george xxx
Active Member
I agree the only known way to avoid internet tracking is through a series of remote servers.Another important benefit of Open VPN (switched to AirVPN because beside having servers abroad, they also have servers in the USA which I only use for sites that require a US IP address, like Hulu) is that beside hiding your IP address, it also encrypts your data so no one can read it. This is very important on unsecured networks such as at Starbucks. Most Open VPN services are under $10 a month, small price for security and anonymity...
Thats like feeling safe with facebook. Software to by-pass encription is legal for law enforcement.encrypts your data so no one can read it.
The 9th Circuit agreed, ruling ... that "e-mail and Internet users have no expectation of privacy in the To/From addresses of their messages or the IP addresses of the websites they visit because they should know that these messages are sent and these IP addresses are accessed through the equipment of their Internet service provider and other third parties."
You have no right to get back something that does not exist.We were lured with cheese into the trap. Time we get our rights back.
The judges' conclusion: federal agents did not violate the Fourth Amendment when spying on the Escondido DSL line without any evidence of criminal wrongdoing on his behalf, a legal standard known as probable cause. All the feds must do is prove the information is "relevant" to an ongoing investigation.