EDIT: It’s something to do with my VPN and/or EasyTether, but it only happens in Firefox, so I didn’t think that could be it. I commented about my findings below: https://lemmy.world/comment/7585497


I start a video and it either doesn’t load at all of stalls within 5 seconds, never to recover.

I’ve tried everything:

  • Deleting every Mozilla folder in AppData to completely refresh Firefox. (after backing up my profile)
  • Flushing DNS cache
  • Uninstalling and reinstalling Firefox. (Which made me remember I had a policies.json file in the program folder to permanently lockdown the settings I want. So that wasn’t the problem either.)

Even when using no extensions like an ad blockers it still won’t play videos. Besides, I’m a Premium subscriber. Once in a while a video will work, but it’s so, so rare. And often it’ll even stop after a minute.

Meanwhile, it’ll work in the DuckDuckGo Browser all the time, which is Chromium based.

What do you think the deal is? It broke rather suddenly a few weeks ago. Do you think it’s Mozilla’s fault, or Google’s?

  • @oktux
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    9 months ago

    For what it’s worth, my gut feeling when I read the symptoms was that packets were getting misrouted. I had a similar issue when my NAT was misconfigured, so packets were going out the clear net but with the VPN’s source IP. If so, it would appear as if packets were getting dropped. Those half-open connnections could conceivably cause ns_binding_abort, since the browser is making lots of requests but many of them never get responses. Maybe.

    Some other random tidbits, in case they’re helpful:

    • When I ran OpenVPN on Android and tethered my PC, the tethered traffic didn’t go over VPN, only traffic originating from the phone did. From what I recall, that was normal on Android. Maybe Mullvad and/or EasyTether changes that. But maybe they don’t change it reliably? I have no idea why that would be Firefox specific, though. You could try ipleak.net to see if it gives you any clues about traffic leaking from your VPN.

    • I also recall that some mobile carriers use the TTL on packets to detect tethering. I believe there’s an Android setting that affects that behavior, which you can set with ADB. If the carrier detects that your packets’ TTLs are lower than they should be, they might drop the packets. Again, I have no idea why that would be Firefox specific or sporadic.

    Good luck!