It doesn't matter what you use, they know who you are on pretty much everything... including Tor (another govt platform -- U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)
LOL, you do what you want... I'm just sayin' there is no point in believing you are protected in any way by not entering your name and phone number.
If you're truly interested in privacy you might do semi OK with a directional wifi antenna pointed at a signal far away and hiding in a covered area under heavy RF shielding... and never staying in the same place long because if wanting to find you they could still figure it out after a while, but they'd have to probably use some effort and have someone on the ground.
I wouldn't be surprised if there are hidden identifiers in TCP which have the serial number of your computer so they can track it back to the store and get the credit card it was purchased with.
Sort of like how printers print serial numbers into paper to track counterfeiters back to the credit card that purchased the printer.
Truth social accounts are linked to your real name and phone number, nice try FBI.
It doesn't matter what you use, they know who you are on pretty much everything... including Tor (another govt platform -- U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)
Good point agent. Let's just expose ourselves.
LOL, you do what you want... I'm just sayin' there is no point in believing you are protected in any way by not entering your name and phone number.
If you're truly interested in privacy you might do semi OK with a directional wifi antenna pointed at a signal far away and hiding in a covered area under heavy RF shielding... and never staying in the same place long because if wanting to find you they could still figure it out after a while, but they'd have to probably use some effort and have someone on the ground.
I wouldn't be surprised if there are hidden identifiers in TCP which have the serial number of your computer so they can track it back to the store and get the credit card it was purchased with.
Sort of like how printers print serial numbers into paper to track counterfeiters back to the credit card that purchased the printer.