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I recently came across a post that said jews have their hands in most VPN services. I assume they are collecting intel on all of us using those VPNs and planning on blackmailing us when the time comes. Or just straight up debanking / hate crime indicting / adding us to the concentration camp list / whatever.

Anyway, now I gotta switch from kike express to something else… any suggestions?
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derkevevin on scored.co
1 year ago 5 points (+0 / -0 / +5Score on mirror ) 1 child
I'd recommend Mullvad VPN. They are based in Sweden and were apparently raided by police, but they had to leave empty handed because there was no data to be taken*

Costs 5 bucks a month, can be paid with crypto or *cash* (by letter) if you want better anonymity for the payment.
Works on PC and phone.

*this is the official story, of course it *could* also be an elaborate scheme to make people trust a honey pot. In short: Don't trust anything 100%.
Best way to be safe, if you're doing something where you *really* don't want to be identified, assume that everything that isn't done with a 1 use burner device through a McDonalds wifi with no cameras around you, is being watched.
EternalJew on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 2 children
You do not need a burner device. Just use a laptop without LTE and do not take any phone with you. Not even turned off. Phones have an auxiliary battery that can be used to connect to a cell tower and place you within a block of your location.
Megaboom2025 on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
What’s LTE?
derkevevin on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
>You do not need a burner device. Just use a laptop without LTE and do not take any phone with you.

What about things like browser fingerprinting by hardware?
EternalJew on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 2 children
You can spoof it using a browser addon like this one: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/chameleon-ext/. You can also run your session through QEMU as well to spoof your OS, which is the most important one they using for identifying you.
myke on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
I'll put that one in my back pocket. Thank you kindly.
derkevevin on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
I'm not saying this is important for everyone, most people should be fine with a VPN and some solutions like browser plugins. But if you really have to be on the safe side for something, you can't trust any of these things. It's nothing more than false security. The right way of going about it isn't clearing your tracks, but avoiding to leave any possible tracks to begin with.
In one of his interviews Edward Snowden shared a good approach to this: Think about what happens if X is compromised and consider the worst case consequences to decide if it's an acceptable risk. For example, what happens IF your personal device IS compromised? What happens IF your phone IS hacked and the camera and microphone are recording you, etc. ?
Or "The wifi/location is turned off/in airplane mode. What can happen if it isn't?"
"The phone is turned off. What can happen if it isn't?"
If the answer is "something very bad" then you shouldn't be doing X and find an alternative with the lowest possible risk, like using a burner device or not having a phone with you at all.
EternalJew on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
You might have not worked with web technologies so no blame on you for that one. The way they fingerprint you is by what the browser is providing to you, which is what addons like that do; fake your browser session to what you wish (you should use the most common available i.e. windows 11 with google chrome). As I said, if your device is really compromised, then sure you can use a new burner device every time. Or, you can virtualise your sessions through something like qemu or qubesOS, to avoid causing you the most inconvenience. Chances are you are doing things that way for a reason. If you're doing something that would be putting you in the spotlight, chances are you're doing it in that particular way for a reason for which there likely is no alternative. I am against VPN for the simple reason that you are placing unnecessary trust on a third party that is legally bound to follow log and gag orders with real consequences if the owners are not compliant. If the operational security requirement is that high, you wouldn't be using a VPN. You would be using tor or i2p.
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