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Started by Lucid1010, August 05, 2025, 02:50:51 PM

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Maybe I misinterpreted the link in the OP?

The things it discusses seem to have more to do with punching through for access purposes (avoiding VPN blocks) rather than anonymity.  Tor is solving a different problem, no?
N5105 | 8/250GB | 4xi226-V | Community

Yes, but in which scenario would you legitimately need to punch holes through a firewall that not also asks for anonymity?
Deciso DEC750
People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. (Isaac Asimov)

Today at 12:16:05 PM #17 Last Edit: Today at 12:17:59 PM by OPNenthu
Either when fear of repercussion is low (no real consequence of getting around a block) or in high numbers (a country in revolution/protest all accessing information together).  In some cases I guess getting information can be more important than hiding the fact, especially if Tor can be blocked.

In typical situations, I think I agree with you.  Most casual VPN users probably desire some level of anonymity or at least blocking data collection from a network operator (maybe some people are employed by their ISP, for example).

I'm reaching a bit here, but I'm trying :)
N5105 | 8/250GB | 4xi226-V | Community

Quote from: OPNenthu on Today at 12:16:05 PMMost casual VPN users probably desire some level of anonymity or at least blocking data collection from a network operator

The funny thing is that at least in the EU your ISP is way more trustworthy than any so called "VPN provider". With a commercial "VPN" you hand all your communication metadata to a single entity, frequently a company located not in the EU. While your ISP is bound by GDPR and strong consumer protection laws and all hell will break loose should they ever get caught sniffing.

For me a VPN is something where I control both ends. Hence the quotes (") above.
Deciso DEC750
People who think they know everything are a great annoyance to those of us who do. (Isaac Asimov)