IP law firms tried to get their cases into my country and they only got a 50% success rate on court so they stopped trying (cost benefit thing I suppose).

Also private trackers in my country do not allow the use of VPN (why do they care IDK, they say it is to have more control on who join), so there’s little point on getting a VPN for piracy here.

KillingTimeItself
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36d

Also private trackers in my country do not allow the use of VPN (why do they care IDK, they say it is to have more control on who join), so there’s little point on getting a VPN for piracy here.

it’s probably for IP banning or something. Whitelist authorization, something silly like that.

Haru asking Futaba where she has to type in her dad’s credit card number

Or pirat through a public library proxy :)

Explain this to me more thoroughly? Does this mean physically going to the library and using their Wi-Fi? Or are you talking about something else?

I have a proxy host on a library terminal Server and a VPN through/to their firewall (its actually a network of Libraries

voxel
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95d

i never hav to use one lmao

@AnokLola@lemm.ee
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65d

And please don’t use anime girls to refer to every fucking thing in the world

I mean this is Persona 5 and this is 100% what Futaba would say and do

katy ✨
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45d

do i want to be her or date her?

Who is the original artist?

@Fl1ppyR34@ani.social
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86d

@negglartz on that place Elongated Musksticles ruined

https://x.com/neggoartz/status/1833956375367659551

kn0wmad1c
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146d

Not sure about the artist, but these are characters from the game Persona 5 (Haru and Futaba)

Okay, thanks!

Even Haru’s billionaire ass can’t afford all these subscriptions 😭

@DavidGarcia@feddit.nl
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396d

I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P I2P

watched the mental outlaw video i see

I2P

wait, so this would route my traffic through others’ internet connections and theirs through mine? seems like a great way to get implicated for actually illegal activity, like, say, other people running I2P to download and/or upload certain types of porn.

KillingTimeItself
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it’s all encrypted, and a darknet, so unless you’re routing through exit nodes, or you host an exit node, that information isn’t publicly accessible.

the other problem here is the “illegal contents” problem, if UPS accidentally ships a human head in the mail, is that the fault of the UPS? If someone mails a bomb to someone else, is that also the fault of UPS?

Ultimately, there is little to no reasoning as to why you should be capable of getting into trouble, unless you’re storing it, and it’s a very very strict law. But it’s a router, so it shouldn’t be storing anything.

There are no exit nodes on i2p.

KillingTimeItself
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25d

there can be clear net proxies iirc, which are essentially exit nodes, but they aren’t recommended for fairly obvious reasons.

It’s called an outproxy

The i2p outproxy is simply a user-specified proxy that i2p uses when you try to fetch someting outside the i2p network. I2p does not implement that proxy itself, therefore it is not part of i2p / it can’t be called an i2p exit node.

@psud@aussie.zone
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16d

It seems trivial for the US government to tie data into TOR to data out. If you’re hiding things that government is willing to spend effort seeking, it’s not safe.

KillingTimeItself
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25d

im not sure to which scale this is true, but TOR specifically is highly centralized, and by design I2P is extremely decentralized, with most nodes running network routing of other nodes. Not that it’s impossible to do, it’s just a lot harder, and not nearly as valuable.

A lot of the ways in which people are got over shit like TOR is just skill issuing. Don’t run a drug empire on the darknet and you’ll probably be fine. If you do run a drug empire on the darknet, you better be damn fucking good at opsec, and pretty fucking good at laundering money. And even then you’ll probably still end up fucking it up.

Man, why is everyone like this? Please read the documentation, the traffic is encrypted and metadata cannot identify you. Unless the NSA has an active hack for I2P lying around, NO-ONE IN THIS WORLD can find out what chunks of traffic just went flying by your internet connection

lapis [fae/faer, comrade/them]
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sure, but I2P’s end-to-end encryption is for connecting to I2P addresses, not the general internet. I’m unclear on whether every node serves as an anonymized connection to the internet, though.

EDIT: read a little deeper! so no, not every computer connected to I2P is an internet-connected node, but, due to the limited number of internet-connected nodes, I2P does not offer the same level of anonymity that a VPN does, and may struggle from bandwidth issues.

I can understand the argument against bandwidth, but how do you conclude that it is not anonymous enough? Even against a VPN?

the whole purpose of a VPN is to anonymize internet traffic, so they have many servers that send traffic out to the internet, which improves both anonymity and bandwidth. I2P is more akin to Tor, with anonymizing internet traffic as a bit of an afterthought, and the limited number of internet-connecting nodes makes users’ traffic more trackable.

What you’re talking about is supposed anonymity in obfuscation, and that has been proven to not work.

Also, most VPN companies keep logs and can be subpoenaed. Not all, but most. I2P is meant to anonymize your traffic, so I do not see the point of your statement

What you’re talking about is supposed anonymity in obfuscation, and that has been proven to not work.

if it’s been proven not to work, then neither I2P nor VPN is worth using, no?

most VPN companies keep logs and can be subpoenaed.

well, sure, but that’s why anybody looking into a VPN is generally advised to use specific, known-good VPN providers who don’t keep logs and who, preferably, aren’t headquartered in a country with strict IP law.

Southern Wolf
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56d

Yeah, if you don’t mind it possibly taking a week to download something… Really like the idea, but in practice it’s very slow for something like that, unless you got a lot of seeders for something maybe.

@Grass@sh.itjust.works
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16d

has it gotten any better since 100 years ago or whenever I was a kid?

A VPN is just essentially a change in ISP.

@sus@programming.dev
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importantly it’s (hopefully) an ISP that operates from a less copyright-happy country and isn’t tied down to tons of expensive infrastructure and long-term contracts

@dan@upvote.au
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135d

And make sure it’s a VPN that supports port forwarding. Sharing is caring.

or just use Usenet.

@Deceptichum@quokk.au
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486d

I don’t use a VPN because my government has acknowledged that an IP address cannot identify what individual was using it.

RandomLegend [He/Him]
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526d

wouldn’t trust that tbh

@psud@aussie.zone
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6d

I know that government prosecutions for fraud against government use IP addresses

The IP address identifies the company or home the fraud was done from, the account the money went to identifies the individual

If breaking the law and able to afford to make it difficult for prosecutors, it’s probably best to make it difficult for the prosecutors, we may have an activist pro copyright holder government in future and logs are forever (or 5 years)

CaptainBasculin
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1186d

If your country persecutes individual piracy. Mine doesn’t.

Lee Duna
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35d

Yep, my govt only cares about porn, manga, hentai, online gambling sites, reddit and duckduckgo.

SagXD
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15d

Why DDG?

(⬤ᴥ⬤)
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13d

racist against ducks

SagXD
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13d

Oh Yea Kiwi people

@BakedCatboy@lemmy.ml
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396d

Our ISP sends 3 strike letters :(

Robust Mirror
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That is supposedly the case in Australia as well but I haven’t got a letter from telstra since around 2004 and I have never used a VPN and watch all my shows and movies via torrents so either I’m extremely lucky or they stopped bothering.

Though recently I started paying the $4 / month for Real Debrid for better streaming performance, which is just as good as a VPN for torrent anonymity. I used to be fundamentally against the idea of paying anything to pirate but honestly this is worth it, I’ve even been able to watch a few shows that had 0 seeders because they were previously cached.

Norah - She/They
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146d

Scroll down and there’s a section about Australia on here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dallas_Buyers_Club

Basically, they fucked it up so bad in Aus no one’s ever tried again.

@psud@aussie.zone
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106d

That says their error was trying American threats “we got you dead to rights, tell us your income and we’ll tell you how much to pay our we’ll sue for punitive damages”

Which isn’t legal in Australia. They would have been ok if they had asked to send a letter saying “stop it or pay us a reasonable amount for one person viewing the film once” but of course actual damages aren’t enough for film companies

They were too greedy.

Norah - She/They
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66d

Yeah basically. But part of why no one has tried again is because the judge made it very clear he wasn’t going to just roll over and let them pull their BS. Including setting a bond of $600k for them to even try litigating it. Another part of it is that ISPs used to hand out IP addresses and PII in response to requests from media companies. This was found to be in breach of privacy laws and now those companies would have to apply for court orders, proving malfeasance, to get that information.

@Grass@sh.itjust.works
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96d

I have had like 14 while I was still in school here in canada. if things haven’t changed you just ignore them because they can’t do jack if you don’t respond. Someone I worked with was blown away when I told him this because back home he was banned from all but the slowest ISP.

@BakedCatboy@lemmy.ml
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5d

Hah I wish we could ignore them. It seems to just vary from ISP to ISP in the US but our small town ISP turns off your connection and puts you behind a captive portal forcing you to click through and accept what you did wrong before your connection is turned back on.

youmaynotknow
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336d

Our ISPs are too cheap and lazy to even try looking. I still use I2P, but only because I need to justify my tin foil hats collection.

@Damage@feddit.it
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136d

I’m pretty sure our ISPs would advertise piracy if they could

youmaynotknow
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36d

They pirate and sell the service locally 🤣🤣

Scary le Poo
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14d

It’s important to note that a VPN is simply somebody else’s network in another location.

hamid 🏴
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656d

Yeah there is no way Surfshark, NordVPN and other services are compromised and or straight up run by the NSA

@Blackmist@feddit.uk
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326d

In fairness I doubt the NSA give a single solitary fuck about piracy and aren’t about to give themselves up over a telesync rip of Beetlejuice 2.

But probably best to plan 9/11 part 2 over something a bit more secure.

merde alors
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926d

let’s say that VPNs are compromised and “they” know that you’re downloading “illegally”

in order to prosecute, “they” have to prove you’re a pirate and show how they know

would they compromise their backDoor to go after a tiny pirate?

hamid 🏴
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216d

you don’t really need to scare quote they in this context. The NSA and similar organizations are real and operating at this scale right now.

Will they compromise their back door to go after a pirate? No. Will they collect data on you to profile you and your activities and use that in the future? Yes.

It is not if, it is when the digital police state is imposed will we know the real end state of this level of data collection. My warning about them is not just about the pirates, its about installing their software and letting them port mirror you and cache your dns calls for years to target you later.

@Blackmist@feddit.uk
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96d

Will they collect data on you to profile you and your activities and use that in the future? Yes.

And that’s why the only thing I use my VPN for is piracy. Don’t really have a good reason to push anything else through it.

@parody@lemmings.world
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286d

This is why I compose all my messages on an air gapped computer and send them out from my compound with couriers.

@ElCanut@jlai.lu
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15d

Who controls the couriers though

y0kai
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116d

I personally just use a VPN that connects to NSA servers so they think it’s themselves doing the torrenting.

Unless you PGP-encrypt everything by hand you’ve just lost the fight

hamid 🏴
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-36d

Oh also people use VPNs to buy DIY hormones online, what happens when the inevitable US anti trans witch hunt happens?

KillingTimeItself
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96d

nothing because it’s fucking hormones. It’s not meth.

Estrogen, yes. Trans guys are fucked if we’ve got to order testosterone off the internet.

KillingTimeItself
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15d

yeah, and? What are they going to do? Send the DEA after you for growing GMO titties? Gonna hit you with the ATF because you grew hormonally altered facial hair?

They’ve got shit like fentanyl to be worrying about. I think this is probably the least of concerns, especially considering this is less “drug addiction” and more “illegal prescription drugs” instead. Besides, they don’t get drug money from trans people.

It’s certainly a potential risk for procurement of the drug legally. But that’s already a problem.

KillingTimeItself
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06d

in order to prosecute, “they” have to prove you’re a pirate and show how they know

would they compromise their backDoor to go after a tiny pirate?

this information isn’t likely to be public after the fact.

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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76d

Are you suggesting that it’s pointless to use a VPN?

For anonymity, yes. Sure you might fool Google trying to match your IP to your traffic but that’s about it

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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14d

How so, specifically for logless VPNs?

Technically speaking, VPN logs tend to include the IP address of clients connecting to them, after which the good VPN providers like Mullvad, IVPN and maybe PIA tend to purge them somewhere in their process. Now, if the VPN is running in a RAM-only node, then these logs probably don’t touch storage, which means there’s not much need to shred information from hard drives for the VPN provider.

With that said, an ISP can technically log your traffic and see that you’re connecting to the IP range associated with a VPN. That and perhaps some more covert side-channel/correlation attacks can, in theory, compromise your identity.

Of course, this is going deep into OPSEC and forensics, and I don’t think the NSA is that interested in the average Billy torrenting “The Office” to go through that many logs, even if the studios sue in court. Hence, technically your privacy is somewhat maintained with the good VPN providers, but you’re definitely not anonymous

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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34d

That’s kind of my thought as well. It’s certainly possible someone might go through the effort to find a single pirate downloading The Lion King, but that’s a lot of effort (read: money) to find just one person.

There’s certainly the possibility that an ISP could note that you connected to a VPN, but given that it’s not a remarkable event, since people connect to VPNs for all kinds of legal reasons, they aren’t likely to track your particular IP’s connection to a VPN apart from a court ordering them to care. They get paid their monthly internet plan price whether someone pirates or checks their email.

If someone was running the Pirate Bay from their home servers, however, more parties would likely be interested in finding that person, and that person’s threat model probably exceeds just using a logless VPN.

Maybe I should have said “it’s not anonymous based on your threat model”

hamid 🏴
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36d

Yes, a hosted seedbox paid with crypto and self managed keys is the way to go for torrenting

If you are worried about VPN’s, why are you not worried about seedbox providers?

As he said, paid with crypto and managed with his own keys. I don’t see how the seedbox provider can trace you if you do that, so there’s not that much to worry about

You’re going to connect to the seedbox at some point, which ties your IP to the traffic. If you are worried about a VPN attaching your IP to traffic, this is no different, no?

SFTP over TOR. This should be a requirement at this point.

If you’re not doing that, then yes you’re technically right in that seedbox companies can be subpoenaed too. I usually use TOR to copy over what little I torrent.

hamid 🏴
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-16d

I am not worried about my torrenting traffic. I am worried about installing their software on my machine and giving them wide access including port mirroring.

@sus@programming.dev
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15d

if you can’t connect to a vpn using only open source software, that’s a crappy vpn

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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56d

What evidence do you have that no-log VPNs are compromised by the NSA? What about VPNs based in other countries like Canada?

hamid 🏴
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-56d

You might have heard about Edward Snowden? Have you looked into anything that he leaked?

@psud@aussie.zone
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26d

Is your home machine, your phone, better protected than the VPN servers? I bet you’re not as good at IT security as the IT security staff VPN companies hire

If your threat model includes nation state actors, you’re best off not using networked computers

sunzu2
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04d

I am all about good tinfoil but some of these people acting as if they are SNOWDEN lol

Yes if feds wanted to catch you shitposting, watching big titied asian porn and downloading coldplay… I think there raised ways than compromising a VPN provider.

Unless it is a honey pot, then use a different VPN provider. Gonna need trust at the end of the day.

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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136d

The existence of the NSA and their activities is not proof that they have backdoors in VPNs. That’s bogeyman conspiracy theory shit—“they could be anywhere, therefore they’re everywhere!”

You still haven’t answered the question, and I’m beginning to think you are making shit up based on paranoia.

hamid 🏴
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6d

Go ahead and use these services. I don’t care about you, what you do or what you think. You are deeply unserious if you are not paranoid about the surveillance and I really have nothing to discuss with you.

@Syntha@sh.itjust.works
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76d

Is there literally any evidence that the US government managed to extract useful information from no-log vpn providers in the US?

@cheddar@programming.dev
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6d

You didn’t answer the question. Your behavior is toxic.

hamid 🏴
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-56d

My behavior is toxic because I am saying VPN services aren’t safe? OK whatever. I really don’t care what the fuck you do. Go ahead and pay money for these services 🤷‍♀️

KillingTimeItself
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6d

the US has so much geopolitical reach that companies in canada or elsewhere would just hand over the question if it was high enough profile.

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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46d

That’s an interesting point, but I think the “if it’s high profile enough” is key. People torrenting files is probably low on their priorities. On the other hand, somebody organizing a terrorist cell is probably much higher.

Companies might have an interest in finding pirates, but it would not be as easy for them to get other companies to comply with their subpoenas.

KillingTimeItself
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46d

yeah if ur just a dude pirating, it probably doesn’t matter, but if they find you’ve done a large crime, you can bet your ass that shits getting yoinked from you.

companies might, but that’s almost entirely through legal processes. ceast and desists, required reporting, etc…

At least if the company is run from the US

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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26d

Why?

Because if the government wants that data then they are gonna get it. If it’s in another country its a lot more work than just serving them a warrant like it is if they are USbased

@Telorand@reddthat.com
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66d

At least that’s a more reasonable answer than trying to imply the NSA has backdoors everywhere.

My position is that it all depends on your threat model. The government isn’t likely to go after someone who torrents files and is hidden by a VPN. The government might go after someone running a streaming site, on the other hand.

And even that might wind up with a dead end. AirVPN (for example) is Canada-based, has no logs, and accepts both crypto and anonymous cash payments.

socsa
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5d

Everyone knows it’s impossible for the NSA to buy rack space in Bulgaria, where they literally don’t have to deal with any US legal process.

It’s also impossible for the NSA to market such a service via pop-privacy blogs and social media profiles.

The funny part about this is that the Snowden leaks showed that the NSA actually put a lot of effort into doing shit like this specifically to avoid all the paperwork which came with accidentally collecting data from US citizens. Keeping the data and analysis off shore means no pesky FISA paperwork.

do you have a moment to talk about our lord and saviour mullvad vpn

Bro I’m downloading Final Fantasy, not running a pedo marketplace. I will be fine.

what about proton or mullvad?

sunzu2
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04d

Both are considered strong choices but again… This is 100% trust me bro.

But that’s the people the bros chose to trust

@Rogers@lemmy.ml
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76d

Title is probably true, but also it’s less likely for the NSA to leak your info than say an ISP that openly sells your info. I highly doubt that the NSA sees someone pirating Photoshop as a priority. VPNs can help with preventing a random ad from logging your real loose location, have built in DNS ad block, open up region locked content plus a list of other benefits.

VPNs absolutely help with general privacy, like not putting your personal phone number on a public registry. They are not intended to perfectly hide you from a super power’s intelligence agency lol

@x00za@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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45d

I don’t think they care about piracy.

Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ
!piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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