http://voxday.blogspot.com/2021/01/uatv-update.html
There are some signs of things moving very fast and I believe there is a real chance of the internet really going down soon. We have discussed how this would most likely be done with the Ilk techies already, and it would be incredibly risky for them to try doing it at the IP level. There are so many critical services depending on IP.
What is much more likely is poisoning the world's DNS servers by Google, after which all the sites are still there, but you can't see them, except ones that are specifically allowed by Google. The nice thing about this is that you can work around it, if you act before it happens. You need to store the necessary information locally, where Google can't get at it.
There is just one step that you need to do right now, before the internet goes down. How to do it depends on your operating system.
If you are on Windows and you have never edited the file c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts , things are easy. If you HAVE edited it, you will know you have, because this is advanced use of Windows.
You will need administrator rights to edit this folder in the file exporer. First, rename the old file called hosts, to hosts_backup. Then, put the file you download from the following link, as the new c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts : http://205.251.111.249/win/hosts
Note that some browsers may complain that the file is not "commonly downloaded and may be dangerous". On Chrome, click the up arrow in the complaint, and then "keep".
After that, you will be able to open the URL http://emergency.voxday and you will find further instructions there, in case you find that all other lines of communication have disappeared. Most importantly, there will be a new hosts file behind that link, that will then contain many more entries in it. For any site that has an entry, it will override what the system gets from the poisoned DNS entry. That will allow us to bring all our major services back. Also, if at any time in the future they pull this same trick, this will always be our response. So, you will probably want to keep the addition there. As long as it's only that one additional line, it will not interfere with your normal internet usage. It will simply allow that URL to always be opened.
Currently there aren't any instructions in the link. But if internet goes down, they will appear.
If you have edited the hosts file previously in Windows, or if you are a Linux or Mac user, then add the following line to the end of your existing file. Which on Linux and Mac is /etc/hosts . You will need root rights to modify the file. In most cases you gain them by adding "sudo" in front of the command. So, let's say your editor is nano. You'd write "sudo nano /etc/hosts".
205.251.111.249 emergency.voxday
OK for non-autistic readers: A DNS is the shorthandle for Domain Name Server.
In your browser you type in https://greatawakening.win.
This request will be received by a DNS first and translated into an IP address to route your traffic on.
To find the IP address, goto to your terminal.
If you haven't got one, try command prompt on windows, or simply download an app from your fav repo: terminal.
Once there, type: (#is comment to prevent code execution)
ping greatawakening.win
You'll see something like this: PING greatawakening.win (172.64.206.37) 56(84) bytes of data. 64 bytes from 172.64.206.37 (172.64.206.37): icmp_seq=1 ttl=59 time=65.5 ms 64 bytes from 172.64.206.37 (172.64.206.37): icmp_seq=2 ttl=59 time=80.9 ms 64 bytes from 172.64.206.37 (172.64.206.37): icmp_seq=3 ttl=59 time=82.8 ms 64 bytes from 172.64.206.37 (172.64.206.37): icmp_seq=4 ttl=59 time=80.7 ms 64 bytes from 172.64.206.37 (172.64.206.37): icmp_seq=5 ttl=59 time=85.8 ms
172.64.206.37 is the IP address.
Try and plug this IP address into the addressbar of your browser and hit go.
There you are.
So, to recap. a DNS is a service like a giant internet telephone book. And of course you can use different books.
Below you'll find a few links to lists with DNS servers:
https://beebom.com/best-dns-servers/
https://www.lifewire.com/free-and-public-dns-servers-2626062
http://www.bestdns.org/
if not: get yourself a different browser, which allows you to do so: firefox, waterfox, palemoon, etc.
one last thing: There is such a thing as DNS over HTTPS.
As discussed, when you request access to a website, your request is sent to a DNS server. But this is send without encryption. So everybody in the middle can see, what you are requesting. e.g. your ISP.
To fuck up their spying operation, consider to activate DNS over https.
Of course there are many more funny things to do like DNScrypt but that is an entirely different matter. This is the quick and dirty for you.
Learn it and overcome your fear of fucking up your system. Make sure you have an alternate OS ready for use, like linux. Know how to deploy it, and use it.
If these are your first steps, watch yt video howto's for running it as a live CD.
Enjoy!
Unfortunately you can't actually get to greatawakening.win using that IP because cloudflare.
Good info.
Here is some additional information about the hosts file:
https://helpdeskgeek.com/windows-7/windows-7-hosts-file/
It's for Windows 7, but the same thing applies
Thanks. When Windows 8 came out I was alarmed and my Windows computers are frozen on 7 or Linux forever.
I'm in the same boat. Haven't quite pulled the trigger on Linux, but I think it's going to happen.
Disclaimer: Techtard here. Patience please.
JUst got a new laptop and wanted to avoid all things big brother. Got ubuntu installed. If I have the digital IP of whatever site, I should still be able to access it, correct? Except those on cloudflare, like gaw and tdw?
I'd probably go with cinnamon or mint to start with. Have enough experience with DOS and QNX that I don't care to be closely tied to an OS. Just a tool to me, to run the apps I care about.
Easy way to find IP addresses:
https://www.ipvoid.com/find-website-ip/
If you have a windows machine, you can just use the command prompt and run this command
tracert {domain}
For instance
tracert facebook.com
You'll get the IP address that way as well
I just tried to use that to get the IP of Amazon.com for an example, and none of the IPs it gave me actually linked to amazon.com
Could be. I've never used it before. But it gave the same results as using ping in a command prompt, so I figured it was ok. Some sites might be hidden behind a vpn.
I'm not much of an IT geek. I have a basic understanding, and let the IT geeks provide the IT answers. That could change if I ever decided to get interested, but too much of my day job involves getting under the hood of PCs anyway, so no need to add that to my "free time" plate.
I have an ipad air 2. What are the steps I take?
Bookmark this IP URL http://205.251.111.249/
It's the URL listed in the OP. The hosts file hack is just a way to link any custom domain name to an IP for your local device. In this case, they were linking "emergency.voxday" as a custom domain to the IP in the OP. You can skip that and just use the IP address itself.
I've just bookmarked that on Firefox on my Android
If you have a mobile device, you won't be able to change your hosts file. The IP address listed in the OP is still usable though, just bookmark it so you can access it through your bookmark.
http://205.251.111.249
By the way I am also computer illiterate
Bro I wait for everyone else to decode. I have no idea what this means lmao
Basically, every website on the internet is hosted at some IP address. Public domain hosting will take your plain text URL (Google.com, Facebook.com, Twitter.com, etc), fetch the matching IP address, and connect you to the website using the IP address. All of that happens behind the scenes normally. Without public domain hosting, you would only be able to connect using the IP address.
In this case, there is no public domain for "emergency.voxday". The OP suggests altering your hosts file on your Windows Machine to create a custom domain name for the IP address given. As far as I'm aware, altering your hosts file only works on Windows Machines.
You can feel free to skip all of that though, and just bookmark the IP address itself. By going directly to the IP (for any site, really), you bypass the public domain hosting, to connect directly to the website itself.
An example of how public domain hosting is this: There is no actual difference between http://facebook.com and http://31.13.66.35
They both take you to Facebook, the first just asks a public domain hosting what the IP address is for "facebook.com". Ultimately, it still connects via IP in the background.
We can all agree that facebook.com is easier to remember than that string of numbers, however.
By editing your private hosts file, you're just adding another entry. In this case, you're linking http://emergency.voxday to http://205.251.111.249, but only for your machine.
You can feel free to ignore the hosts file if that's too technical, and just bookmark that IP address instead. You'll still access the information, and you're still bypassing the public domain hosting, in case the public domain hosting gets taken offline.
What about greatawakening.win ip in the hosts file as well
emergency.voxday is not a legitimate domain name. The hosts file creates a custom domain name to link to an IP.
Every website has an IP to connect to it. Google and other services have public domains that connect to that IP, because it's easier to remember "Amazon.com", for instance, than it is to remember the IP for Amazon.
In this case, the IP is 205.251.111.249. But since they aren't using a public domain provider, you would have to type that IP in to access the site.
By using a hosts file, you can create a custom name to link to that IP for your device. In this case, the custom domain name is "emergency.voxday". So, with the custom domain name, you won't have to remember the IP. Now, you only have to remember what's in the hosts file. You can make the custom name whatever you want for your local device, it'll still connect to the IP as long as you navigate via your browser to that custom name.
I know that I was suggestiing adding it to the host file but forgot this site uses CloudFlare for protection
I pinged greatawakening.win, and got 172.64.206.37.
It's on cloud flare, so if they take down cloud flare....
Okay, cool.
Thanks, tried and can't get it to work. Windows 10, never edited shiite...
I think I successfully saved the file tho.
I get a message from the voxday file saying I cannot access it.
hosts files to allow internet access 'if' google poisons servers
you have to put the new host file in c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts?
Yeah, I musta clutzed it somehow, but then half the time I try to do 'simple' chores like that I mess it up .
https://kekpe.pe/i/5ff9d5701f5ff.png
Just use the IP that's given in the OP, and bookmark that. That still works.
OP was just trying to give you a workaround so you won't have to bookmark/memorize the IP, but it's still connecting to the IP regardless.
Thanks, I have it saved for later when my more techy step-Son comes around mooching beer...