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Curtailed does not mean eliminated. I didn't think you'd go that far.
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"We hide behind private VPNs so that governments and law enforcement cannot track our IP addresses when we break that country's laws."
although your comments about fb twitter, etc are valid what you just said makes me wonder what planet you live on and for how long. The government nor law enforcement have the right to track me anywhere unless they have probable cause.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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Your personal IP address is logged each time you login to your VPN provider.
The government can get your IP address anytime they want. Almost all VPN service providers have an agreement with law enforcement to give over most of your personal data upon a search warrant.
I live on planet earth, same as you.
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That's the point, they need a warrant specific to a suspect. Currently they just slurp up everyone's activity _without_ a warrant
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I can think of many legal, but possibly immoral activities that some people would prefer the use of a VPN-service for.
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That's easy. To hide one's non criminal activities online.
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it is not up to anybody else to prove you are wrong, though you are wrong. the proof is out there. find it yourself.
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Slacker007 wrote: Facebook/Twitter still knows who you are, VPN or not.
If you use a VPN, but then log into Facebook/Twitter, then duuuuuhhh.
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Porn?
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why would you need a vpn for legal porn?
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In order not to get embarrassed if an ISP employer finds out by accident. As well as some curious person who might hack into my wifi. As well as some police officers who could tap my phone line (in my country police extensively abuses its powers in that aspect and do not hide that fact, according to official statistics around 30 percent of population got taped in past 10 years). E.g. I got taped 3 times by financial crimes unit that investigated my clients (I work as a corporate legal counsel which is risky in this aspect ).
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Somehow I don't feel ok exposing my sex life by accident even if it's completely legal
I don't think the situation is much different in other states. It's not like I live in China or Russia. I live in Lithuania which is a democratic one. Yet due to the public opinion that it's ok for police to tap a phone line just in case (without any proofs of a criminal activity whatsoever), we have the situation.
P.S. neither I nor any of my clients got convicted, nobody even got to a suspect status.
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You're trolling.
And may your chains rattle lightly.
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noooo although this is the lounge and I had resigned myself to someone vectoring in that direction.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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I beg to differ.
- With the exception of banking and access to government-provided services, there is no requirement to identify oneself with one's real name
- Many countries criminalize the free expression of opinion - if said opinion goes against that of the local government
- Even in the so-called free countries, expressing an unpopular opinion can get you into hot water (e.g. losing anything from friends to a job)
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Daniel Pfeffer wrote: Even in the so-called free countries, expressing an unpopular opinion can get you into hot water (e.g. losing anything from friends to a job)
VPN will not prevent this.
Most social media requires you to login to a site. VPN only hides the IP, not who is logged in making the comments.
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We had a users account compromised when he did business from a hotel room (pre-Covid). VPN's that encrypt can help prevent that. Has nothing to with anonymity. For that, just use Tor, it is free.
You are still free to hate VPN's. We still respect you.
If you can keep your head while those about you are losing theirs, perhaps you don't understand the situation.
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Slacker007 wrote: private VPN use is intended so that authorities cannot track someone's activities to their personal computer via the IP.
Or to have no travel/goods prices go up every time you visit the same website because they track your ip.
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Slacker007 wrote: private VPN use, IMHO, has no real value or benefit to the regular citizen unless someone wants to commit crimes and/or say things online in anonymous forums The stall door in a public toilet has no value or benefit to the regular citizen either, but I bet you still close it before you sit down to poop. Many people just like privacy.
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my entire point of posting this was that I found it interesting how many online accounts simply went haywire when I enabled VPN. Two come to mind:
1) Microsoft - my customer uses 365 and MS validates me all the time.
2) Google - now here is where it gets interesting (Slacker - I'm looking at you). One thing that annoys me to know end is if I search for something, say new rotors for my teen daughter's car, I am forever inundated with ads everywhere, because most sites have sold sections of their pages to advertisers. Even if I've browsed anonymously,, I still see it. Firing up the VPN, I don't see this behavior. Further, with VPN on, google searches are constantly prompting me with Captcha contests . It seems to me google really likes my IP address.
I also like the idea that my ISP cannot really sell any useful data on me. I'm not paranoid, and I really don't care. I have more important things to worry about, but just on the face of it, an ISP selling customer network traffic (I'm sure it's somewhere in the t's and c's that no one ever reads) seems dirty to me.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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charlieg I use Proton Mail and have been tempted to use the FREE VPN
My ISP Frontier is tracking my every move and I have proven they sold my information
That said the ISP service sucks 5 mbps speed
So does the free VPN from Proton Mail affect your down/up load speeds?
For the person who posted that the VPN providers sells your information
Proton Mail after 3 years of use I have never seen one SPAM e-mail
The can of worms the post generated made the question/comment GREAT
What I find of interest here very few people use their real names or disclose their location
When I joined CP so many years ago I was just starting to realize NOT to disclose too much personal information Thanks for the Posted Question
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At some point someone decided they wanted to track your IP address. Then they said well this user's IP address changed since last time, that must be a security risk.
Then the security nannies took over and demanded that you re-validate before you can access their service. And it is completely out of hand now.
All this with complete disregard for real life scenarios as to why a user's IP would change from hour to hour.
None of them want you to be anonymous, because that reduces the value of you as a product. They will make an effort to make your life a difficult as possible to get you to comply with how they would like you to behave.
And it is even worse than this VPN situation, install Tor browser and browse to your favorite sites to see what happens.
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charlieg wrote: I've started using a VPN to anonymize my internet activities. Some VPN's will change what country your IP address is coming from. In that case, yes, your bank accounts and everything else SHOULD go crazy.
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