• Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    One of the things I did was to run mulvad in a virtual machine and use a different web browser in the vm than I used normally. This makes tracking much harder because they rely on website fingerprinting to identify you independently of your ip address.

  • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    If you are in the US, and the risk you’re concerned about is getting in trouble, yes it is enough, provided you use it correctly. The only real risk is that copyright trolls will scrape your IP while you are torrenting along with the rest of a big list and then automatically send complaints to your ISP, which may then send you a threatening email, or shut off your internet if it happens enough times. The fact that this is the only action they are taking against consumer level pirates means that if your home IP is not itself available to torrent peers, you are entirely immune from anything happening.

    Just make sure to bind your torrent client to your VPN, this is the accepted way of safely ensuring your IP cannot leak due to your VPN losing connection.

  • 🌞 Alexander Daychilde 🌞@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I use a seedbox. I won’t link to the one I use, but if you add dot eye oh it’ll redirect you to their new site. They run the seedbox in a country that doesn’t force them to give up info to anyone asking, and you download stuff via SFTP which cannot be seen by the people looking at torrents, and to your ISP, it’s just a connection to a server somewhere. So it’s safe.

    The seedbox I have even has emby, meaning I can click a magnet link in the browser that opens with rutorrent on the seedbox, add the torrent to one of the categories I also set up in emby, and once it’s downloaded to the seedbox, I can stream it on my phone or desktop. It’s painless.

  • themachine@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Mulvad is great but if you need port forwarding you’ll have to look elsewhere as they no longer provide that feature.

    • ickplant@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      Thanks! I am learning a ton today. I’m googling every term I don’t know. Feeling very “galaxy brain” right now.

      Edit: I should specify I’m using Duck Duck Go instead of Google cause you all taught me that. So thanks again.

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    You don’t need to be so euphemistic. If you’re just downloading, piracy is not really investigated rigorously anywhere. Just using a VPN is sufficient. You can talk openly about it too.

  • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’ve been sailing for a good 20 years now. I run PIA VPN, which I know has concerns with their ownership, but that’s what I’ve always had and purchased before their sale, and have never had any issues. I have received 3 letters from ISPs in my life and all were when my VPN wasn’t running. No I have a kill switch in my workflow that will cut access with no VPN.

    If you look into something like MEGA, all that data is http traffic. I’ve used that without a VPN a lot and have had no issues there, but that’s now my backup for when alternatives aren’t available.

    VPN is almost for sure good enough, but there are other actions you can take if you want to take it further. Do a search for fmhy and follow some advice I there for detailed info.

    • lennee@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      use PIA as well cuz its the only port forwarding vpn i got to work on arch linux, not endorsing them cuz what the fuck do i know but never had any issues

  • hesh@quokk.au
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    2 months ago

    You can use ipleak.net to see if your IP is visible through your web browser AND through downloading a test torrent.

      • Schwim Dandy@piefed.zip
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        2 months ago

        I can see an argument that the exit node is someone else’s computer. An an example of this risk, honeypot Tor exit nodes.

        In this context, however, I would trust Mullvad’s exit nodes, I think. Well, do trust them, since I use them, just not for anything that would get me in hot water.

  • a goblin for your pocket@slrpnk.net
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    2 months ago

    Keep in mind that each country has different piracy laws. Some don’t care much and fines won’t be pursued if you just ignore them, some poor countries don’t care at all, some don’t care about foreign content but take their own content and sports seriously, and some take all piracy seriously and hit you with tens of thousands of dollars of fines. I’d recommend looking into your local laws, and if you find out you’re in a danger zone, following the recommendations from your fellow countrypeople.

    Even reputable no-logs VPNs aren’t foolproof, they can leak and the killswitch can fail. But Mullvad is currently the best, I heard their killswitch is better than Proton’s currently is.

    Different methods carry different levels of risk. You’ll often hear that streaming from websites is safe since it’s not seeding (and exposing your IP address to the pool), but a lot of those sites do torrent from your browser these days (and can’t be bound to a VPN, I don’t think?). They’re also full of malware and malicious ads, so a good adblocker is necessary. The safest methods are private trackers (seeding but only to other private members) and debrid services (lowest risk but no seeding and they’re paid subscriptions. though there’s one that offers some seeding time at the highest subscription tiers). There’s also joining a trusted person’s private Jellyfin server (getting someone else to pirate for you).

    Seeding is of course really important for preventing the entire system from collapsing and preventing niche or old media from being lost, so if you’re in a position to seed, you absolutely should. A good VPN bound to the torrent client (after enabling the killswitch and doing the leak tests) and the knowledge to ignore fines is enough for public trackers in many countries.

    Note that even in countries where fines aren’t pursued if you just ignore them, (if they do somehow get sent due to a VPN accident or the government further eroding human rights) they’ll be sent out to your ISP and the person named on the internet bill. Your household may have their own thoughts about your viewing history, and some people are concerned about their government getting wind that they consume things like queer or non-English media.

    Here’s the piracy community! You should do your research before getting started. https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/piracy

  • WagnasT@piefed.world
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    2 months ago

    If you don’t want to store the media then yarrlist has a bunch of sketchy streaming sites that work well enough with an ad blocker.

  • EpicFailGuy@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    mull is a very decent VPN and that will do OK to anonymize your traffic, but that’s all you’re doing … you’re far from safe from all threats.

    There’s malicious downloads, torrent hijacks, honeypots, bandwidth issues, the Number one thing you need to stay safe is COMMON SENSE …

    So educate yourself and learn about this world you’re getting into. The information is out there and freely available.

  • nul9o9@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    +1 with mullvad. Haven’t heard of any issues with them. Had nothing to turn over to investigators multiple times.

    You can pay them in cash if you want, so they’d have no PII on you other than your IP.

    • ickplant@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      That’s neat! As an animal lover, I also love the mole in their logo. Not that the logo has anything to do with the quality of the service… but it is cute.

      • tomiant@piefed.social
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        2 months ago

        Moles build tunnels. Underground, can’t be seen. They dig a hole, build a tunnel, then surface somewhere else without anyone being any the wiser. Surely you have heard of VPN tunnels! That’s why they have a mole as a design animal. :)

    • tomiant@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      This is true, I know for a fact. Cops showed up demanded they gave them everything, and they did: they got nothing. Nothing stored, nothing to give.

      Bye pig.