adespoton

joined 1 year ago
[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 10 points 1 week ago

How is that a scoop?

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 week ago

Well, when I was young I told my father to make it stop snowing. Eventually it did, and I gave him full credit.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 week ago

It’s about the traffic shape and size; the packets are all encrypted, but unless you’re filling the gaps with random noise, there’s a pattern to the randomness, in terms of packet size and density, and to the shape of the traffic volume over time.

If you’re streaming video AND torrenting at the same time, that will cover up some of the torrent fingerprints, but not all.

And if someone has the fingerprint of a torrent from a non-VPN source, they can pretty reliably figure out exactly which torrent you’re connected to. Pretty much nobody goes to that level of analysis for a random person though; they’d have to already have some reason to be watching your network traffic AND find it worthwhile.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 week ago

The real winners are the people who received all the money from the R and D campaigns. They literally had to show no proof of work, and their effectiveness (or lack thereof) is almost impossible to prove.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Torrenting means you’re sending copies of the files to anyone with a magnet link. Great for quickly sharing legitimate software with a wide group. If you’re trying to download stuff you don’t have a license for, torrenting is a bad solution. Better to find a small community where you can just share files directly, peer to peer or on a private server.

Torrenting has a very obvious digital fingerprint, so even if you’re using a VPN, your ISP knows you’re torrenting. And if your VPN provider gets served with a notice and their country is a member of any international trade agreement, they know who you are and have a responsibility to take action against you.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 week ago

The US has political baseball where the blue team is a collection of players with different strategies who want to play the game in different ways.

Internationally, a lot of countries play cricket.

Some countries play Go.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 week ago

Trump has never swept a day in his life.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 27 points 1 week ago

As the POTUS, Trump gets to set the bar on the world stage for international cooperation in many parts of life.

Other leaders, world-wide, will follow his lead, either because they can finally get away with it, or in reaction to how he treats their nation.

We saw this to a small degree with Trump 1.0 when nobody expected him to win. Now the entire world has had 8 years to figure out what they are going to do.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 5 points 1 week ago (5 children)

I keep all my traffic encrypted, use my own DNS, and run a VPN so that anytime I’m away from my place, my traffic is tunnelled through my home setup, which includes a piHole.

If I need more than that to obscure the traffic source, it goes through TOR.

I also run a few public web services off the same IP, so the traffic coming out of my address has plausible deniability.

Plus, I use tracker and ad blockers in all my browsers/devices, of course, as well as block JavaScript by default.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 week ago

Isn’t childcare a provincial responsibility? So it’s the lack of provincial regulations at play here. Still an issue, but the pressure needs to be applied in the right place, as the national guidelines are already clear.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 12 points 1 week ago (8 children)

Generally, it’s best to go by capability, not by policy.

Any company has to do what the government of its country says. This goes both for the VPN company, AND any exit node country. So you have to always assume that whatever country your exit node is in has full access to the data exiting the VPN there.

Then there’s the technology being used, the expertise with which it is configured, and finally the policies in place for handling and storing your PII.

Mullvad has a strong record on all accounts, even as far as just giving a year’s notice that it will stop supporting OpenVPN.

AirVPN has virtually no track record, fewer details on hardware, configuration, expertise and PII handling, and it’s in the EU, so has to comply with EU laws as well as Italian laws.

Being in the EU means it has to comply with the GDPR, which does have its benefits. But it also means an EU member state could put a gag order on your account and be monitoring all your data without you ever knowing.

So it all comes down to who you want your data to be private from and why.

Personally, I avoid all public VPN services as much as possible, and assume that the only thing they’re really doing is tricking the next service in the hop as to what country I’m connecting from.

[–] adespoton@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 week ago

They do. It’s just a much bigger group to them, so the hate spreads further.

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