Google voice not work with new update
Google voice not opening with the new update, still spinning and don't work !!!
Alle svar (13)
jscher2000 said
Interesting! The Firefox equivalent of that "policy" is: (1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk. (2) In the search box above the list, type or paste peer and pause while the list is filtered (3) Double-click the media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference to switch the value from false to true If you make only that change (leave the media.peerconnection.enabled preference on true), does Firefox pass a WebRTC leak test and does Google Voice work?
Changing media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference value from false to true allows Google Voice to load in the browser. How/wherefrom to run a WebRTC leak check for you?
simrick said
Changing media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference value from false to true allows Google Voice to load in the browser. How/wherefrom to run a WebRTC leak check for you?
I think some VPN software makers offer a leak test page to demonstrate that their product is working. :-) But if not, there probably are many other test pages.
Use ipleak.net to check webrtc leak
ipleak.net says I'm good.
I have submitted feedback through the GVoice page, and I suggest others do it as well.
So for now, for Firefox users, the guidance seems to be to adjust the settings as follows --
If you use a VPN and want to use Google Voice with minimum leak exposure:
(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk.
(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste peer and pause while the list is filtered
(3) If the media.peerconnection.enabled preference is bolded and "modified" or "user set" to false, double-click it to restore the default value of true to allow WebRTC -- you'll restrict it in the next step
(4) Double-click the media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference to switch the value from false to true -- this is equivalent to "disable_non_proxied_udp" which is the strictest setting, blocking WebRTC that does not come through your proxy (your VPN)
It is not guaranteed that GV will work with these settings; it may depend on your VPN.
jscher2000 said
So for now, for Firefox users, the guidance seems to be to adjust the settings as follows -- If you use a VPN and want to use Google Voice with minimum leak exposure: (1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk. (2) In the search box above the list, type or paste peer and pause while the list is filtered (3) If the media.peerconnection.enabled preference is bolded and "modified" or "user set" to false, double-click it to restore the default value of true to allow WebRTC -- you'll restrict it in the next step (4) Double-click the media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference to switch the value from false to true -- this is equivalent to "disable_non_proxied_udp" which is the strictest setting, blocking WebRTC that does not come through your proxy (your VPN) It is not guaranteed that GV will work with these settings; it may depend on your VPN.
Cheers and thanks for the help.
Great team work here. This is awesome. Ice proxy setting indeed is more stringent against leaking internal ip compared to media.peerconnection.enabled = false. Some of the geo restricted sites that could expose my location and didn't work, now do. Not to mention GV is working as well. That's why opera was working with geo restricted sites, but not FF. Now both do. Awesome.
Thank you all.
I have this issue also. FF 60.0.1 64bit disabling the Disable WebRTC extension fixes it - which enables WebRTC, right? any of my computers-desktop, Asus laptop, Dell Laptop, HP laptop FF in safe mode, delete PREFS.JS file, clean install FF -- nothing changes it. Chrome works fine but then it appears WebRTC is enabled and there is no way to disable it.
OK, so since my desktop doesn't use VPN, it isn't an issue. But I have a VPN on my laptops so the Disable WebRTC extension is useless there and if I use Chrome on the laptop the VPN is useless.
Sounds like a great plan Jason.
Hi ruggb, did you try this to minimize leakage while using your VPN:
https://support.mozilla.org/questions/1211377?page=2#answer-1096514
Repeating here:
So for now, for Firefox users, the guidance seems to be to adjust the settings as follows --
If you use a VPN and want to use Google Voice with minimum leak exposure:
(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk.
(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste peer and pause while the list is filtered
(3) If the media.peerconnection.enabled preference is bolded and "modified" or "user set" to false, double-click it to restore the default value of true to allow WebRTC -- you'll restrict it in the next step
(4) Double-click the media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference to switch the value from false to true -- this is equivalent to "disable_non_proxied_udp" which is the strictest setting, blocking WebRTC that does not come through your proxy (your VPN)
It is not guaranteed that GV will work with these settings; it may depend on your VPN.
thanks J I don't have VPN on my desktop and it is not on on my laptops at home. Since WebRTC seems like such an issue, I disabled it with the FF extension. So by using the extension, I guess that changes the first item (3). But if I am not using a VPN, then I don't have a proxy so 4 will probably break something, right/wrong?
The issue is all the other Google app pages will open except GV. (at least the ones I tried). So why isn't it a Google problem?
ruggb said
The issue is all the other Google app pages will open except GV. (at least the ones I tried). So why isn't it a Google problem?
Google Voice uses WebRTC now, instead of a plugin. I'm sure there are other ways to implement it, but that is the current situation.
Since WebRTC seems like such an issue, I disabled it with the FF extension.
Well, it's an issue if you are using VPN to disguise your IP address for privacy reasons and you want to avoid any methods of bypassing the VPN that could blow your cover. If you aren't using a VPN, I'm not aware of an issue because you're already revealing your IP address to the site with every request.
"Double-click the media.peerconnection.ice.proxy_only preference to switch the value from false to true. If you make only that change (leave the media.peerconnection.enabled preference on true), does Firefox pass a WebRTC leak test and does Google Voice work?"
I can confirm that this works!
I used two services to test: https://www.privacytools.io/webrtc.html https://diafygi.github.io/webrtc-ips/