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Hi everyone...
I can't really tell how much people in Lebanon or on this form even are aware of the latest Net Neutrality issue taking place. (I advise some of you to give that a check as soon as possible and get a thorough understanding of it's implications)
More so, the recent claims of certain officials in Lebanon indicate that all the new hardware being installed on the network indicate a more in depth monitoring of internet user's data as well as activity
Hence my question: any recommendation on particularly good VPN soft wares and/or firewalls (or other software that "protect"?)
Any input would be welcomed
All those laws don't affect us. They affect the US only. As for a vpn i recommend torguard and always connect to sweden/Switzerland/NL servers.
Last edited by RandomMemory (December 16 2017)
All those laws don't affect us. They affect the US only. As for a vpn i recommend torguard and always connect to sweden/Switzerland/NL servers.
I was advised hours ago by a hacker-friend to use the same servers you mentioned...
As for the NetNeutrality laws not affecting us.... not in the near future at least
Build your own vpn server, most of the services out there log your actions.
Build your own vpn server, most of the services out there log your actions.
This why i was asking on this forum if someone was aware a of good VPN software (A.K.A. one that does not log you actions:p)
Thanks though ;)
As far as I know, net neutrality is already being violated in Lebanon. One example of this is the "whatsapp package" provided by the phone operators where you can only access Whatsapp using your data bundle. Another one is how various ISPs throttle torrents.
As far as I know, net neutrality is already being violated in Lebanon. One example of this is the "whatsapp package" provided by the phone operators where you can only access Whatsapp using your data bundle. Another one is how various ISPs throttle torrents.
True
I want to add that NN rules in USA can affect everyone, technically. I mean if you access something in USA, that happens to pass by some greedy ISP lines (Like AT&T), wouldn't they charge the requester ISP, and the bills get passed along until it reaches Ogero, and eventually us? That's the way I see it.
I doubt they can implement it in a way where the Lebanese ISP would be like "hey server that I have no control over, this packet is going to Lebanon, so if it passes through some greedy USA ISP , please tell them not to charge it more... kthxbai" (A bit comical but not to offend anyone, it's a bit easier to explain this way)
Keep in mind, that in most of countries where too many people resorted to VPN, ISPs did simple solution, they just throttled vpn to low speed.
But honestly, if ISPs in USA had same prices as Ogero give to private companies here - they wont even let to talk about net neutrality. Its not possible to survive without bandwidth priorities here.
Last time I read about the issue I was left with the impression that this is trying to solve a problem that does not exist (yet?).
Also these are 3 different issues:
- Privacy
- Optimizations based on protocol and FUP. These aim to improve average customer experience.
- Politically motivated prioritization. Eg: requests to google.com get priority over requests to bing.com because the ISP has an agreement with google.
Last edited by rolf (December 18 2017)
How do they know you are using a VPN? You can just put a VPN on port 80(I think) or any standard port that makes it confusing for them to make sure what it is...
DPI logic is much more complex than port.
In some cases it is able even to estimate type of traffic(without decrypting) inside your vpn.
Net neutrality explained through burgers---innovative way of trying to explain it.