T04:22:48Z
Lists: pgsql-general
On 4/12/21 7:22 PM, Jan Wieck wrote: > On 4/12/21 7:16 PM, Ron wrote: >> On 4/12/21 5:33 PM, Jan Wieck wrote: >>> On 4/12/21 5:13 PM, felix.quintgz@yahoo.com wrote: >>>> Unfortunately the official site for downloading the installer is >>>> blocked for me. >>>> I only had that option and trust what I am downloading. >>> >>> That wasn't your only option. Other members have suggested that you >>> contact EnterpriseDB directly. >>> >>> Note that CloudFront is just a content service by Amazon Web >>> Services. The owner of that content, in this case EnterpriseDB, >>> controls those "GeoRestrictions", that you are having trouble with. See >>> >>>> https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudFront/latest/DeveloperGuide/georestrictions.html >>>> >>> >>> for details. >>> >>> It is possible that this restriction is on purpose and that EDB >>> really doesn't want people from your country to download those files. >>> It is also possible that this particular download got that >>> restriction by mistake, either on EDB's side or on the side of the >>> third-party GeoIP service, Amazon is using to determine the origin of >>> your IP address. I know a few people at EDB (I did work there in the >>> past). Asking them won't do any harm and if all of this is actually >>> by mistake, they will be glad you asked. >> >> It's quite possible that EDB added the restriction because OP is from a >> country on the US-restricted list (and that country also bans VPNs). > > It is, which would change "EDB really doesn't want" into "EDB is forced > by stupid export restrictions, written by stupid lawyers, who have no > clue what they are making laws about". While I can appreciate frustrations with legal systems, making a blanket statement like the above without the facts in hand is not helpful either. > > Yeah, I agree, that is indeed "quite possible". > > > Regards, Jan > -- Adrian Klaver adrian.klaver@aklaver.com