VPNs

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Mullvad was raided by Swedish glowies a couple of days ago. They say nothing is compromised, but I'm sure true and honest schizos will be freaking out.
I mean it's not going to be the last time Mullvad will be raided by glow niggers after this stunt. I just want to know why a search warrent was even allowed in the first place, especially if Mullvad didn't even have what they were looking for because they don't operate in the way the glow niggers think they do.

Only thing I can think of is that Mullvad got insanely popular in a short amount of time for being a good VPN and the glow niggers, or someone in political power, got pissed people weren't using the compromised shit, so this comes off as political pressure/warning from them. Mullvad claims they've been in service for 14 years, so why all of a sudden are they getting visits NOW?
 
I mean it's not going to be the last time Mullvad will be raided by glow niggers after this stunt. I just want to know why a search warrent was even allowed in the first place, especially if Mullvad didn't even have what they were looking for because they don't operate in the way the glow niggers think they do.

Only thing I can think of is that Mullvad got insanely popular in a short amount of time for being a good VPN and the glow niggers, or someone in political power, got pissed people weren't using the compromised shit, so this comes off as political pressure/warning from them. Mullvad claims they've been in service for 14 years, so why all of a sudden are they getting visits NOW?
It takes a Mullvad user doing something that results in a warrant. What happens next will be interesting, if anything.
Something similar happened with Protonmail and Protonmail was compelled to log the IPs for the account in question just so they could come back and say "Give us the IP address now that you actually have them."

Mullvad gets around this by issuing account numbers. I'm not sure how they do it in Sweden but I would wager the warrant has to be somewhat specific in its purpose, so they'd need to specify the account they would want tracked to use that technique but there's no way for them to get that if Mullvad accurately reports how they handle logs.
 
If in the US, it's pretty simple. Generate account number, choose pay with cash, print or write payment token, enclose payment and token, address envelope, affix proper amount of Global Forever stamp(s) ($1.45 for up to 1oz, US bills bills weigh slightly under 1 gram each), drop in random freestanding blue drop box away from cameras, preferably residential.
Also they take Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, and possibly more enticing, Monero.
It takes a Mullvad user doing something that results in a warrant.
And someone who is either an absolute retard or glows. Or both.
 
I mean it's not going to be the last time Mullvad will be raided by glow niggers after this stunt. I just want to know why a search warrent was even allowed in the first place, especially if Mullvad didn't even have what they were looking for because they don't operate in the way the glow niggers think they do.

Only thing I can think of is that Mullvad got insanely popular in a short amount of time for being a good VPN and the glow niggers, or someone in political power, got pissed people weren't using the compromised shit, so this comes off as political pressure/warning from them. Mullvad claims they've been in service for 14 years, so why all of a sudden are they getting visits NOW?
The organized crime outfits(all immigrants...) are at war with each other. There are shootings, murders and bombings every day. The police is going after them hard right now especially since the government are now "right wingers" that campaigned on cracking down on these bozos, that's what I think this is about.
 
Someone on the piracy subreddit made a VPN comparison table on Google Sheets that goes over speed, encryption, audit log availability, etc.. Popular providers like NordVPN, Private Internet Access, and Mullvad are listed, as well as smaller VPN services. It's by no means an exhaustive table list in terms of functionality, features, and performance. Take the sheet with a grain of salt, and be sure to do your own research before committing to a VPN. RAM-only servers are preferable for VPN providers, since it better adheres to privacy and a no-log policy.

I was surprised to see that Mullvad is part of the Fourteen Eyes (something that hadn't crossed my mind when I bought the service, as I was only aware of the Five Eyes country agreement). I also find it interesting how NordVPN was ranked highly, given that they're typically associated with YouTube sponsorships (which have a long track history of being absolute garbage products or services).
 
Someone on the piracy subreddit made a VPN comparison table on Google Sheets that goes over speed, encryption, audit log availability, etc.. Popular providers like NordVPN, Private Internet Access, and Mullvad are listed, as well as smaller VPN services. It's by no means an exhaustive table list in terms of functionality, features, and performance. Take the sheet with a grain of salt, and be sure to do your own research before committing to a VPN. RAM-only servers are preferable for VPN providers, since it better adheres to privacy and a no-log policy.

I was surprised to see that Mullvad is part of the Fourteen Eyes (something that hadn't crossed my mind when I bought the service, as I was only aware of the Five Eyes country agreement). I also find it interesting how NordVPN was ranked highly, given that they're typically associated with YouTube sponsorships (which have a long track history of being absolute garbage products or services).
I find the "x Eyes = super bad" mentality insanely schizophrenic, if you're actually this worried about surveillance then you're either super autistic about reaching 100% privacy by using inherently unprivate technology or you're planning to do some heinous shit, and I'm not talking torrenting, if you're that worried about it you probably should be on a watchlist to begin with. And the thing with VPN's is that even if they are in the most "privacy friendly" jurisdiction imaginable, they just as well might be a fed honeypot and log everything you do.

I only recently paid for Mullvad VPN and it's my first contact with a paid VPN service and I find it to work rather well. I'm not worried about Mullvad ratting me out for daring to torrent shit, because that's not the reason those "x Eyes" agreements are being made. Same with bypassing regional locks or IP locks, that's the reason I wanted a VPN and Mullvad is perfectly fine for that despite being located in Sweden.

Generally, my stance on schizoprivacy is this: look at what Richard Stallman is doing. Are you willing to make the same sacrifices as him? If not, then you'll never reach your imaginary goal of privacy and you're losing your mind over nothing. What rms is doing is as close to absolute privacy when using computers as you can get in the modern age, and if you're not willing to go to the same extent then you are simply wasting your time, because the goalpost you've given yourself is unreachable. You can only increase your privacy, but not to 100%.

Also, now that I'm looking through that chart, it seems rather odd that when it comes to payment forms both Mullvad and NordVPN have the same amount of "yes" yet NordVPN scores lower. Then you have the customer support chart where the only metric that counts towards the average is how many forms of communication they have, not how good the customer support is, with NordVPN having a "positively reviewed" note.

And again, in ethics both Mullvad and Nord score the same but Nord has a lower score. There are also metrics for the amounts of owned servers which also doesn't tell you much about how good the service is but still counts towards the average, with Nord having less servers in less countries than PIA, yet Nord scores 5 while PIA scores 4.

This chart feels heavily diluted with superfluous bullshit, with a lot of it being lower for other good providers like Mullvad, with NordVPN having the score arbitrarily lowered in some charts despite being on par with something like Mullvad, and even then it ends up with a much much better average than Mullvad, and has TWO discount links out of all the providers on the list. But in all honesty, that's what you'd expect from a Redditor, subreddits are only useful for their megathreads which are just curated link indexes and that's it.
 
Can Mullvad do spit tunneling with killswitch enabled?
 
The search warrant came from Germany and was related to a blackmail attack that hit several municipal institutions in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in October 2021. It sounds like a ransomware attack to me? Someone could look it up if they're feeling motivated. Or perhaps a bomb threat.


 
The search warrant came from Germany and was related to a blackmail attack that hit several municipal institutions in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in October 2021. It sounds like a ransomware attack to me? Someone could look it up if they're feeling motivated. Or perhaps a bomb threat.


No logs is true after all.
 
The search warrant came from Germany and was related to a blackmail attack that hit several municipal institutions in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in October 2021. It sounds like a ransomware attack to me? Someone could look it up if they're feeling motivated. Or perhaps a bomb threat.


what is it with state, that one autistic agency/court that constantly sues steam for basic shit like "teens watching r18 store pages" is from there too.
 
As usual a few lunatics ruin it for the rest of us. Goodbye Plex.
To remotely connect to your local Plex server in your local network (btw Jellyfin is better), you have some better, free options.

If your ISP gives you a unique IP, as in only your home net gets that outbound IP and not a bunch of homes in the area, you can set up a local Wireguard VPN server, which would allow you to connect to your home network remotely and securely. In case you're not so lucky, there's also ZeroTier which doesn't require a private IP and accomplishes about the same thing.

Personally I got Mullvad to torrent shit, where port forwarding is pretty much a must. I've asked for a refund of the 5€ for my second month I've bought days before the announcement, and they've refunded it no issue.

It's a damn shame they decided on it, but perhaps they'll think it though and make a separate pool of VPN nodes that will allow port forwarding that will have a clear notice that they'll get blacklisted on websites and that they should be used for port forwarding services only, since from what I understand that was their issue.
 
If your ISP gives you a unique IP, as in only your home net gets that outbound IP and not a bunch of homes in the area, you can set up a local Wireguard VPN server, which would allow you to connect to your home network remotely and securely. In case you're not so lucky, there's also ZeroTier which doesn't require a private IP and accomplishes about the same thing.
There's also Nebula, which allows you to layer your own network on top of (IIRC) layer 5. A positive with Nebula versus a traditional VPN is you don't need to open ports on your gateway each time you wish to connect to your network, you can keep that node (the lighthouse) on a free-tier cloud VPS.
 
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To remotely connect to your local Plex server in your local network (btw Jellyfin is better), you have some better, free options.

If your ISP gives you a unique IP, as in only your home net gets that outbound IP and not a bunch of homes in the area, you can set up a local Wireguard VPN server, which would allow you to connect to your home network remotely and securely. In case you're not so lucky, there's also ZeroTier which doesn't require a private IP and accomplishes about the same thing.

Personally I got Mullvad to torrent shit, where port forwarding is pretty much a must. I've asked for a refund of the 5€ for my second month I've bought days before the announcement, and they've refunded it no issue.

It's a damn shame they decided on it, but perhaps they'll think it though and make a separate pool of VPN nodes that will allow port forwarding that will have a clear notice that they'll get blacklisted on websites and that they should be used for port forwarding services only, since from what I understand that was their issue.
Can I still set up remote access if I’m already using Wireguard on my router for VPN? I don’t really want to install any additional software outside the router.

Edit: Now that I think about it I can probably just create a firewall rule for the Plex port outside my VPN.
 
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That would be pedophilia advocate Jeremy Malcolm, one of the principals of the pedophile advocacy group Prostasia, which finally got a thread today. The OP goes into immense amounts of detail including a lengthy section on this creep.

Oh and it actually goes back way, way further than that. Try the '90s when they tried (and failed) to prosecute Phil Zimmerman for creating PGP.
Also in the 90's: The NSA tried pushing the clipper chip. The chip featured hardware encryption, a classified encryption algorithm (skipjack) and built in back doors. During the cold war western nations had export control laws surrounding technology assets to prevent the Soviets from learning western encryption techniques. I'm pretty sure that encryption was illegal at various points in history in the west. In short, governments hate encryption and will always try to circumvent it.
 
What is the recommendation for free bittorrent vpn providers, ideally available in Canada? I'm looking at hide.me as the free tier is sufficient for linking to qbittorrent-nxe as I realistically won't go over the data limit.
 
What is the recommendation for free bittorrent vpn providers, ideally available in Canada? I'm looking at hide.me as the free tier is sufficient for linking to qbittorrent-nxe as I realistically won't go over the data limit.
There is virtually no risk of torrenting here in Canada without a VPN currently. Not to say that won't change in the future. Posting here is literally riskier.
 
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