Privacy? I don't have anything to hide.
Glenn Greenwald: Why privacy matters Over the last 16 months, as I've debated this issue around the world, every single time somebody has said to me, "I don't really worry about invasions of privacy because I don't have anything to hide." I always say the same thing to them. I get out a pen, I write down my email address. I say, "Here's my email address. What I want you to do when you get home is email me the passwords to all of your email accounts, not just the nice, respectable work one in your name, but all of them, because I want to be able to just troll through what it is you're doing online, read what I want to read and publish whatever I find interesting. After all, if you're not a bad person, if you're doing nothing wrong, you should have nothing to hide." Not a single person has taken me up on that offer.
Glenn Greenwald in Why privacy matters - TED Talk
I literally yesterday decided to sign up for a year with nordvpn, they had a special offer $36
I have never used a vpn before, but the internet is becoming very authoritarian and isps are being forced to censor and with new snoopers charter coming into affect you can kiss goodbye net neutrality.
regarding people asking why. Its not if you have something to hide. Its a matter of principle. If you were at work all day and someone entered your house looking through your stuff. "my data is my data" and no one should have access to it.
The benefits of it
+ browse anon
+ access to service such as hulu, pandora that you would not have access to otherwise
+ anon p2p
+ good for when you are connecting to public wifi, keep you safe from man in middle attacks
+ dns encryption
some cool sites about privacy,encryption, net neutrality
https://freedom.press/encryption-works
https://prism-break.org/en/
https://dns.watch/index
https://theintercept.com/2015/07/14/communicating-secret-watched/
https://www.privacytools.io/
Thanks for that.![]()
The benefits of it
+ browse anon
+ access to service such as hulu, pandora that you would not have access to otherwise
+ anon p2p
+ good for when you are connecting to public wifi, keep you safe from man in middle attacks
+ dns encryption
Half right. The main point is that by using a VPN you move the "trust" from your ISP to your VPN provider. For example, they could be keeping logs (even if they say they don't) and get coerced into revealing them, or install a backdoor, or allow governments to eavesdrop. All you can do is trust they don't.
Second, it's still possible to use surveillance on you and the VPN providers. With clever analysis it's possible to coordinate your and their traffic to work out who's who.
Third, your browser is probably the weakest link when it comes to anonymity. Everything from your cookies to your plugins, add-ons, even screen resolution could be used to personally identify you. The VPN can't help with that.
I believe tor is the only way to get the anonymity you're thinking of, see the FAQ for more info and why VPNs aren't great.
The two points you raised on geo content and unencrypted wifi security are good ones though. The former is probably the main reason people use them.
The Government can look at my porn all they like.
I use one but only for work or public/untrusted internet connectivity.
thank you for clarifying. I hope nordvpn are decent in that case haha. I would have went with airvpn. i like their ethos especially as they are run by activist, but they are expensive. anything is better than putting trust with my current isp
Does this mean your home network connection is acting as your VPN when connected to public networks? I'd like to set something like that up if it alleviates the issue of my IP address changing randomly (id rather not pay for static).I use one when out and about to connect to home.
Found this VPN comparison chart from Reddit.com: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet...VzbOigT0xebxTOw/htmlview?usp=sharing&sle=true