This app was mentioned in 20 comments, with an average of 2.45 upvotes
I haven't tried that app and have no opinions about it either way, but just to offer an alternative and give people more options this is what I use:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
Please follow the connectivity issues guide and post your winMTR report.
There's also Ooniprobe to check how heavily and what is filtered on your connection. (a common thing in your area I would assume)
Edit: Regarding your hardware setup I can only see you running into memory issues if you're running a browser in the background, but that's it.
Usa o meek do Tor. Para o provedor, vai parecer que você tá usando o google, aws ou azure. É um método bem difícil de bloquear.
Se quiser saber o que mais seu provedor tá bloqueando usa o OONI probe, você pode entrar em contato com a EFF e relatar esses bloqueios. A EFF possui frentes jornalísticas, tecnológica e jurídicas contra bloqueio de provedores.
Pode fazer uma reclamação na Anatel também. O bloqueio do TOR fere o Marco Civil da Internet, que garante a neutralidade da rede.
Unrelated, but do take the chance to launch an OONI Probe into that network just to see what happens. Don't forget to publish the results :D
On this note, we should monitor censorship by ISPs and governments. I always run OONI Probe's connectivity checks from Android when I travel to new places or join new networks. The results are shared to a central server managed by the Tor project and used for yearly reports measuring the status of Internet freedom in the world.
Here's the link for the Android Version of this app
Do you have an android? If so please download and run ooniprobe.
Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
What bridges work in your area currently?
On the topic of censorship, you can detect it using OONI Probe
I think its OONI probe .
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
Measure Internet Censorship, Speed & Performance
> What's new
> New tests for measuring the blocking of WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, and Telegram!
> Run these tests to collect data confirming whether and how these apps are blocked by your ISP.
Collect evidence of Internet censorship. Measure the speed and performance of your network. Play an active role in increasing transparency of information controls around the world.
By running ooniprobe, you will examine the blocking of websites, your network's speed and performance, and whether systems that could be responsible for censorship and surveillance are in your network.
These tests have been developed by the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI), a free software project (under The Tor Project) that aims to uncover Internet censorship around the world. Since 2012, OONI has collected millions of network measurements across more than 190 countries, shedding light on multiple cases of network interference. By running ooniprobe, you will help increase transparency of Internet censorship around the world.
Collecting evidence of Internet censorship
OONI's Web Connectivity test is designed to examine whether access to sites is blocked through DNS tampering, TCP/IP blocking, or by a transparent HTTP proxy. By running this test, you will collect data that can serve as evidence of Internet censorship, and you will be provided with circumvention tips.
Detecting systems responsible for censorship and surveillance
OONI's HTTP Invalid Request Line test is designed to uncover the presence of systems that could be responsible for censorship and surveillance.
Measuring the speed and performance of your network
OONI's implementation of the Network Diagnostic Test (NDT) measures the speed of your network by connecting to M-Lab servers near you and by collecting low level TCP/IP information that can help characterize the speed and performance of your network.
Open data
OONI publishes all network measurement data that it collects because open data allows third parties to conduct independent studies, verify OONI findings and/or to answer other research questions. Such data also helps increase transparency of Internet censorship around the world. All data is published on OONI Explorer: https://explorer.ooni.torproject.org/
Free software
All OONI tests, as well as its NDT implementation, are based on free and open source software. You can find the source code through the following link: https://github.com/thetorproject/ooniprobe-android
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OpenObservatory
Please note: Running ooniprobe might be against the terms of service of your ISP or legally questionable in your country. By running ooniprobe you will connect to web services which may be banned, and use web censorship circumvention methods such as Tor. The OONI project will publish data submitted by probes, possibly including your IP address or other identifying information. In addition, your use of ooniprobe will be clear to anyone who has access to your computer, and to anyone who can monitor your Internet connection (such as your employer, ISP or government).
Basically I upload lots of data for publicly available databases, like APK Mirror and Ooniprobe, and I have an IPFS node always open, I seed torrents, you name it. I do easy stuff for other people. ^(No, I don't mine, but I did fold in the past.)
Here is the full description of the app if you don't know what this is about.
Google Play Store : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
Measure Internet Censorship, Speed & Performance
Collect evidence of Internet censorship. Measure the speed and performance of your network. Play an active role in increasing transparency of information controls around the world.
By running ooniprobe, you will examine the blocking of websites, your network's speed and performance, and whether systems that could be responsible for censorship and surveillance are in your network.
These tests have been developed by the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI), a free software project (under The Tor Project) that aims to uncover Internet censorship around the world. Since 2012, OONI has collected millions of network measurements across more than 190 countries, shedding light on multiple cases of network interference. By running ooniprobe, you will help increase transparency of Internet censorship around the world.
Collecting evidence of Internet censorship
OONI's Web Connectivity test is designed to examine whether access to sites is blocked through DNS tampering, TCP/IP blocking, or by a transparent HTTP proxy. By running this test, you will collect data that can serve as evidence of Internet censorship, and you will be provided with circumvention tips.
Detecting systems responsible for censorship and surveillance
OONI's HTTP Invalid Request Line test is designed to uncover the presence of systems that could be responsible for censorship and surveillance.
Measuring the speed and performance of your network
OONI's implementation of the Network Diagnostic Test (NDT) measures the speed of your network by connecting to M-Lab servers near you and by collecting low level TCP/IP information that can help characterize the speed and performance of your network.
Open data
OONI publishes all network measurement data that it collects because open data allows third parties to conduct independent studies, verify OONI findings and/or to answer other research questions. Such data also helps increase transparency of Internet censorship around the world. All data is published on OONI Explorer: https://explorer.ooni.torproject.org/
Free software
All OONI tests, as well as its NDT implementation, are based on free and open source software. You can find the source code through the following link: https://github.com/thetorproject/ooniprobe-android
Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OpenObservatory
Please note: Running ooniprobe might be against the terms of service of your ISP or legally questionable in your country. By running ooniprobe you will connect to web services which may be banned, and use web censorship circumvention methods such as Tor. The OONI project will publish data submitted by probes, possibly including your IP address or other identifying information. In addition, your use of ooniprobe will be clear to anyone who has access to your computer, and to anyone who can monitor your Internet connection (such as your employer, ISP or government).
You can share censorship instances with The Tor Project using https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
I have been waiting for this for - media coverage of India's censorship. I use ooniprobe (I have shared this here already) to check which sites are being blocked by my ISP (airtel). There are is an android version as well.
Among others, they use the SNI(server name indicator) to block your request to particular site.
Now-a-days, some browsers (chrome based and firefox) allows you to encrypt your SNI to bypass such censorship with DoH(DNS over HTTPS).
Of course VPN would be a better option to bypass such censorship but the free VPNs themselves are sort of a nuisance and logs your tracks. Most of them sells your data to third parties for ads. And not many would go for a good paid VPN service.
It requires only few steps to enable DoH on your browser.
For chrome
For firefox](https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-dns-over-https)
For other browsers
I
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe is how you help out.
https://ooni.org/ or https://explorer.ooni.org/ might be what you're thinking of regarding looking at other people's results?
Also useful for censorship: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.openobservatory.ooniprobe
If unsure, the quick and easy way is using Opera since they now include a free built-in VPN. Speed is okay for a free VPN.
You can do more tests like the Oonie one (Android app link) on your connection. More classic approaches would be to use dig or traceroute to see all the steps of your packets.
Assume everything is compromised :)