So I’m pretty recent to the high seas but I’ve seen a few posts now about “stop relying on your VPN” and “people that think VPNs will protect them are naive” and so on.
So since I believe knowledge is our greatest weapon/tool/super-power, can we get some answers regarding what exactly the doomsayers are getting at? ELI5 why VPNs wouldn’t protect your anonymity.
Is it about logging? The country your end-point is in? Something more technical?
Ultimately I’d like to be fully armed in order to keep making the best choices for my fledgling ship as it navigates the vast, stormy seas.
That sentiment isn’t so much about piracy, but general security. Do keep in mind that the NSA can easily sniff your VPN traffic, even through logless Mullvad in theory, and access your account information to correlate and deanonymize you via subpoena. This is done routinely, and there are thousands of illegal subpoenas done yearly with no repercussion. Fortunately it seems the NSA is only going after heinous criminals, but that could also change. To be truly NSA safe is nearly impossible - did you know your password can be determined by a simple audio recording of you typing it? The NSA has frequently snuck into private residence to install keyloggers as well. What will a VPN matter in such a case?
So a VPN might prevent a DCMA notice from your ISP, but if the NSA starts caring about piracy y’all are out of luck.
The NSA is always going to have bigger fish to fry than busting individuals for IP violations. Risks exposing their methods in court and allowing their real targets the opportunity to harden their security even more. It would be an incredible waste of their resources.
They’re pretty exposed already, and in my opinion their targets probably can’t do much to protect themselves unless they are part of a foreign government, like the Kremlin. But yea they haven’t gone after piracy yet.
Can you say more about this?
The NSA has unlimited legal power in this context. They can legally go to any US VPN, copy all traffic onto their massive servers, and use it as they want. They probably already do this, although that claim is unverifiable. That traffic contains your IP address and the websites you’ve viewed, clear data of torrents you’ve downloaded, etc. Mullvad, being outside its jurisdiction, is possibly safer, but presumably since they operate servers in the United States at least those could be sniffed. There is precedent for all of this.
While it’s unlikely for you to specifically be targeted, my point is that you can never be truly anonymous on the internet.
If you use US VPN you already doing it wrong. You should never use US for anything related to piracy that rule #1.
Its trivial to find out youre using a VPN and which one and which of their servers youre using. If you pay for your VPN with identifying information (a card, PayPal etc) then they can theoretically make the provider log your specific activity.
NSA can’t break AES-256 and no it can’t deanonymize if you use it correctly.
The NSA doesn’t need to break AES-256 to deanonymize you. But not trying to spook anyone, just inform.
NSA can’t break AES-256 and no it can’t deanonymize if you use it correctly.
Ok, well they have access to supercomputers that can probably crack a target password 99% of the time. Unless you use a like 100-character password for everything you are probably not totally safe. And using it correctly is incredibly difficult, if not impossible in practice. They have found zero day exploits for Tails OS and deanonymized (very, very bad) criminals doing pretty much everything they could to stay anonymous, at least 5 years ago that we know of. So while your claim might apply to somebody pirating the latest HBO series, I can guarantee you the NSA knows everything about you and what you’re doing. They just don’t care, yet.
There is absolutely no proof so far that any supercomputer has cracked AES-256 encryption. And I can garantee you that if everything as you say piracy would not of existed in 2023 :-) So no they are not almighty who can break everything. You just watched too many movies and think its real.