From his telegram
I will be releasing a torrent file that should be spread to as many people as possible. Please only use torrent if you absolutely know what you are doing. It is possible to dox yourself with torrents if you don’t correctly setup your security.
edit: Don’t stay up late waiting for this torrent, it is still being prepared and needs hours to complete.
If one person holds an important file, that person is an easy target. If a million people hold an important file, the file becomes an impenetrable shield for all.
With my VPN I can choose the country to appear to be from. I have bypassed MSM by using VPN.
Lol, thats the most basic thing to do in a VPN. It's like bragging you know how to make a car "move forwards using the gas pedal!" ;)
Be nice :)
I agree. We are trying to help people make sure they are secure, not mocking their lack of knowledge.
unfortunately, there is a lot of unintentional misinformation about tech here lately. VPNs weren't created for geo hiding, they were made for secure communications between endpoints typically router to router, the ability to choose which server to connect to and change your geo-ip was purely incidental.
lmao
Connecting through multiple and switching is better than connecting through one and changing location.
Get IP rotation going as well.
I’m glad. Grow your vpn resources.
Here is a free vpn.
https://vanwa.tech/free-openvpn-service
It’s simple. Install OpenVPN and load up the config - you can even vpn within a vpn and tunnel
Thanks for the link, do you know if it works on linux and if not do you know any free VPN for linux ?
As a rule of thumb - anything works on linux.
OpenVPN should be installed by default in most linux distros.
You can literally usually just do this:
That should launch it.
Now to confirm it’s working it’s super easy.
That will show you what IP you are masquerading as.
Now one main thing I will advise is to also, within linux, edit /etc/resolv.conf and manually set your DNS to use someone else than your ISP default ( linux will populate this file with whatever the router tells it to, usually, unless you have DHCP turned off and manually handle this all.
That should backup whatever you have in resolv right now and replace it.
If you use your ISP for DNS they will actually passively keep track of those requests and even intercept them in some cases to capture information about usage.
AT&T for example does this and then sells the data from your resolution requests to 3rd parties who analyze that usage to build a personal metadata profile for you ( given they also know your account data ). Custom tailoring that data is big $$$$
Hi, thanks a lot for you effort, I truly appreciate your help here.
I'm truly just a user, don't know how to code and make things happen with the termianl in linux, anyway I did what you said and I just don't know if it worked,
it created a folder (which is empty) and then said there were no file or folder of that type, that was step 1.
after step 2 I got an IP back.
looks like it did not work did it ?
Yes
Thanks for the share!
With my pencil I can write letters. Duh.