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I've hosted an asp.net mvc 4 website on IIS 8 and it's perfectly running from my country. But whenever someone tries to browse from other countries, it's not working. This is my site. I've allowed port 80 and 443 both in my firewall.

I've also tried pinging from locaping.com and I get 100% packet loss for every country. Am I missing something that's causing my website unreachable to other countries?

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    You say "outside of my country" - have you actually checked it from elsewhere in your country? Or only from your local computer? Have you tried it from a variety of different ISPs within your country as well? Feb 17, 2016 at 16:02
  • I've a friend in USA that tried browsing and pinging both and found timeout in both cases. I've also used locaping for pinging from multiple regions. So, yes I'm pretty much sure about what I'm stating. Feb 17, 2016 at 16:24
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    Unfortunately you didn't answer my question. I don't disagree - it's certainly not working from outside your country. I asked are you sure it's working from inside your country? Why do you think it's working inside but not outside? What tests have you done to prove it's working inside your country? Feb 17, 2016 at 16:45
  • Thanks, I've tested from a lot of people I know in my country. All of them are ok. So I'm 100% sure that there's no problem inside from my country. Feb 17, 2016 at 17:24
  • @SinOscuras Are you certain those people are using different ISPs?
    – kasperd
    Feb 18, 2016 at 11:39

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For what i can see, your server is hosted in Bangladesh (whois 43.225.150.107, IRT-WORLDNETBANGLADESH-BD).

Trying a traceroute the last hop i see is in Bangladesh too, it's 125.17.96.94.

Seems you have to ask your provider about this.

In the meantime if you have administrator access to the machine you can sniff the traffic coming and check for connections / packets from outside your country, you can ask some friend or such, or with locaping.

I am not used to windows but for what i remember Wireshark used to work fine for sniffing last time i checked.

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  • Thanks for the response, but please can you explain what is wrong here? I'm actually a Web Developer, don't have in-depth concept about networking. Feb 17, 2016 at 13:41
  • Updated my answer with a suggestion. But anyway, if it's your provider blocking the traffic only them can solve your problem. Or you can change provider.
    – Fredi
    Feb 17, 2016 at 15:17

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