Pornhub goes dark in Arkansas after age verification law kicks in::Pornhub operator MindGeek has blocked all users in Arkansas from the site after the state’s new age verification law went into effect.

  • @TIEPilot
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    81 year ago

    Not in Arkansas and not a porn consumer, but in this day and age how do you not already run thru a VPN or two?

      • @TIEPilot
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        -101 year ago

        Well can I Helen Keller them and then knock smarts into them?

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      What kinda adult would care about your ISP knowing you watch porn?

      VPNs are often over blown. Their ads will make it seem like they’re some critical privacy thing, but these days virtually every website is encrypted (HTTPS). Your ISP can know the IP address you’re visiting (and thus typically the site), but pretty much everything else, including what page you’re viewing on the site, is known only to you and the site in question. VPNs had a lot more merit before HTTPS was ubiquitous.

      They’re still useful if you’re visiting illegal sites or using peer to peer technology (most particularly illegal torrents), but that’s not the case for many and certainly not for just viewing normal porn.

      • @nxfsi
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        -61 year ago

        Some people say that a VPN is like a tunnel.

        This is actually incorrect. A VPN is actually like a condom.

      • @TIEPilot
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        -111 year ago

        So your ISP doesn’t have logs on where you surf. I run 2 to 3 at a time. No one (I hope) knows what I’m doing.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          VPNs have many uses, but I think it is overstated how much they provide in privacy. They can hide your public IP address, but your VPN provider still knows it (and you have to trust them that they won’t keep all the information on you). And you can still be identified by your browser fingerprint which a VPN doesn’t do anything about. Their encryption doesn’t add much either, since most traffic on the web is already encrypted via TLS or SSL (when you use https sites).

          They are however useful to access content that isn’t available in all regions of the world, when all you need is to hide your ip (e.g. when pirating (i imagine most governments won’t go through the effort to try figure out who is behind the vpn, but I’m not sure)), to allow you to access an institution’s intranet from home, to allow playing LAN games with your friends when both of you are on different networks and behind a NAT, or in any other situation when you need to use the internet with another IP or need to route traffic to another network.

        • @Vub
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          31 year ago

          I have to ask, does a VPN really 100% anonymise everything? Like DNS and everything, so they can’t see the domains you access? Does this include the ISP but also the wifi router logs (for example on an open network)?

          So the only way to find out anything is to raid the VPN offices and backtrack your real IP…?

          It sounds like a too easy way to get away with anything online. 🤔

          • @aesthelete
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            1 year ago

            Privacy is a goal worth having in and of itself.

            I can’t believe there’s still people on here in the current political climate saying things like “well I don’t have anything to hide anyway, I don’t care if evil corp / the state / any curious person knows my every move.”

            Well, I do care. It’s none of their fucking business what I’m doing and what sites I’m visiting.

            • @Vub
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              21 year ago

              I agree 100%, I was just wondering about the technicalities - how much does using a VPN protect us.

              • @aesthelete
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                11 year ago

                As far as I know, the only person who has information on what you’re browsing is the VPN provider. Your ISP would only see that you were connecting to the VPN, and how much data you were pushing and pulling from them but wouldn’t even have the domain names of the things you were browsing, nor any packets that were actually exchanged.

                The VPN provider could still have all of this information, but presumably not more unless you were doing a lot of stuff unencrypted or were using some weirdo middleware that could man in the middle your encrypted connections.

                • @Vub
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                  21 year ago

                  Very nice, thank you!

    • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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      61 year ago

      It may even speed up your connection.
      Taken from information for end users of Swan Mobile:

      If enterprise blocks, slows down or prioritizes selected ports or services, it will list them in the following table

      There you may notice P2P being limted to 1Mbps and Video streaming to 2Mbps.
      So… without VPN you can watch videos in like 360p. Oh, but it gets better, after you use 10GB on video streaming it drops to 1Mbps. So 240p? 💀
      With VPN you just get the general FUP limit of 300GB without limits.

      • @TIEPilot
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        11 year ago

        Well I rip and run, so streaming isn’t my bag baby.