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Internet Security and Safety Guide • Page 2

Discussion in 'Technology Forum' started by aranea, Oct 11, 2016.

  1. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    I haven't had time to write out a post about VPNs/Tor/Proxies like I wanted so I figured I would at least share some links and give my thoughts.

    Really Private Browsing: An Unofficial User’s Guide to Tor
    How VPN Beats Proxy When It Comes To Security | NordVPN
    Introducing SOCKS5 Proxy to NordVPN Feature List | NordVPN
    That One Privacy Site | Detailed VPN Comparison Chart

    VPNs and Proxies are fairly straight forward. Different methods of routing traffic through computers and networks other than your own. I recommend using both. If you have to pick one go with the VPN for the encryption. The last link I included has a detailed comparison of a shitload of VPNs. If you have questions about specific columns and what they mean, feel free to ask here and I or someone else will go into more detail.

    As far as Tor goes, it uses what is essentially a chain of proxies (called "relay nodes") to attempt to preserve anonymity. The biggest flaw with this is the exit node which makes an unencrypted request to whichever server you are trying to access. This brings back the man-in-the-middle attack which I hinted at in my previous post. If someone is watching for activity on a site and sees you post something at the same time a Tor exit node is accessing that site, there's a very good chance you're compromised. Tor also enables access to .onion sites. All the public ones are watched. You'll get put on a long list that probably won't mean much in the long run if you want to look around, but there's not much there besides child porn, angry white dudes, and ISIL.

    So my main point is to address how you're using the internet. The one nice thing about Tor is that it disables plugins and (most) cookies or at the very least makes it more difficult to end up with files downloaded onto your computer. All sites try and do it, whether it's logon info, caches of pages you visit, or strings you search. It's very difficult to avoid this and in practice is a huge pain in the ass so my recommendation tends to be to segment your internet usage. By that I mean disconnect the activity you wish to remain private from all other activity. If you have an email account you use for activism, don't access it from the same location often, definitely not from where you live. Ideally, on top of that, the account would only be accessed from a single computer only used for that purpose, or using a VM that is then securely deleted. Never log into Twitter or Chorus. Don't Google anything from that computer. Use it for one thing and one thing only.

    Again, I know that this seems like a lot of trouble for most users, but I can't stress enough how much the authorities rely on social media monitoring and mass data collection as intel gathering means. Somewhere a server is keeping track of how long my IP has an open connection with this site...literally as I type this. No conspiracy shit, it's just the country we live in now. So I guess my advice is to at the very least operate with enough assumed risk as to be mindful of your presence online. The lengths to which you go in trying to remain anonymous should track with proximity to physical danger for most, but my hope is that our thinking evolves to understand that every time we access the internet someone is watching and listening.
     
    Jason Tate likes this.
  2. David87

    Prestigious Prestigious

    Hey guys so just got a new PC with Windows 10...what's the best free antivirus and/or malware program to download? I've been told by a lot of people not to just rely on Microsoft Security Essentials (or I guess it's "windows defender" now)...is that true? I see Windows Defender is linked on the first post, is that the best way to go or should I get AVAST or something like that?
     
  3. aranea

    Trusted Prestigious

    Windows Defender - keep it, update it. Don't turn it off. Scan with it regularly.
    Also get Free Anti-Malware & Malware Removal I would really push for subscribing to premium though, particularly cause of the real time protection
     
    David87 likes this.
  4. David87

    Prestigious Prestigious

    THank you!

    So, next question...my computer came with a free trial of McAfee, and Windows Defender won't work with that on apparently...so should I disable/delete McAfee?
     
  5. aranea

    Trusted Prestigious

    armistice and David87 like this.
  6. David87

    Prestigious Prestigious

  7. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    yeahrightdude likes this.
  8. aranea

    Trusted Prestigious

  9. Derek

    Get stung

    I RARELY ever download anything over the internet but every time I have in the past year I got an email from Charter (internet provider). Would a VPN mask my activity with torrents?
     
  10. RyanPm40

    The Torment of Existence Supporter

    Do you close your torrent software immediately after downloading? A lot of people just leave it there seeding, and that's how they get those letters from their ISP.

    I torrent quite a bit and have never gotten a letter or email from Comcast (my ISP), while my buddy and sister got one the first time they ever did it.
     
  11. Derek

    Get stung

    No i usually close it immediately. I've downloaded 2 albums and 2 movies in the past year and got two letters. I use to dl all the time back in the day and had comcast and never received a thing. With charter its wild. I think I got an email a few years ago when I first got them too.
     
    RyanPm40 likes this.
  12. RyanPm40

    The Torment of Existence Supporter

    Huh very weird! Charter must really be cracking down on that.. Surprised Comcast isn't as bad! I feel like they try to screw you every which-way lol.
     
  13. Brenden

    Trusted Prestigious

    When I had charter I got a letter and it was literally for one movie and it was probably the only thing I had illegally downloaded when I had them. I think they are very vigilant about people doing it.
     
  14. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    So before I answer, I have to give you the obligatory

    [​IMG]

    because I still think of this site as a music forum at its base. If you like it on spotify or youtube, pleasepleaseplease support artists.

    That being said, yes. A VPN will obfuscate the content of the data transmitted between you and the peers on the torrent.

    And THAT being said, don't use torrents. They are very, very often infested with malware.
     
    Jason Tate likes this.
  15. Wharf Rat

    I know a little something you won't ever know Prestigious

    Private trackers thoo
     
  16. Derek

    Get stung

    I support artist. Don't worry
     
  17. iCarly Rae Jepsen

    run away with me Platinum

     
  18. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    Demonoid IS pretty exclusive lol.
     
  19. Wharf Rat

    I know a little something you won't ever know Prestigious

    give me some credit at least
     
  20. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

  21. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    Interesting. I'll do some testing with that one. It's hard to find decent products available for consumer purchase. Sophos Intercept X and a lot of the continuity focused email protection services like ProofPoint and Mimecast work pretty well. They actually open links and attachments in a sandbox and see if there's malicious code. False positives are pretty common, but where I've deployed those, I haven't had a ransomware incident. The big issue is you have to either buy through a partner, or become a partner. I'm assuming their success rate is affected by that as well. Selling to corporate environments sort of assumes at least some security policy is in place.
     
    Jason Tate likes this.
  22. armistice likes this.
  23. armistice Jan 3, 2017
    (Last edited: Jan 3, 2017)
    armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors

    This is a decent post, but as always, be extremely wary when someone tells you something will make you anonymous. I also have a very, very hard time recommending anyone read anything that suggests browser extensions as a means of security. The good content of this article is way too far down the page.

    There is a huge need for a site or blog or even a post that appeals to a vast audience without tech background that guides users into good security practice. I very much appreciate every effort taken in attempt to accommodate this need.

    Google, if you're crawling this deep, I have some ideas. My IP is the one that looks like an xmas tree at a rave.

    edit: the "bewares" weren't at you, Jason.
     
    lightning13 and Jason Tate like this.
  24. armistice

    Captain Vietnam: Bestower of Tumors