What does this have to do with piracy
What does this have to do with piracy
At the risk of sounding contrarian/lame, you should probably not be doing any of this especially if you don’t own the hardware you’re using (as mentioned by another commenter).
You don’t specify if this is university or middle/high school, but either way you are not entitled to and should not expect any privacy on a network you don’t control. Regardless of if you use a VPN, your school’s network administrators can almost certainly tell that you are using a VPN, which itself sounds like it would be a violation of your school’s network policy and will most likely land you in trouble. Indeed, your repeated attempts to access blocked sites have likely already raised some flags.
I would quit while you’re ahead until you can afford your own hardware/internet connection, and then maybe worry about any notion of privacy. Use your school’s internet for what it was intended.
Bespoke: Involve random people on the internet in whatever weird exhibitionist fetish this is supposed to be
“Hey sister I’m going out for a bit will be back by 11”
“Ok”
Like no offense, but you should probably figure out how to communicate with your family before you attempt dating lol
It was a hidden, opt-out feature.
it’s literally in the privacy & security section of firefox’s settings with its own heading. how is that “hidden”?
average firefox user: screeching on the internet for weeks about some minor new feature or change
me: unticks a box and moves on with my life
I’ll take “Conversations that never happened” for $500, Alex.
i ain’t reading all that
i’m happy for you tho
or sorry that happened
Proton, yes. There are some criticisms to make regarding them, but I think most are either blown out of proportion or a non issue for the majority of people.
Joplin has the specific features you mentioned, maybe worth looking into. It’s a markdown editor. https://joplinapp.org/
clearly, freedom and easy access to information has nothing to do with the issue at hand, which is enforcement of copyright law.
so long as they don’t plan on violating russian or chinese (or whatever country’s) copyrights (and other applicable laws), why should those countries care at all? archive.org is hosting material copyrighted in a country where said copyright can be enforced (the US). it’s really that simple. while china or russia may not be the most suitable option (I imagine they also host plenty of content that those countries would find to be inflammatory or illegal but not for copyright reasons), they’d be an improvement overall.