Comment by jgrahamc
3 years ago
That's for Cloudflare's CDN/reverse-proxy service.
This is the correct one for Cloudflare Tunnel: https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/connections...
3 years ago
That's for Cloudflare's CDN/reverse-proxy service.
This is the correct one for Cloudflare Tunnel: https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/connections...
This seems to be the license for cloudflared. But when you use cloudflared to create a tunnel via cloudflare network, aren't you also bound to Cloudflare's ToS because the software itself is useless without using the service provided by Cloudflare?
I am literally Cloudflare's CTO. I'm pretty sure I know that using Cloudflare Tunnel for SSH isn't a violation of our service.
Nobody thought you were figuratively cloudflares CTO.
“I’m literally never going to stop misusing this word.”
Thanks for the clarification! Might want to educate your support staff a bit more so they can provide the same clarification.
This was my assumption as well given the tutorials and such available on your site. I was confused though and so reached out for clarification.
Hold up. I follow this space closely (I maintain the list of tunneling tools linked in OP). Everybody I've communicated with has been operating under the assumption that section 2.8 applies to Cloudflare Tunnel. See for example my post on another thread yesterday [0]. Are you saying this isn't the case? Is it even possible to use Tunnel without going through the CDN?
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30259902
2 replies →
Ah, good to know. Thanks!
best reply ever, totally made my day.
It's not clear to me what is allowed. Would I risk a termination if I used the service to proxy ~500 GB per month of video content?
(I'm looking for a way to get around bad traffic shaping I get in the afternoon between two locations streaming live TV.)