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plinden

macrumors 601
Original poster
Apr 8, 2004
4,029
143
Gah ... worked from home yesterday, got into work today, tracked down another iPhone 4 owner, and found IT has blocked Facetime.

Fair enough ... I would do the same if I were in the IT department, but I still haven't managed to try it out.
 
Gah ... worked from home yesterday, got into work today, tracked down another iPhone 4 owner, and found IT has blocked Facetime.

Fair enough ... I would do the same if I were in the IT department, but I still haven't managed to try it out.

Rob Perrago of the Washington Post had the same problem...great IT departments think alike I guess :rolleyes:.

Good luck trying it out, though. FaceTime is simply amazing--maybe even magical :D.
 
It's not that they are explicitly "blocking Facetime", most companies simply block all ports but the standard web ports, 80 and 443.
 
It's not that they are explicitly "blocking Facetime", most companies simply block all ports but the standard web ports, 80 and 443.

I don't know what the network configuration is, but many corporate networks use proxies that only allow these ports.

More open configurations that allow any OUTGOING traffic but only allow specific INCOMING traffic need to have uPnP configured, or it might not work. Without uPnP enabled the router needs to be specific configured to forward certain ports to the specific IP address of the iPhone, which can cause problem when the IP is dynamic.
 
You're probably right - I didn't think of that. We don't allow any traffic to non-80/443 ports on WiFi that's not via a VPN. Ah well. Maybe when the IT director gets his iPhone 4 this will loosen up.
 
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