Now THIS is What a Private VPN Looks Like

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  • čas přidán 8. 05. 2022
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @HerpApandader
    @HerpApandader Před 2 lety +3776

    Im convinced now Menatal outlaw's channel is a honey pot.

    • @samwhaleIV
      @samwhaleIV Před 2 lety +345

      Long con

    • @yowassup46
      @yowassup46 Před 2 lety +19

      😅😭🤣

    • @jomo_sh
      @jomo_sh Před 2 lety +10

      why?

    • @Handlebrake2
      @Handlebrake2 Před 2 lety +106

      @@jomo_sh barely watched, but he seems to be a noob and gets to things late.

    • @2h0
      @2h0 Před 2 lety +241

      @@jomo_sh The comment is Satire

  • @shijai
    @shijai Před 2 lety +1613

    Was working for a US-based VPN fairly recently. Handled reporting bugs and doing QA testing with the software as well as customer feedback. In one of our internal tools, there was a "folder" that contained all the subpoenas from local law enforcement as well as from the FBI. If the gov't asks for info about a specific user, you hand it to them on silver platter.

    • @nadeoki
      @nadeoki Před 2 lety +3

      that's america, you can't speak for other sites.
      also, if you don't keep logs the company can't hand it over.
      VPN's that don't keep logs are safe.

    • @definitelynotobama6851
      @definitelynotobama6851 Před rokem +362

      God I hate the government so much

    • @merkava9122
      @merkava9122 Před rokem +57

      Doesnt your company have no logs policy?

    • @DahSkinniestKEECAT
      @DahSkinniestKEECAT Před rokem +1

      @@merkava9122 Thats not how that works. If the FBI wants your info The FBI gets it Blame Bush and the Patriot act

    • @Sebastian-pc1li
      @Sebastian-pc1li Před rokem +63

      @@merkava9122 it’s literally illegal to permit government interferences

  • @nandoxus
    @nandoxus Před 2 lety +989

    The 21st century, the century where Paranoia is your bestfriend.

    • @nandoxus
      @nandoxus Před 2 lety +81

      @Locked no

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 2 lety +59

      But always keep an eye on paranoia, it could be planning something

    • @Shimpriv
      @Shimpriv Před 2 lety +17

      It has always been this way for those who required privacy and/or anonymity. Thankfully i'm not old enough to witness the full power of the kgb, but even at the end of that era we had to be pretty paranoid about what/where we talk about things. I would imagine they'd be super happy to know we now carry bugs on us completely willingly and even buy them with out own cash.

    • @nandoxus
      @nandoxus Před 2 lety +28

      @@Shimpriv oh man. Where I'm from in the 90's it was a civil war between extremists and the military. bombs everywhere.
      I remember going to school everyday paranoid af if the car parked in front of me was going to explode or if I was going catch a stray bullet. And in the end a bomb did blow up next to my school while we were in class. Paranoia saved me countless times. But now it evolved into something annoying af, because it's accompanied with PTSD.
      Sorry for the rant

    • @DF-ss5ep
      @DF-ss5ep Před 2 lety +1

      @@Shimpriv Did anyone you know ever get arrested? Asking out of curiosity, it's one thing to read it in the books, another to ask someone who lived through it.

  • @HonestlyJustSomeGuy
    @HonestlyJustSomeGuy Před 2 lety +1383

    What gets me pissed is I'm not doing ANYTHING remotely criminal at all, and I HATE how I have to look "suspicious" just because I'm following my dear old dad's advice of not telling people stuff they don't need to know. People don't NEED to know exactly where I live unless they're sending me something to my doorstep. Most people aren't going to DO that, so I don't want them to know. You don't tell somebody your blood type when you meet them (unless you're doing Japanese dating), so why should I have information like that extracted from me and given to people who don't need it?
    Mindboggling.

    • @RAEJDER
      @RAEJDER Před 2 lety +179

      Yeah I feel you, I also specifically hate the "I dont have anything to hide so what does it matter?" group.
      Right, Im not saying you are hiding something but you wouldnt let anyone in on your bathroom visits either right?

    • @indexwell6546
      @indexwell6546 Před 2 lety +17

      What does blood type have to do with japanese dating?

    • @SwornInvictus
      @SwornInvictus Před 2 lety +18

      Seriously though. I just want to protect my privacy.

    • @startedtech
      @startedtech Před 2 lety +100

      @@indexwell6546 weird japanese culture thing

    • @PlaceholderforBjorn
      @PlaceholderforBjorn Před rokem +27

      How should all the companies otherwise find new ways to sell you things you don't need? They need to know you better than your spouse or any other family member.
      The last 20 years that have been the highest priority in western society.
      Hopefully now when the economy seems to change, people may start to question this data mining aswell.

  • @ShuskiCross
    @ShuskiCross Před rokem +126

    "If you truly want to be anonymous, you use TOR" - Proceeds to immediately tell you TOR is actually weak and can in fact be, not anonymous.

    • @iirekm
      @iirekm Před 5 měsíci +13

      Exactly. Let's face the truth, money is the thing that governs the world, but regular users have no financial incentives to run TOR nodes (just like it's in e.g. Bitcoin case). My bet is that most of TOR nodes today are just honeypots run by governments.

    • @ForsenArchive
      @ForsenArchive Před 2 měsíci +19

      @@iirekm I think this is an overly paranoid take. Many people go to great lengths to build ever more and more private software who have nothing to hide but their own privacy. I'm willing to bet that a lot of TOR nodes are actual privacy minded individuals.

    • @iirekm
      @iirekm Před 2 měsíci

      @@ForsenArchive I guess nodes run by privacy-minded individuals are a very tiny minority. For 3 reasons:
      - running node on VPS / cloud services / even old PC in garage costs money, Tor doesn't have any incentives to refund those individuals at least the cost of electricity and risk (read below)
      - Tor exit nodes are just like any other IP on the internet. If someone commits a crime using your Tor exit node, you will have anti-terrorist police pack at your home at 5 AM, arrest and long trial... unless you're a honeypot made by a government
      - Running a lot of Tor nodes and lots of "competing" VPN services is simply too good idea for governments not to use it for finding criminals and obtaining intelligence.
      Want privacy? Use apps with privacy built-in (signal, proton mail, mega drive, Duck Duck Go search engine, physical cash or z-cash/monero, ...), multiple computers and accounts for multiple activities, public internet e.g. in random cafes, SIM card bought in country which still didn't introduce showing ID on card registration. Tor or VPNs over privacy-incapable apps and websites nowadays have little to no sense.

    • @arrowhead1235
      @arrowhead1235 Před měsícem +2

      @@iirekmnah bruv, I run multiple nodes because I’m just a huge supporter of internet privacy. I hate the fact that companies and the gov have so much personal info they don’t need abt us

    • @33Thrty
      @33Thrty Před měsícem

      @@arrowhead1235 thankyou

  • @DeZmanStudios
    @DeZmanStudios Před 2 lety +468

    The "private" in VPN means LAN aka private network. VPNs were developed for the task of linking private networks together or user and private network, over WAN.
    Privacy was never intended, just promoted for the $$$.

    • @Todija
      @Todija Před 2 lety +7

      That is an interesting thing I've heard today

    • @xCwieCHRISx
      @xCwieCHRISx Před 2 lety +5

      This should be the top comment.

    • @TheLoveMario
      @TheLoveMario Před 2 lety +51

      LogMeIn Hamachi is a VPN. Around 2013-2014 everyone used it to make running a small Minecraft server with their friends way easier. That's the kind of thing VPN technology was meant to be used for

    • @darkcatapulter
      @darkcatapulter Před 2 lety +15

      VPN. AKA Virtual Private Network. AKA tunneling. AKA encapsulating an IP header within another IP header. Example of such [VPN] technology is “GRE Tunnel”. AKA Generic Routing Encapsulation. Known for creating VPN tunnels with no encryption. Can be used for sending IPv6 packets over an IPv4 only network (IPv6 over IPv4 tunnel). Another example for such technology is “IPSEC”. AKA IP security. Known for creating encrypted VPN connections. Is very commonly configured with old and insecure crypto settings (using IKE version 1 instead of IKE version 2, or configure insecure DH groups like 2 or 5 instead of the more secure 20 or 21). Third example of such technology is SSL-VPN. Known for creating secure VPN tunnels using SSL certificates for authentication. AKA VPN tunnel over HTTPS. Mostly only used by companies to give employees secure access to company intranet.

    • @jeremyreese54
      @jeremyreese54 Před 2 lety +4

      The big thing is that vpn encryption prevents sslv break and inspect by your ISP.

  • @danielianello
    @danielianello Před 2 lety +416

    Switched to Mullvad over a year ago after listening to Michael Bazzell, replacing PIA. Much happier with it, and my router has direct integration with its Wireguard protocol.

    • @roybuscht.9997
      @roybuscht.9997 Před 2 lety +6

      Which router do you use? I use L2TP with mine and its unreliable

    • @Ooooooooooo
      @Ooooooooooo Před 2 lety +13

      @@roybuscht.9997 Probably GL-iNet, they're quite ok. Asus seems to have a few models that can handle decent WireGuard throughput, too.

    • @danielianello
      @danielianello Před 2 lety +5

      @@roybuscht.9997 GL.inet; they make a 400 mbps VPN router for around $120. Pretty happy with it, they are supposed to be energy efficient and compact, which is nice and all, but I would prefer more performance when adjusting settings in the web interface. Very customizable. Throughput has no issues though, I even played FPS games through my connection and maintained sub 20 ping in most games.

    • @Scranny
      @Scranny Před 2 lety

      Dan, can you explain to me why this router is preferred over a TPLink or Linksys? Also, can you install open source firmware on your GLinet (e.g. Tomato, openwrt, etc)?

    • @Bambotb
      @Bambotb Před rokem +1

      @@Ooooooooooo are you sure VPN makes you private ?

  • @wintrywind
    @wintrywind Před 2 lety +792

    Mullvad is a godsend, not only for privacy but piracy. Setting up port forwarding is so easy than other vpn services.

    • @ReconScammers
      @ReconScammers Před 2 lety +14

      Not exactly, some other services forward all ports and some are easy. Mullvads easy but isn't the easier. Just wanted to clear that up.

    • @magiricod
      @magiricod Před 2 lety +6

      @@ReconScammers yeah I use speedify and it's basically 1 click

    • @EnzoBergstrom
      @EnzoBergstrom Před 2 lety +28

      I run my tor exit relay over mullvad, works great.

    • @wintrywind
      @wintrywind Před 2 lety +3

      @@ReconScammers well then i guess it's just my experience with mullvad and other vpn services i tried, some of them didn't even have port forwarding like NordVPN

    • @ahmadramzy2716
      @ahmadramzy2716 Před 2 lety +41

      What's port forwarding? Complete newbie here if anybody got the time to explain will be greatly appreciated

  • @chip2508
    @chip2508 Před 2 lety +87

    When a sincere video by someone who just knows what they're talking about is more convincing than thousands of dollars in advertising

  • @electrified0
    @electrified0 Před 2 lety +610

    I'd still challenge the premise that a VPN doesn't help you be anonymous, since masking an otherwise public IP can go a long way in some scenarios. For example, in peer to peer situations, whether it be BitTorrent or attrocities like GTA Online (where everyone with a mod menu can see your IP), even a shitty CZcamsr-sponsored VPN with your credit card on file will be enough to keep peers from obtaining your identity who could otherwise obtain it with ease. They won't necessarily stop Government agencies from getting your data, and the VPN company themselves can potentially use the data they gather on you in ways that violate your privacy, so they're still overall not good tools for anonymity, but in both those examples, Tor is out of the set of options and so a VPN is among your only options to add a layer of anonymity.

    • @pucktoad
      @pucktoad Před 2 lety +153

      Yes. Many think VPN = anon, but in reality VPN = hiding from some specific parties. I use mine at work connected to my works wifi. They know my device and how much data I use, but the use of a VPN makes them unable to snoop on the domains I am connecting to. I am not checking anything bad, but prefer to keep that away from my employer.

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 2 lety +41

      It's so non technical users don't get any stupid ideas, anyone in the know understands what you said anyway.
      Every technology has its pros and cons, some more some others. It's just important that you know what you need for your use case.

    • @almaefogo
      @almaefogo Před 2 lety +5

      Just saying but you don't need a mod menu to know someone's IP, it's a lot easier but if you only have 2 or 3 people in the session you figure it out pretty easily without a mod menu.

    • @xCwieCHRISx
      @xCwieCHRISx Před 2 lety +15

      i dont get it. whats so bad when someone got your ip address? they can locate where you live and that information is problably about 50-100km wrong. if you dont want to bypass geolocation restrictions a vpn is a waste of money in my opinion.

    • @itsme7570
      @itsme7570 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm with the author of this thread. I use mullvad with bad opsec and do illegal stuff all the time.. Not in jail atm

  • @zenithzv
    @zenithzv Před 2 lety +155

    Mullvad is genuinely the best VPN I've ever used, been using it for 5 years and have constantly said that it's the only VPN I would possibly take a sponsorship for (too bad it seems like they don't do sponsorships lol)

    • @therearewormsundermyskinth2928
      @therearewormsundermyskinth2928 Před 2 lety

      omg tf2 pedo

    • @cloudynguyen6527
      @cloudynguyen6527 Před 2 lety +27

      I mean you could promote them for free.

    • @zenithzv
      @zenithzv Před 2 lety +62

      @@cloudynguyen6527 i already do to everyone who asks lol

    • @danielrobinson3654
      @danielrobinson3654 Před měsícem +1

      I just saw a mullvad banner on a bus just outside of Chicago, so there's that

    • @aaaaaa-hh8cq
      @aaaaaa-hh8cq Před měsícem

      ​@@danielrobinson3654interesting. it's fine as long as they don't sponsor CZcamsrs and celebrities

  • @Kiwi-9381
    @Kiwi-9381 Před 2 lety +31

    Always get excited when I see your videos, you have literally been my favourite youtuber for a long time now. Keep up the great work

  • @GaiaGoddessOfTheEarth
    @GaiaGoddessOfTheEarth Před 2 lety +21

    As someone who switched to mullvad after the PIA buyout I'm happy to see you covering them.

    • @Bond2025
      @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci

      When police and security services set up a VPN, they used the excuse that it was 6 people that had all left PIA when Kape bought them out. I was able to research and found the IPs coming from a UK Police IP range and stopped using them immediately about a year ago.

  • @LiborTinka
    @LiborTinka Před 2 lety +21

    For EU users it should be noted that no, GDPR does not protect you. Although companies should comply, the state institutions do not. The state and its institution can use your personal data virtually however they want.

  • @Freak_Gamer
    @Freak_Gamer Před 2 lety +138

    My biggest issue with TOR is that people/your ISP *knows* you are using tor. They may not know what for, but they know you are.
    And when probably only a handful out of many thousands of people in a city use tor, they become persons of interest.
    Edit: I know there are guard nodes, but it feels as if quite a few of them must be tapped.

    • @kevinbarber2795
      @kevinbarber2795 Před 2 lety +2

      What’s a guard node?

    • @greatac5082
      @greatac5082 Před 2 lety +28

      @@kevinbarber2795 in the context of this I'm assuming it means an entrance node which some how some way makes it so that your isp doesn't know

    • @ray8776
      @ray8776 Před rokem +25

      If you live in a 3rd class country, random not-so popular city, and only a few people within a mile radius uses Tor. Then it could be a problem. (?)

    • @johnmachenzie1613
      @johnmachenzie1613 Před rokem +6

      @@ray8776 You & the OP forgot bridges (Tor) exists

    • @Bond2025
      @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci +2

      They know all the guard nodes too, what you might want to look at is the settings to make Tor settings look like Microsoft update data. This can help on DPI/DPI systems, but newer ones cross reference the traffic and IP, so it is pointless depending on who you are hiding from. A guard node is as insecure as an exit node. I could set one up and inspect and modify traffic. Police and Security Services in the UK do this all the time. Look how many sites that are aimed at privacy still insist on the lowest security settings on Tor Browser and demand scripts are run! That is so they track you and know your real ID.
      A lot of exit and middle nodes are run by GCHQ and NSA to play with. They can stain traffic going in to see where it comes out, so get the real IP that way.
      Two university students were threatened or paid not to give a talk on how to de-anonymise Tor users when they went to DEFCON. The talk was pulled as it would have revealed users can be traced easily and ruined the work of the security services.
      Tor Browser Bundle had firefox changed by developers - because they say it was not hacked - to facilitate Operation Onymous in 2014. Scripts were all set to run, but the program was like that from default instead of how it was previously with everything set to OFF. That was pressure being put on the team by Security Services and they rolled over.
      Then they allowed all scripts to be run no matter if the setting was on or off. Again, to keep police and security services happy because they were running exploits on Tor Users.
      You really can't trust anyone.

  • @claudespeed13579
    @claudespeed13579 Před 2 lety +163

    I feel like real anonymity is unobtainable while Internet is paid. Your ISP will always need your billing info. The only hope would be to wait until fiber optic infrastructure becomes so cheap you can get it for free, which is not realistic. And again, supporting privacy is not in the best interest of corporations and states, so...

    • @darkcoeficient
      @darkcoeficient Před 2 lety +3

      Too bad you can't phreak I guess.

    • @reforcoescolar7881
      @reforcoescolar7881 Před 2 lety +8

      I mean, you could use someone else connection, thus someone else, ISP?
      It's illegal but it's a way nonetheless lol

    • @darkcoeficient
      @darkcoeficient Před 2 lety +17

      @@reforcoescolar7881 yeah, at that point is like... What the hell are you even doing? I was even going to suggest public Wi-Fi.

    • @reforcoescolar7881
      @reforcoescolar7881 Před 2 lety

      @@darkcoeficient tru, forgot about em

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 2 lety +27

      Just build many relay stations that connect to different free wifis in your area and combine them into one high speed connection /s
      in the future maybe it's possible to hijack IoT mesh networks to get free anonymous internet. Depends on how secure they end up being.

  • @CubeBag
    @CubeBag Před 2 lety +80

    8:25 It's probably not just them giving a discount out of the goodness of their heart -- I'm sure the discount is also because these card companies charge merchants up the butt with fees, so Mullvad can afford to drop the price a little bit for payment methods that are almost free to use.

    • @ethgod
      @ethgod Před rokem +1

      the credit card fees are max 3-4%

    • @kk-gu1zv
      @kk-gu1zv Před rokem

      @@ethgod yes + 25-50 cent on top as a flat fee

    • @genkiferal7178
      @genkiferal7178 Před 10 měsíci

      the discount CODE is so that the YTer gets credit for sending business to VPN.

    • @JansHeikkinen
      @JansHeikkinen Před 9 dny

      They may not have at the time the comment was posted, but they specifically state that this is true on their website: "Our accepted cryptocurrencies are discounted at 10% due to lower fees and less administration." This is on the pricing page, under the question about discounts. From what I've seen, most stores that accept cryptocurrencies have discounts like this; Mental Outlaw's store does the same ;-)

  • @steini19o4
    @steini19o4 Před 2 lety +76

    There is also IVPN. Mullvard and IVPN are the best ones out there. Mullvard is cheaper overall for the same features, IVPN is cheaper if you use all available device-slots for the 2 and 3 year plans for the same features.
    One of the best features these two VPN providers have is port-forwarding which allows you to expose a single service on one of your computers (e.g. ssh, webserver, password manager, ...) at a static public IP on the internet without having to open your home firewall to external requests or making your own IP known to DDOS script-kiddies.

    • @alpha12081
      @alpha12081 Před 2 lety

      What about X-VPN for general browsing and research stuff?

    • @EasyOCE
      @EasyOCE Před rokem +1

      ​@@alpha12081 ye no 😂

  • @battokizu
    @battokizu Před 2 lety +18

    You actually shouted out the best vpn. Actually great speeds and no bs for torrenting. God bless them.

  • @hansmichael6270
    @hansmichael6270 Před 2 lety +21

    Mullvad is based on Sweden. And Sweden is part of the 14 eyes.

    • @Blood-PawWerewolf
      @Blood-PawWerewolf Před 2 lety

      True. But there really isn’t trustworthy countries to begin with.
      Want to escape the 14 eyes? Go to a sketchy country (ie China, Russia). Oh? You don’t trust sketchy countries with your data? Well, who would you really trust? Nobody

    • @lazar2949
      @lazar2949 Před 2 lety +12

      Mullvad doesnt hide that fact, they talk about it on their website. They are pretty transparent about that stuff which i respect. Being part of 14 eyes doesn't mean they are definitely monitoring.

    • @philcooper9225
      @philcooper9225 Před 2 lety +5

      @@lazar2949 definitely monitoring doesn't matter. Possibly monitoring does

    • @marcusaurelius3487
      @marcusaurelius3487 Před 3 měsíci

      And theyve had multiple court proceedings, and they show the court details, they provide nothing. Dont underestimates swedes love for piracy

  • @grrman
    @grrman Před rokem +8

    Haha, this great because glowies in Europe recently tried to raid Mullvad offices and came away with NOTHING

  • @Dystopikachu
    @Dystopikachu Před 2 lety +2

    Mullvad is doing a massive ad campaign right now in the subway and at bus stops in Stockholm, Sweden. One of the banners reads something like (translated from Swedish): "If you see this ad, it's completely by accident". Genius.

  • @peeweesprincess89
    @peeweesprincess89 Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting! Will give this a look. Also that FBI back door cellphone is terrifying.

  • @TonCulte
    @TonCulte Před 2 lety +6

    You've shown what to look for into VPN's as well as DNS's an TOR, I'd suggest making a video about proxies to complement these topics would be helpful.

  • @TruthBehindTheLies
    @TruthBehindTheLies Před 2 lety +1106

    I've heard you recommend against connecting to TOR while using a VPN a few times in other videos but I'm not sure the reasoning. Could you or someone knowledgeable explain why that's a bad decision? I'm new to privacy and I'm just trying to understand it so I can make better decisions in the future.

    • @MentalOutlaw
      @MentalOutlaw  Před 2 lety +910

      Guard nodes already provide the service of hiding the fact that you're using Tor.

    • @TruthBehindTheLies
      @TruthBehindTheLies Před 2 lety +196

      @@MentalOutlaw Okay thank you, I'll look into that

    • @freerobuxgotomychannel7179
      @freerobuxgotomychannel7179 Před 2 lety +616

      @@TruthBehindTheLies idk truth, you acting kinda sus as a roblox youtuber on tor :/

    • @isheamongus811
      @isheamongus811 Před 2 lety +48

      I heard if u use VPN with tor VPN goes before tor guide nodes hide better in most cases but if ur in China it's good to have VPN before tor coś it's easier for vpn to bypass firewall i heard that from nordvpn and I'm not sure

    • @isheamongus811
      @isheamongus811 Před 2 lety +8

      I think ud have to use VPN wire wall or something

  • @wilux2469
    @wilux2469 Před 2 lety +1

    Mullvad also has public billboards here in their hometown of Gothenburg.
    Fun too see them doing well.

  • @DotHackProject
    @DotHackProject Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks, I've watched the old videos about this topic but I think I need this kind of video from time to time to remind me about how vpn sucks.

  • @Jack-oc2fc
    @Jack-oc2fc Před 2 lety +8

    VPN's are anonymous to an outside observer. The problem is if the VPN company is connecting data.

  • @valleyd0g69
    @valleyd0g69 Před 2 lety +2

    so glad i found this channel, keep the content coming outlaw ✌

  • @GrimMetropolis
    @GrimMetropolis Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the info MO. ✌🎃🤘

  • @kbb8030
    @kbb8030 Před rokem

    Great job! And thank you for sharing

  • @Ultrajamz
    @Ultrajamz Před 2 lety +42

    The issue I see is no non-sketchy way of getting monero in decent amounts

    • @junosoft
      @junosoft Před 2 lety +3

      Buy a good GPU and mine it.

    • @f0rest10
      @f0rest10 Před 2 lety +1

      invest in alts use interest / gains to transition into moreno

    • @vanish3408
      @vanish3408 Před 2 lety +6

      buy with cash from a P2P market

    • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
      @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 2 lety +6

      Duh just ask your drug dealer or the local Chinese restaurant

    • @Andrew-jh2bn
      @Andrew-jh2bn Před 2 lety +21

      @@junosoft Actually Monero isn't mined with GPUs, it uses a cpu only algorithm.

  • @coin6607
    @coin6607 Před rokem +8

    What I also love also Mullvad is they don't offer huge bulk discounts like many other big providers. Most VPNs try to suck you in giving you $2-3/month deals for a 2 year plan, but a $8-10/month deal for monthly subscriptions. With Mullvad, it's 4.5 euro a month with any plan.

  • @MarlonSardini
    @MarlonSardini Před 2 lety +72

    Would be nice to expand on the issues involved in hosting a tor exit node. It seems like a pretty high risk.

    • @itsawill9268
      @itsawill9268 Před 2 lety +3

      It does seem that way but tor has been through the ringer with gov agencies trying to take it down or mitigate its uses

    • @spyj1900
      @spyj1900 Před 2 lety +5

      For anyone:
      Anonymity and secrecy are inherently contradicting each other as any anonymous software require external (therefor less secure) servers as a proxy. Also windows version of tor browser is relatively vulnerable to traditional cyber attacks as well.
      Tails linux equipped with end to end encryption tools such as pidgin paired with xmpp and https everyware may mitigate the risk of it. Though there is a risk of MiTM attack from exit node.

    • @itsawill9268
      @itsawill9268 Před 2 lety +1

      @@spyj1900 It just doesn’t seem very likely to happen

    • @DigitalNomadInvestor
      @DigitalNomadInvestor Před 2 lety

      @@itsawill9268 Yet it was created by the military?

    • @brands2131
      @brands2131 Před rokem +2

      That's why you don't do that... He runs a tor relay, two different things.

  • @SuperEbbandflow
    @SuperEbbandflow Před 2 lety

    MO out here doing the Lord's work. Criminally underrated channel

  • @afrofantom6631
    @afrofantom6631 Před 2 lety +1

    an important thing to note is that the talking points used for the VPNS in ad reads has started to shift towards the "Watch British nflix in America" thing more than privacy (but still mentioning it).

  • @bina7513
    @bina7513 Před 2 lety +10

    Can you talk about tor guard? It managed to become court proven by refusing to give up logs to the company/companies throwing copyright lawsuits against them in regards to torrenting, and instead opting for making it so that only US servers can't torrent (but other servers can).

  • @TawaraboshiGenba
    @TawaraboshiGenba Před 2 lety +3

    2:41 Lol. At this point, the only way to be sure you're really anonymous, is to write the software yourself, and to design and manufacture the hardware yourself. And even then, as soon as you connect it to the internet or the mobile network, you might be able to guarantee under some circumstances that your communications are private, but you can never be sure that you're able to hide who you are and with whom you communicate.

    • @nadeoki
      @nadeoki Před 2 lety +1

      false, the whole point of "OPEN SOURCE" is so you don't have to write the code but you're able to view it.

    • @zac2384
      @zac2384 Před rokem

      Just use a pen and paper

    • @Bond2025
      @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci

      Agreed, even home routers are inspecting and collecting all your traffic. Have you noticed how many of them hide it as antivirus monitoring or traffic shield systems.

  • @festerbutt
    @festerbutt Před 2 lety +2

    Very informative video, I have liked it!

  • @YeePie
    @YeePie Před 2 lety

    a few hours ago i saw an ad for mullvad on a bus in stockholm, this getting into my recommendations feels like a targeted advertisement

  • @Livity.
    @Livity. Před 2 lety +43

    Mullvad has an unique ability bypass public paid wifi, such as (college) dorms or hotels.
    If your in a dorm type situation, you could test this out.

    • @J43rv1
      @J43rv1 Před 2 lety +4

      Not a good idea at all. Remember how they caught the kid who posted bomb threats to get out of finals at Harvard? He was even using TOR.

    • @ghostymytoasty7007
      @ghostymytoasty7007 Před 2 lety +44

      @@J43rv1 He was caught because he admitted to the authorities he did it. Mental Outlaw even said himself a few times don't admit to anything, they knew he was using TOR yeah and that made him suspect #1 but just using TOR wasn't what got him caught.
      That said though if they seized his computer I am almost positive they would of found more evidence.

    • @J43rv1
      @J43rv1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ghostymytoasty7007 They correlated his usage of the internet with the same time the posts were made. What I'm saying is, for the original question, it doesn't matter if you're using a VPN or TOR on Public paid wifi/university wifi, you can still be identified. Unless I don't understand his comment.

    • @mnageh-bo1mm
      @mnageh-bo1mm Před 2 lety

      @Livity that can't be true

    • @slicepie410
      @slicepie410 Před 2 lety

      But how?? Dont they "ban" your access to internet untill you pay? Or does it just put some sort of limit making it impossible to surf the internet comfortably?

  • @Clancydaenlightened
    @Clancydaenlightened Před 2 lety +4

    Unlike vpns, people can black list tor exit nodes, tor also don't like captchas
    Seems harder to block, filter, or ban VPN based ips
    Tor is more secure typically because you're trading bandwidth for the cost of better data privacy

  • @jeffyramalhocardioworkouts

    Love your videos

  • @enzoduvernay4540
    @enzoduvernay4540 Před 2 lety

    Oh thanks there's finally videos about Mullvad!

  • @miodrag.aleksic
    @miodrag.aleksic Před 2 lety +83

    Regarding using an android phone as a Tor node: you shouldn't recommend it. Battery management on mobile phones is horrible, and even LTT mentioned in a few videos how they've had every single device explode due to being used (as far as I remember) as a server to remote into for some project.
    Most people would just set up a Tor node on a mobile device and forget it, instead of bothering to implement a system of charging it's battery only when it gets low and stopping once it's full. Even LTT didn't bother to do that. So there would definitely be explosions if that use case is promoted.

    • @anubmusing9749
      @anubmusing9749 Před 2 lety +3

      Lipo battery inside mobile phone wouldn't just suddenly explode when overly discharged right?

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před 2 lety +1

      Wait what

    • @sigmamale4147
      @sigmamale4147 Před 2 lety +2

      @@anubmusing9749 i think it is more about the temperature, as phone batteries can get pretty hot when using the device while charging it

    • @beardalaxy
      @beardalaxy Před 2 lety +3

      @@sigmamale4147 you'd have to find a phone that lets you connect directly to the wall without a battery which i don't think exist

    • @anubmusing9749
      @anubmusing9749 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sigmamale4147 I am pretty sure most smartphone now will just shut off when your battery or cpu is overheating.

  • @Cefst
    @Cefst Před 2 lety +27

    oh fuck yeah i love mullvad, switched to them after a few years of pia

  • @justwatching6118
    @justwatching6118 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm waiting for Kenny's VPN! :))
    Monero will be the only payment option and on landing page will display "connect to this site from coffee shop's wi-fi or tor" :D

  • @mohamedchaib5084
    @mohamedchaib5084 Před rokem

    I love your thumbnails, bud

  • @jeremydoerksen5988
    @jeremydoerksen5988 Před 2 lety +14

    One could also pay for other vpn services via prepaid cards, or similar. There would have to be additional steps taken to keep your identity somewhat sterile, in registration, and use; but, it wouldn't be impossible.

    • @RuthlessNoise
      @RuthlessNoise Před 2 lety

      I've never used a prepaid card, do you have to give your information to use it?, or can you put a random name on it?.

    • @beardalaxy
      @beardalaxy Před 2 lety +7

      @@RuthlessNoise if you pay for a pre-paid card with cash then the only way the card itself can be traced back to you is if someone looks at surveillance footage and sees you buying it but even then i think there would have to be a lot of other factors coming together.

  • @Ultrajamz
    @Ultrajamz Před 2 lety +16

    Maybe Mullvad is trying to honeypot by appearing so good but they still get your ip and that is plenty

    • @RedSaint83
      @RedSaint83 Před 2 lety +8

      It's well proven by now, that if a well meaning company grows too big, becomes too corporate, they end up becoming the bad guys, so yeah. Although, might as well ride the wave while it's radical. 🏄‍♂

    • @MrEdrftgyuji
      @MrEdrftgyuji Před 2 lety

      They are based in Sweden, which has a terrible track record for privacy.

    • @catpurrn
      @catpurrn Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrEdrftgyuji Bro what are you on about lol

    • @EasyOCE
      @EasyOCE Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrEdrftgyuji what lol

  • @lucywucyyy
    @lucywucyyy Před 2 lety

    im so glad monero is slowly gaining popularity, even one of my fave anime reviewers takes donations in monero

  • @lalosalamancat4550
    @lalosalamancat4550 Před rokem

    Just switched to mullvad, thanks to the content bro!

  • @fryphillipj560
    @fryphillipj560 Před 2 lety +5

    ANOM was genius, and it is precisely the type of stuff we mean when we fight against complete surveillance and advocate for targeted surveillance of known criminals. Change my mind.

    • @ulfr-gunnarsson
      @ulfr-gunnarsson Před 5 měsíci

      Problem is, how would any law enforcement or intelligence agency know for sure that person they're surveiling is in fact a criminal? (It is especially true for various crimes coomon today, like fraud, money laundering etc). Criminals aren't fools.
      Plus, it's not only law enforcement who is surveiling people, it's also intelligence agencies.

  • @anonp2958
    @anonp2958 Před 2 lety +5

    In terms of running relays, you can also run multiple relays in containers instead of having to have one device per relay.

  • @Randomynous01
    @Randomynous01 Před 5 měsíci

    I luv ur sense of humor Mental, Ur my type of person who would be fun to hangout with..

  • @maplerlol
    @maplerlol Před 2 lety

    Great video, I learnt a lot.

  • @devdylan6152
    @devdylan6152 Před rokem +11

    I don't use a vpn for privacy but I do value my privacy.... I self host my own vpn so I can take advantage of a secure wan into my own network at home. I am currently using my own self hosted openvpn and I have deployed others before as well, would be cool to see something covering how well secured those solutions tend to be and if they have some privacy issues as I wouldn't be surprised if they have some telemetry reporting services packed in. It is open source but most people including myself don't have the time to comb through all that and even if I did I am not a cyber security expert and even someone who is could miss things. happens all the time. Too me a vpn is a way to make a cheap wan.

    • @Lucas-md8gg
      @Lucas-md8gg Před 8 měsíci

      You're here too

    • @devdylan6152
      @devdylan6152 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Lucas-md8gg ..... do I know you from somewhere else?

  • @masterzoroark6664
    @masterzoroark6664 Před rokem +3

    And that's why war for privacy shouldn't be sidestepped with "fixes" like VPN.
    It should be fought with being outspoken and action.
    "Fixes" like VPNs are not fixing things at all, they justs swep the problem under the rug so you, consooomer, don't need to "worry" about it.

  • @mindgamesnl
    @mindgamesnl Před rokem +1

    Been using mullvad for a long while now, love it

  • @morganmcdougall3103
    @morganmcdougall3103 Před 2 lety

    The Four Horseman of CZcams!
    Choked on coffee with laughter!

  • @jeremybarlow2291
    @jeremybarlow2291 Před 2 lety +13

    A Calyx Institute MiFi Hotspot ordered with a computer running Tails over a public WiFi bought with XMR shipped to a mail drop for a Wyoming LLC at a registered office ran by your attorney and forwarded to you by the attorney's office is about the most private access point you can get as an entry point to the Internet. After that connect via Tor over a VPN paid for with XMR. That is about as anonymous and private as you can get thanks to Attorney-Client privilege. Of course never put the sim into that hotspot anywhere near a location that can be associated with you.

    • @joeybuddy96
      @joeybuddy96 Před 2 lety +2

      This guy's doing the thinking for all of us. ☝️

    • @jeremybarlow2291
      @jeremybarlow2291 Před 2 lety +3

      @@joeybuddy96 For bonus points, you hire the attorney with cash and give him a psuedonym.

    • @wrockd
      @wrockd Před 2 lety

      Using TOR over VPN is doing nothing but making latency based correlation and MITM attacks easier for them.

    • @jeremybarlow2291
      @jeremybarlow2291 Před 2 lety

      @@wrockd it is adding one more hop of obfuscation and adding yet another layer of fruitless investigative sourcing. The ISP doesn't know you were connected to Tor. Tor doesn't know where you are coming from, and the VPN provider only knows that you came from a mobile hotspot and went out to a Tor node. It removes single points of failure.

    • @wrockd
      @wrockd Před 2 lety

      @@jeremybarlow2291 TOR Guards work much better for that purpose, as they mitigate that exact single point of failure that you're talking about.
      VPNs are Centralised and Your ISP can figure out exactly which VPN Provider you're using just by looking at the IP, after that all it takes is an email exchange between two governments to hand over your data from that VPN company (14 eyes and 7 eyes exist). And now you've got a single entity with logs of all your activities, that's a single point of faliuee.
      For obfuscating TOR usage using TOR Guard nodes is much better, they Obfuscate the traffic behaviour to look like common traffic, and by the time they get recognised/registered as TOR Guard nodes by your ISP they are already replaced.

  • @BossManTee
    @BossManTee Před 2 lety +3

    One question tho, is it your choice that your relay server is an end node, or an inner node? Can you choose?
    If not, then wouldn't that just prove that most of the end nodes are controlled by the feds? Because if they control both the end nodes that i use (the one that my packet enters and the one that it exists), then they can easily know who is sending which packet.

    • @Bond2025
      @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci

      And that is how it works! Exactly how you are identified using Tor, they stain the traffic going in and look for it on the exit nodes. GCHQ and NSA monitor all Tor nodes are correlate the traffic.

  • @vicstoron
    @vicstoron Před 2 lety

    Hey Kenny, what do you think of in a near future doing a video of Bitcoin anonymity for noobies? stuff like Coinjoin (Wasabi/Samourai Wallet) and what-not.
    also, a Tor-over-VPN or VPN-over-Tor vid would be a good vid.

  • @Tyro555
    @Tyro555 Před rokem

    My neckbeard has long awaited the day a youtuber has mentioned mullvad with a well produced video

  • @cristianespinal9917
    @cristianespinal9917 Před 2 lety +4

    One major VPN use of mine is to connect to CZcams somewhere outside the US during election season so I don't get flooded with cringe political ads. Using it for that, any free nonsense VPN does the job.

  • @ayakas-kh5mk
    @ayakas-kh5mk Před 2 lety +8

    MULLVAD FOR THE WIN!!!

  • @corbonthec0b
    @corbonthec0b Před rokem

    The most complex 12 minute ad read I’ve ever seen. Shoutout Mullvad

  • @beardalaxy
    @beardalaxy Před 2 lety

    it's also worth noting that it seems like if you DO pay with a method like debit card or paypal, the receipt gets yeeted in 40 days.
    and you can pay with actual cash. since mail doesn't require a return address, i'd say that's pretty anonymous.
    of course, they can still see your IP address and who knows when/if they get rid of it. you just have no way of actually knowing. as far as VPNs go, though, they're the best you've got.

  • @IFlipRizla
    @IFlipRizla Před 2 lety +7

    I bought NordVPN about 5 years ago using Tor and bitcoin bought with cash, so it's not the only company that offers this. Although now I wouldn't trust NordVPN. Just saying this seems like a sales pitch for Mullvad.

  • @Slugbunny
    @Slugbunny Před 2 lety +11

    One thing I've liked about Vtubers is that they haven't had sponsored ads on streams. Probably because they're with an agency, but the result is the same.

    • @nadeoki
      @nadeoki Před 2 lety

      imagine marketing yourself as authentic and "down to earth" but breaking the status quo of no sponsors xd

  • @spooky2466
    @spooky2466 Před 2 lety

    new sub here, love the content

  • @sams5803
    @sams5803 Před 2 lety +1

    You should definitely do some relay videos! I need to learn more about this stuff! Can't you run your own VPN server type in of deal?

    • @smorrow
      @smorrow Před rokem

      Self-hosting anything (e.g. email) is the most secure, least anonymous way.

  • @josephkelly4893
    @josephkelly4893 Před 2 lety +31

    Is it possible to run a TOR relay on a VM in Google cloud? I've been playing with some VMs on the free level google clouds, and the bandwidth is massive, could be a good way to claw back some anonymity through the all seeing google.

    • @liamholcroft7212
      @liamholcroft7212 Před 2 lety +9

      yes unless they block it

    • @alemswazzu
      @alemswazzu Před 2 lety +13

      I doubt they will allow tor traffic through their servers.

    • @bravefastrabbit770
      @bravefastrabbit770 Před 2 lety +10

      I don't understand why nobody is talking about Sybil Attacks in the tor network?
      It's old as shit and the glowies are all up in the mix since like foreeever, how people can be so ignorant to this just blows my mind. If you want a true VPN/onion router, then either set up your own personal exit node within the lokinet network, or fork the project as everything is open source.

    • @robertpaulson8790
      @robertpaulson8790 Před 2 lety +4

      We don't need more relays, we need more entrance and exit nodes.

    • @tbjers
      @tbjers Před 2 lety +3

      @@bravefastrabbit770 The only argument I see for Lokinet vs Tor in regards to Sybil attacks is that you have to stake Oxen to run a node. As if governments and other "bad" actors couldn't afford this?

  • @caberful
    @caberful Před 2 lety +3

    You can also opt for an overall privacy boost of the entire Internet by obfuscation, in that case trigger red flags for nothing would be a good strategy, I mean, people are already doing that.
    Don't forget that behind that frontface of everyday heroes there's a lot of creepy bastards.

  • @ezhumbug
    @ezhumbug Před rokem

    The waifu thumbnail got me into watching your video. Although I'm in mixed bag with privacy, I'll probably use it when I move out of family house in future when living my own.

  • @xanafein8453
    @xanafein8453 Před rokem

    Nice to see mullvad getting mentioned

  • @amnottabs
    @amnottabs Před 2 lety +4

    I love how from the description alone you can infer that the ANON Phone was an obvious scam yet real criminals that operates outside the law fell for the meme, it is almost comical

  • @testtest8399
    @testtest8399 Před rokem +3

    VPN should really just be used for unlocking geo-locked content and pretty much nothing else unless you know what you are doing. Same way ISPs puke data to police/fbi/whatever other government agency VPNs will do the same and lot of them said they have no logs policy but they are apparently required to collect logs or something like that. Like only benefit I really see is if you are from country X, VPN is in country Y and country X agencies cannot request logs from company based in country Y.

  • @Marcus-kz7rw
    @Marcus-kz7rw Před 2 lety

    Currently using IVPN, in my opinion the only true competition to mullvad VPN. Both don't require email and phone number for using the service, both offer 1 month membership and longer.

  • @elielbourrelly9902
    @elielbourrelly9902 Před rokem

    Huh, a channel that recommends stuff without affiliate link! What kind of awsome sorcery is this!

  • @ElectronNDubstep
    @ElectronNDubstep Před 2 lety +5

    What's your opinion on double VPN? Using a VPN to connect your PC, then starting a VM and connecting to another VPN. Theoretically this would obfuscate your IP address to the point of near anonymity.

    • @ethanmorris36
      @ethanmorris36 Před 2 lety +2

      Shouldn't work in theory, VMs are typically bridged to your physical adapter on your PC meaning that the traffic would both be going out from the same physical NIC and destined for two separate servers. Wouldn't be any different than running through a single VPN tunnel

    • @ElectronNDubstep
      @ElectronNDubstep Před 2 lety +1

      @@ethanmorris36 ok yes that makes sense. What about using your VPN to connect on a VPS and then chaining with another VPN? I know this is probably bogus but I try to think of methods to achieve this. Double VPN did something similar but was cancelled by the glowies.

    • @skafiskafnjak971
      @skafiskafnjak971 Před 2 lety +3

      Mullvad VPN offers Double-Hop option. No need for VM.

    • @ElectronNDubstep
      @ElectronNDubstep Před 2 lety

      @@skafiskafnjak971 but couldn't it be tracked in the same sense as any other VPN even with double hop?

    • @skafiskafnjak971
      @skafiskafnjak971 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ElectronNDubstep it can be tracked obviously, but it will take much more time & effort. you'll be tracked even if you use VM. encrypt your PC with veracrypt and use doublehop vpn, that's the best thing you can do.

  • @user-rj2oj2cp5t
    @user-rj2oj2cp5t Před 5 měsíci +3

    I don't see the problem with putting a credit card to pay for your VPN, when you connect to a server it's a single IP address that is shared with multiple other users that are also using the same connection, how could the feds directly trace it back to you?

  • @Clancydaenlightened
    @Clancydaenlightened Před 2 lety +1

    Also if you own enough tor exit nodes, it be easy to de-anonymize people, same packet that go in, have to exit and show up somewhere.....
    You may not know what some one is sending, but you'd know who is sending it and who's the recipient

  • @notafbihoneypot8487
    @notafbihoneypot8487 Před 2 lety

    Mental, i personally run my relay from my spare pinephone and its awesome.
    Even have it hardwired

  • @Bond2025
    @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci +16

    Privacy and Anonymity are completely different. Tor was compromised in 2013, users can be identified by rogue nodes and traffic staining techniques. That is why GCHQ runs a lot of Tor Nodes. The Tor Browser Bundle was altered, possibly with the agreement of the developers to assist Law Enforcement with Operation Onymous in 2014. All the default security settings were changed to the lowest level and scripts were turned on. The script feature was also left operating despite the setting being set to off/blocked in later releases - to assist further with police investigations. The way it worked was that sites run a script when a user connected and the Tor Browser Bundle firefox sent replies outside Tor, back to Law Enforcement. Certain sites were given ID numbers and once the user connected, firefox run the script and identified the real IP address of the person.
    Tor Project would never answer questions over this. They also presented for download a version in November and December 2013 that had a "profiler trojan" built in, but only identifiable by Kaspersky antivirus at the time, because that company would not assist with exposing users.
    Some sites had pictures and videos that were modified, so they would cause a video player or picture viewer program to call for extra resources or a CODEC. Unless you blocked this or set VLC, for example, to connect out on a random IP and Port, you would be connected to Law Enforcement and they tracked you. Other files were just remote access trojans and law enforcement just sat watching what users did.
    VPNs are dangerous. CZcams affiliates only advertise them as they earn up to 40% of each referral. Most are only Proxy Servers, not VPNs. They operate on rented equipment in datacnters like M247 Ltd - who are forced to hand over all data in the UK at the request of police with a Production Order. The VPN collects, inspects, manipulates and redirects your data and sifts through to see if there is anything they can add to a user profile. Some VPNs want email addresses, phone numbers, WifI info, contact lists, PRECISE LOCATION and also your credit card details as your verified profile is sold for more.
    Even if the VPN doesn't collect all your data, the Host Company can and does sell it to whoever wants it
    A VPN only hides the IP, technology has moved on in the past 10years, now it is possible to trace anyone anywhere. Security Services can locate a person using facial recognition, using input from doorbells, CCTV, phones, ANPR etc. They can also tell who is with you if you are talking near a phone or alexa, or some TVs.

  • @damienbutt6320
    @damienbutt6320 Před 2 lety +4

    I’ve been using NordVPN for years. I’m obviously aware it’s not anonymous but in terms of the privacy aspect, it seems to work for me and my use case.

    • @Bond2025
      @Bond2025 Před 10 měsíci

      I hope you do not use a credit card or all that information in your profile is sold as verified!
      Try cancelling with them or even asking them why PayPal banned them.

  • @Samuel-iw2wm
    @Samuel-iw2wm Před 2 lety

    Thanks, had no idea about the other VPN's not being private, although it's actually very obvious the way you explained it. Appreciate the recommendation!

  • @RandomFrick
    @RandomFrick Před 2 lety +1

    this looks fenomenal! please continue working on it ❤

  • @h.hristov
    @h.hristov Před 2 lety +10

    When you buy Monero on an exchange, you buy it using a debit/credit card/PayPal and you provide the exchange with your personal identifiable data.

    • @GhostofTradition
      @GhostofTradition Před 2 lety +17

      But they just know you have, ni idea what you do with it once its moved

    • @mikerotcherson
      @mikerotcherson Před 2 lety

      But the Monero blockchain is private, so as long as you don't send it directly from the exchange to whomever you're paying, there is no way to trace what you did with the moneroj.
      In other words, just withdraw it from the exchange to your own wallet first, then pay anyone from there, and there's no practical way to trace that trail on the blockchain.
      And for anything else you can use something like Incognito app
      czcams.com/users/incognitochain

  • @powerfist1340
    @powerfist1340 Před 2 lety

    With your opinion on most VPN's and such, what's you thoughts on Safing/Portmaster?

  • @JeanPaulB
    @JeanPaulB Před 2 lety

    "Special operation"! lol, I see what you did there! xD

  • @dementedd
    @dementedd Před 2 lety +5

    YESSSS I EMAILED THEM ASKING FOR A MONERO OPTION AND THEY DID IT

    • @mikerotcherson
      @mikerotcherson Před 2 lety +1

      Careful. According to Kenny you're now identified since they have an email address for you.

  • @o_q
    @o_q Před 11 měsíci +4

    lmao port forwarding removed, rip mullvad

  • @Hadkek
    @Hadkek Před rokem +1

    Don't forget that Mullvad is open source and written in Rust, which is a language that prevents many security issues usually propagated by bugs.

  • @RocketLR
    @RocketLR Před rokem +1

    They are the best Wireguard vpn provider IMO, I have benchmarked so many VPNs and Mullvad comes out on top all the time.
    Better speed and better battery life.

  • @Channel-he5fr
    @Channel-he5fr Před 2 lety +11

    The government can send CP to your TOR relay then charge you with distribution
    Tor IS the 🍯

    • @ainzooalgown9952
      @ainzooalgown9952 Před 2 lety +3

      um sweetie how would they get CP to send in the first place? it's illegal 🤓

    • @karolbomba6704
      @karolbomba6704 Před 2 lety +9

      @@ainzooalgown9952 I doubt what the OP is saying is true, but to be fair it's irrelevant to them; whethever it's illegal or not. The feds broke law before

    • @Channel-he5fr
      @Channel-he5fr Před 2 lety +2

      @@ainzooalgown9952 from their large cache they call "evidence" or "forfeited property"

    • @Channel-he5fr
      @Channel-he5fr Před 2 lety +2

      @@karolbomba6704 oh it's true. Whether it's practical or if the charges would stick is irrelevant - you are responsible for all traffic through that Tor Relay. Running a device that accepts CP from one user and sends it to another is still a violation of CP laws
      CP was just an example

    • @Channel-he5fr
      @Channel-he5fr Před 2 lety +2

      @@ainzooalgown9952 a user like you downloads a Tor Relay - then gets trapped by the feds. You then agree to continue running your relay as an informant to keep yourself out of trouble - you refuse? You go to jail to await trial while the government continues to run your relay
      Tor is the worst opsec

  • @anonazerty165
    @anonazerty165 Před 2 lety +8

    Would love to see a project where you use the mullvad/tor combo

  • @SkyenNovaA
    @SkyenNovaA Před 2 lety

    Mullvad seem to be chads. When I eventually bother getting an external VPN it will probably be these guys.

  • @DevideNull
    @DevideNull Před 2 lety +1

    I just used my latest VPN subscription to watch this video and leave this comment, I feel super safe/private/anonymous. 😇

  • @julikaiba
    @julikaiba Před 2 lety +63

    isnt mullvad located within a 14 eyes country and thus basically forced to give out your IP address, without informing you, whenever anyone wants it?
    not saying nordvpn wouldnt do that, but they at least are outside the 14 eyes. While sure they need an email address one could theoretically create a throw away email using tor, and activate it by purchasing a one year gift card in some electronics store. You also seem to be able to pay with monero now, but no idea what data they want for you to be able to do so.
    again, I'm not saying nordvpn is good or bad, i just dont think mullvad really is much better.
    or am I missing something?

    • @trik9464
      @trik9464 Před 2 lety +19

      Its entirely possible mullvad is another cryptoAG jr. They have been on the nsa radar since 2009

    • @joey199412
      @joey199412 Před 2 lety +46

      Yes Mullvad could be completely compromised but the point of the video is that it doesn't even matter if they're compromised since they never get your information besides an IP address anyway. It means they could still be valuable to use even if the internet connection runs straight to the CIA headquarters.

    • @MrEdrftgyuji
      @MrEdrftgyuji Před 2 lety +18

      Sweden has a terrible track record for privacy, as does the rest of the EU. Don't know why he keeps shilling them ($$$)

    • @julikaiba
      @julikaiba Před 2 lety +1

      @@joey199412 I mean if they got my IP they basically got everything they need to know who I am, in which case I could have just used my credit card in the first place

    • @ekkkkkknoes
      @ekkkkkknoes Před 2 lety +23

      @@julikaiba No. In order to even connect your IP to you, they need to have some sort of pressure on your ISP, like law enforcement. And even then mullvad would have to keep logs of what traffic exactly goes to what IP address. Then, and only then, would it matter that mullvad is in a 14 eyes country.