اگر VPN استفاده می شود برای حفظ ناشناس ماندن و نشانه های کاربر وارد به خدمات (Spotify، من فضایی، مایکروسافت، و غیره)، سپس ناشناس ماندن کاربر را شکست داد؟
در تصور کنید راه های متعدد است که کاربران نابکار VPN می تواند پایین وجود دارد. برای واقعا آدمهای بد وجود دارد، آنها مردم جستجو برای آنها داریم. برای متوسط جو/ژوزفین، چه فعالیت باید نه انجام یا وارد ورود VPN خاص را جدا از بقیه چیزهای? و یا این سوال حتی است نگرانی های معتبر? می تواند ورود به سیستم شبکه اختصاصی مجازی یافت و سپس به فرد ترسیم چون آن شخص چیزی اشتباه است در حالی که بررسی آنها دیوار صورت از طریق VPN?
P.s. در جستجو و شکست خورده. بنابراین در اینجا من هستم. ممنون!
So, Facebook is going to see your VPN server’s IP address, not your modem. Your other activity is traceable back to the VPN as well. This is where their trail ends and the two can’t be correlated…
Unless your VPN keeps logs and tracks what your modem talked to through the VPN.
Edit: there’s more complex stuff, like WebRTC, but you can research that separately.
Not *defeated* necessarily as there will almost certainly be many other people’s traffic on the same IP as your traffic. Without logs, therefore, it wouldn’t be conclusive proof that you were connected to concerning traffic. However, I imagine you’d be a person of interest if the traffic warranted an actual criminal investigation. If you’re just torrenting or whatever, it’s almost certainly no big deal. If you’re dealing drugs, etc, probably a different story.
>For the average Joe/Josephine, what activities should not be done or signed into to keep a particular VPN login separate from the rest of the stuff?
The moment you log in (in a browser) to any account, related to yourself in any way, you are compromised.
Also VPN does pretty much nothing to increase your privacy, as it doesn’t stop ads and various kinds of trackers tracking you across the web. Major browsers (like Chrome and Firefox) also leak IP anyway, so it doesn’t even matter if you use VPN, or not. Windows 10 also leaks DNS queries to sites, to top it off.
Solution is using IceCat with uBlock Origin, and disabling WebRTC in uBlock Origin’s dashboard.
If you log into Facebook with your VPN and without, then Facebook will know that both IPs are linked to you. If you have third party cookies, they could entirely de-anonymize you.
You should disable third party cookies in your browser settings. Also WebRTC if your browser supports it. Also use a more privacy-focussed DNS, like the one from your VPN provider.
A VPN isn’t enough to protect you on its own, but it’s one of the core components to your privacy.
What a VPN will really protect you against is advertisers from tracking you down and people or groups with the capability of tracking your online activities at the network transport level.
If you want stay anonymous online, it’s always advisable to use a disposable internet device or laptop, throwaway accounts and obviously a VPN to give sniffers a hard time on figuring out what your browsing behavior looks like.