
T-Mobile has blocked access to the domains of Drip Haus and Jupiter Exchange from its DNS, causing significant disruptions for users trying to access these websites. The issue, which appears to be related to a threat feed provider like DomainTools, resulted in a week of revenue loss and extensive engineering hours for Drip Haus. Users predominantly in the West have been affected, with many resorting to using VPNs or desktop devices to bypass the restrictions. The incident has raised concerns about the legality and implications of such actions by a major mobile carrier, with some describing it as crypto censorship.
🚨JUST IN: Mobile Network operator @TMobile has dropped @JupiterExchange from their DNS, causing issues for Mobile operator users to access the Jupiter website. Users are using VPNs or Desktops to get around the restrictions. https://t.co/itJPOFpk4r
waking up this morning realizing that certain ISP is dropping us from their DNS. a lot of users are having problems accessing the website via T Mobile (and related MNVOs). it doesn't seem like an isolated issue since Drip had the same problem last week as well:… https://t.co/9zccmwRQ8D
Just confirmed: T-mobile just disappeared @JupiterExchange from their DNS, just like they disappeared @drip_haus for the last week Likely via @DomainTools or another threat feed provider This is crypto censorship at the most sinister root level https://t.co/smlgkQP6kM