Google thinks I'm in a different country


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I'm from Israel.

My IP starts with 46.x.x.x.

whatismyipaddress shows me correctly on the map.

 

BUT,

since today Google thinks I'm in Germany:

* Youtube shows suggestions from Germany

* Play Store is fully open (include buying devices like Nexus 5). Devices, magazines, music etc. are NOT available in Israel.

* Pretty much every google service thinks I'm from Germany.

 

I haven't installed any proxies, any software...

 

Are there any other people with the same problem as mine right now?

 

Is there a way I could "debug" this?

 

Thanks!

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Thanks paul0544, but it is something more fundamental than this.

I'm not just being redirected to another Google domain, I'm actually getting content that is blocked in my country.

On the other hand, I'm not getting content which is NOT blocked in my country.

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i had this problem once too - my acct was showing up in Mexico. Suspecting my acct was hacked i quickly changed my pw and enabled 2-factor auth. Problem hasnt happened since.

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Google worked fine for me, but YouTube always thinks I'm in the UK when I'm really in the US. Not a big issue since there's only a few word changes, but it's a bit annoying that it displays a banner at the top saying that the language has been set to UK.

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Tried that. Rebooted both my router and modem. Disconnected both of them from power supply. Disconnected any cable that was connected to the modem.

I forgot to mention that I am connected over MPLS.

My ISP says my IP will be changed in about 3 months, and they can do nothing about that.

 

(Actually things in here are complicated because we have one company that provides the "infrastructure" and another company which is the ISP. They refuse to speak with each other, no matter what is the problem. It is easier this way to tell the user "its the other company's problem".)

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They try that here sometimes too, in Australia.  Ombudsman fixed this.

Last time I had this issue, it was due to a DNS addon I had in Chrome.

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I ran namebench, ALL my results appear like this:

  • www.google.com is hijacked: 173.194.112.52, 173.194.112.50, 173.194.112.49, 173.194.112.51, 173.194.112.48
  • google.com appears incorrect: 212.199.219.247, 212.199.219.221, 212.199.219.227, 212.199.219.237, 212.199.219.226, 212.199.219.217, 212.199.219.216, 212.199.219.222, 212.199.219.251, 212.199.219.236, 212.199.219.232, 212.199.219.246, 212.199.219.241, 212.199.219.231, 212.199.219.242, 212.199.219.212
  • twitter.com appears incorrect: 199.16.156.38, 199.16.156.6, 199.16.156.198

Anyway, I changed the DNS in my router, but it didn't solve the problem.

212.199.219.* is my ISP BTW.

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You would definately need to reboot or at least flush your caches before checking this. Rebooting is the easiest way. Also check that your clients are all signing from the same hymn sheet with regards to DNS servers. Try setting them on Windows clients and see if that helps.

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I'm behind a router (TP-LINK 741 with dd-wrt).

This just started 2 days ago, without me installing anything on any machine nor changing any configuration in the router.

I've done factory reset to the router as well and the problem remains.

 

All the clients show DNS entries of 192.168.1.101 which is my router.

 

I have now surfed to another site which is not Google and found that it has redirected me to the Dutch version. So I'm beginning to think the problem is deeper than I thought...

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No. At home. Private user. No proxies are defined or have ever been.

I factory reseted the router just to be sure. It gets the DNS of my ISP. As I mentioned, changing the DNS didn't help.

 

Edit:

this is tracert to google.com:

C:\Users\x>tracert -d google.com

Tracing route to google.com [212.199.219.212]
over a maximum of 30 hops:

  1     1 ms     2 ms    <1 ms  192.168.1.101
  2     9 ms     9 ms    29 ms  10.159.160.1
  3     *       11 ms     *     212.199.24.218
  4    12 ms    10 ms     9 ms  212.199.24.217
  5    14 ms     9 ms    27 ms  212.199.219.212

Trace complete.

212.199.* are all of my ISP.

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@Torolol I tried that. Didn't work.

I tried opening private browsing so no cookies and stuff. Didn't work.

 

Again- I'm getting content that is only available in Germany in my case- like the Google play store with the ability to buy music, books, devices- which are not available in Israel.

So even if YOU (or anyone else) will change its location settings on Google, you will NOT gain access to content which is normally not available in your country. This could be achieved by using proxies, which spoofs your IP so Google thinks you are from a different country. This is NOT the case here as I'm not using proxy.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Hello,

When you disconnected your modem and router, did you wait 5 minutes? ISP's hand out IPs but there is a short lease to them (very short, since there are few IPv4 left) so you have to disconnect them for a while (I usually do 5 minutes and it works). It doesnt seem you have a static IP so it should give you a new one. Then you can hope that new one is from your country.

Also of course I imagine you did your standard flushing of cache, DNS, etc...

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riahc3- things goes differently with my ISP. They lease the IPs for 3 months. So disconnecting will not work here.

They give each modem 3 IP addresses, so you can plug in 3 different sources to the modem (each source has it's own MAC address of course), and the modem has a "table" of MAC address and its corresponding IP.

They can send a "clear" command to the modem to clear it's MAC-IP binding (the MAC comes from the router) but they won't do that.

 

This was finally "solved" by "spoofing" the MAC address to the one from my PC (instead of the one of the router. This can be done in my DD-WRT firmware using "mac clone"). So now the modem "sees" my PC and assigns another IP address as this is a different MAC.

 

I can quickly reproduce this by setting back the MAC to my router's.

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Hello,

riahc3- things goes differently with my ISP. They lease the IPs for 3 months. So disconnecting will not work here.

They give each modem 3 IP addresses, so you can plug in 3 different sources to the modem (each source has it's own MAC address of course), and the modem has a "table" of MAC address and its corresponding IP.

They can send a "clear" command to the modem to clear it's MAC-IP binding (the MAC comes from the router) but they won't do that.

 

This was finally "solved" by "spoofing" the MAC address to the one from my PC (instead of the one of the router. This can be done in my DD-WRT firmware using "mac clone"). So now the modem "sees" my PC and assigns another IP address as this is a different MAC.

 

I can quickly reproduce this by setting back the MAC to my router's.

So you have 3 IPs without NAT enabled on your router?
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It has nothing to do with NAT on the router. The modem can give up to 3 IPs to the devices connected directly to it (i.e. a router, an IP phone, etc).

 

I might be wrong tho, I don't exactly know all the technical details, but I only know it helped solving my problem.

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