It's registered by a company called Perfect Privacy that allows people to own domains through them without having to publish their information to the WHOIS database. It's possible wizards started using them when securing websites for upcoming products since historically product names would first be discovered by new wizards domain registrations or trademark filings, but could easily be someone else taking the name.
"The flaw wasn't considered a major issue until Windows 8 began allowing users to sign into their Microsoft accounts -- which links their Xbox, Hotmail and Outlook, Office, and Skype accounts, among others."
"The flaw works because Internet Explorer and Edge (on Windows 10) allow a user to access local network shares but don't fully block connections to remote shares."
"Perfect Privacy, a virtual private networking (VPN) provider, said in a blog post that VPN connections are also affected."
"The group set up a proof-of-exploit page."
"Chrome and Firefox users aren't affected."
> Aufgrund der Indizien, dass der Täter über Insiderkenntnisse verfügt haben musste, um sich während des Angriffs geschickt im System zu bewegen, sowie den Dateinamen "Hack" und "Perfect Privacy", die bei der Durchsuchung des Rechners des Angeklagten gefunden wurden, verhängte das Gericht dennoch die Haftstrafe. Der Haftbefehl erfolgte aufgrund der drohenden Fluchtgefahr des Angeklagten mit sofortiger Wirkung.
Hack und Perfect Privacy findet man auch auf meinem Computer. Interessant das sowas als Indiz ausreicht
Of the three I've only used Mullvad, and it's definitely one of the better services I have used. Very simple and relatively anonymous sign up process for an account - all you get is an account number and no other identification.
I'd also recommend Perfect Privacy. Their VPN is quite robust and they have some interesting tech like neural networking which is kind of a type of multi-hopping and built in filters that blocks trackers.
I almost forgot, there is a new version of OpenVPN 2.3.9. It has several Windows-related fixes, and a long awaited option “block-outside-dns” which fixes DNS leaks on Windows 8.1 and 10.
That’s how I got my $5000 from Private Internet Access and additional $1000 from Perfect Privacy for such a bullshit issue. I feel kinda uneasy about this. Part of that money will go to OpenVPN and strongSwan developers.
Just another point of interest, the domain is registered through a company that blocks the true domain owner (Perfect Privacy LLC). They also don't have a Facebook page (or did, but it no longer exists). I wouldn't use these guys.
At least it was discovered by Perfect Privacy who did the responsible thing and forwarded the information to other VPN providers so they could fix it, it's also good to see that the vulnerability is fixed relatively easily. This could had been quite serious in the wrong hands.
I'm a Private Internet Access subscriber for a few years now. I'm happy for what I receive from their service. I do not recommend them 100% for privacy-conscious users solely because of their US-based presence. Other VPN providers on my to try list (if PIA ever fails me) are: AirVPN, TorGuard, ProtonVPN, NordVPN, ExpressVPN, IPredator, Perfect Privacy.
Don't reveal your VPN provider, don't reveal you're using a VPN, don't do anything that'll tie that VPN IP range with other things you do, and don't reveal you're doing illegal things to random people you talk to on IRC. If he had simply spoken with no one, it is highly unlikely he could've been charged for accessing someone's Gmail with a VPN. But if you say "lol I'm in this guy's Gmail and yeah I use the Perfect Privacy VPN" to informants, then it no longer means shit that you're using a VPN.
Laut diesem Twitter Bubi, der dann auch den entscheidenden Hinweis lieferte, nutzte er Tor und Perfect Privacy.
This domain is currently registered to Perfect Privacy, LLC. They appear to be the kind of group that snatches up old domains and such if there is a lapse, you can see a history of that online. Unlikely this is in any way still related to Marvel.
When you register a website domain, you can often pay more to hide the registration information and protect your anonymity. For reference, legitimate sites , , and were registered using a proxy (Perfect Privacy LLC) through registrar Network Solutions LLC, but the IP addresses are still tied to WOTC servers. , for some reason, was registered under WOTC's name without a proxy, still through registrar Network Solutions LLC. Meanwhile, Atlazan was registered using a proxy through a different registrar and without pointing back at WOTC servers. It could totally still be official, but given the timing it's very plausible someone saw this leak and decided to grab the domain for themselves.
I tested 29 Windows VPN clients for DNS, IPv4 and IPv6 Leaks. Six (AirVPN, FrootVPN, IVPN, Mullvad, Perfect Privacy and SlickVPN) performed perfectly. Three others (CyberGhost, and ) hit VPN-specified nameservers directly while reconnecting after uplink interruption. They didn't hit other nameservers, but this leak does reveal hostnames being browsed. The other 20 Windows VPN clients failed in various ways. Over half leaked IPv6 packets whenever the machine was connected to the Internet. After uplink interruption, some failed to reconnect automatically, and some leaked IPv4 packets.
IVPN provided funding and technical support for this work.
Well done by Perfect Privacy for writing about this. Obviously it was needed if there were services that were vulnerable.
Can this really be the first time this vulnerability is discussed publicly? I would be very surprised. If that's the case, shame on those of us that have already mitigated it long ago without publishing our findings.
In the case of Mullvad, we discovered and fixed this long ago, I believe in 2010. Our solution was to use separate in and exit addresses, which is why our servers are named things like and .
Not sure what is suppose to be, clicking a picture asks for an access code.
Edit: The Whois information lists a "Perfect Privacy LLC" as the registrant, and it's been registered since 1994 from Jacksonville FL.
Keeping 800,000 people who were unwillingly brought her as kids able to live and work here seems fine to me, but I don't write for the World Socialist Web Site. Turns out the World Socialist Web Site needs to hide behind the Perfect Privacy LLC, acting out of Jacksonville, Florida. Choo choo hop on the disinformation train!
Perfect Privacy, teuer aber einfach der beste Anbieter. Keine Firma sondern eine Interessengemeinschaft, keine gespeicherten Daten = keine Daten die man dem Staat aushändigen konnte und die Leistung ist top.
Ich persönlich benutze Perfect Privacy. Du bist damit sehr anonym unterwegs. Kostet aber auch 12€ im Monat, aber das ist es mir wert. Mit PP habe ich kein Problem NBC oder CBS sehen( Mediathek). Aber ABC funktioniert irgendwie nicht. Für ABC benutze ich den vpn von Avira, kostet aber im Jahr auch 60€. Ob das mit Live-Fernsehen funktioniert weiß ich nicht. In Amerika brauchst du meistens noch ein Abo, oder einen eigenen Fernsehanschluss mit eigener Nummer.
Das Problem ist halt, dass auch ausländische Sender VPN's kennen. Die blockieren dann gerne "verdächtige" IPs. Das ist immer ein Wettkampf zwischen den VPN Anbietern und ausländischen Sender.
Nah this guy has been posting "cutting edge activism" since 2013 at least. I wonder if APD already knows about him. But honestly that current page looks like a job for Homeland Security. Perfect Privacy LLC is company that hides your ID from whois lookups, but their TOS explicitly says that won't happen if you threaten people. That and I'm pretty sure Homeland Security doesn't give a fuck about the Perfect Privacy LLC TOS and client privacy protections anyway.
No, that's not correct. Any VPN provider that offers port forwarding without having developed a specific protection against this kind of attack is affected. It was discovered by a competing VPN Provider, 'Perfect Privacy', whom decided to privately inform other major providers before publishing their findings in their blog:
>The only VPN, to my knowledge, that had proven in the court to not keeping any logs is PIA.
Better yet a real-world case was with ExpressVPN getting their servers seized. The seize yielded nothing. Then next up would 100% without a doubt be PIA.
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Real-World Case:
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Possible Real-World Case:
^(NOTE: Around August of 2016 Perfect Privacy announced that Dutch authorities had seized one of their servers in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The issue is they never released why but they did say it yielded with no information being given.)
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Court Case:
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Audit:
^(NOTE: ExpressVPN has had Third-Party Audits along with real-world cases of being proven to not log.)
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EDIT: Please add more if you know more. This is all I know personally.
> 70.0.132.224
That IP address resolves to (nslookup 70.0.132.244
at the command prompt) ``
Perfect Privacy LLC? sounds like a VPN/proxy service.
Bad mojo. From this and your post I'd say somebody s definitely trying to hack your apple devices, but it may not be a targetted attack - more likely somebody setting up/using a botnet.
This was the point I was going to try to get into with my obviously bait comment. I can go ahead and use "Perfect Privacy, LLC" to protect the registration information for any domain I own. This doesn't connect me, or anyone, to the Clintons.
Won't be shocked when this isn't the most upvoted comment, but it really should be considering it debunks all "PROOF" that OP had.
Why would the web-site use "Perfect Privacy [llc]" to block WHOIS look-up if they are truly for free information access? If they don't want their name(s) coming out for selling DVDs or whatever, why wouldn't they expect anyone else to do the same? Why's there such inflammatory video-editing and why did they monetize it? The graphics are terrible: it looks like a Nigerian spam-email with minimal effort. You can also find misguided people all over the planet, no matter their (in)formal education.
It will be interesting to see where they go, if I recall correctly when Stormfront was kicked off their registrar & russian host they moved to Perfect Privacy LLC. Currently there are also a few crypto payment processors that are trying to "win" gab's business after Stripe terminated their accounts, I saw one offering a bounty on /r/bitcoin for anyone who could get them in contact with gab's operator. It seems to me there are enough free market solutions that gab will be back and stable in the coming weeks.
Damit der ISP nicht die Daten und Metadaten sammeln und verkaufen kann.
Damit der Traffic verschleiert wird gegenüber den Websitebetreibern.
Geoblocking umgehen.
Verschiedene Profile mit verschiedene IPs mit verschiedenen OSs.
Generell Obscuring traffic.
Perfect Privacy hat so gute Server, ich merke keinen bis kaum Unterschied zu Vanilla Internet.
As you can see in the picture there hasn't been a month without any data breaches in 2019. During only 7 months, there's already been more than 50 different data leaks with at least 4 billion records. Recent study claims that there's a new victim of identity theft every 2 seconds.
This is some beautiful although shocking data and it's the reality we're living in. I really doubt it ever gonna get better, until we'll start doing something for our protection online.
There are some ways how you could protect yourself from your personal data leaks or even our protection online.
There are some ways how you could protect yourself from your personal data leaks or even identity thefts:
It's best if the VPN is not located in the 14 eyes country (look it up), especially not US. Read terms of service and privacy policy of a VPN - they have to write down what they log or what information do they keep of users.
I'd suggest checking out these ones - NordVPN, ExpressVPN and Perfect Privacy
Stimmt schon:
>If you are using Perfect Privacy VPN, you are protected against this attack. Our VPN manager prevents sending login information to network shares over the internet.
Aber Perfect Privacy macht es häufiger so, dass sicherheitsrelevante Informationen in dieses Format gebracht werden. Und die Informationen scheinen scheinen ja trotzdem eine gewisse Relevanz zu haben.
You will get hundreds of answers. :) Everyone is satisfied with their VPN, because most of them works fine.
What you should care is do they keep logs. And so far, I know that 3 VPN providers partially proved that they don't keep logs: Private Internet Access, Perfect Privacy and ExpressVPN.
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You can Google it. PIA was subpoenaed and it appears in some court document - they couldn't provide logs because they don't have them.
Perfect Privacy and ExpressVPN got some of their servers seized (in Netherlands and Turkey I think) and it resulted in nothing.
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PureVPN keeps logs and is happy to share them with Three Letter Agencies. HideMyAss and a few others too.
A VPN (virtual private network) hides your IP and encrypts it, making it so that your Internet activity cannot be deciphered and traced back to you. It's used for security, bypassing geo-blocked content and more. What is important is to have a no logs good paid VPN (free ones are rubbish) like NordVPN, Express, VPNBaron, Perfect Privacy and similar. Torrentfreak is great when researching VPNs, that one privacy guy too though the info on hid website is outdated
Using an encrypted tunnel is always going to raise ping times & reduce throughput somewhat but that's an abnormally large hit you're reporting.
You get what you pay for in the VPN world. Try a monthly subscriptions with Perfect Privacy, or Windscribe. Test different exit nodes.
Make sure your router is up to date firmware & can handle a deluge of encrypted traffic.
ISP's (and governments) can use 'deep packet inspection' to determine what type of vpn traffic is passing even if they can't read it & consequently throttle or even block it. Top quality VPN providers like Perfect Privacy give you solutions to draconian measures but a performance hit goes with the territory of privacy.
Hope this helps.
Hast du dir schonmal Perfect Privacy angeschaut? Ist nicht gerade der billigste Anbieter - erfüllt meiner Meinung nach aber alle deine angesprochenen Punkte. Absolut keine Datenspeicherung ist jedoch so eine Sache: Sobald das RZ/der Diensteanbieter speichert kann natürlich auf dem VPN-System das Logging abgeschaltet werden und trotzdem sind Verkehrsdaten vorhanden.
Ausserdem hatte die c't in der letzten Ausgabe eine kleine Zusammenfassung über verschiedene VPN-Anbieter. Dort wurde zwar nur auf zwei Seiten das gröbste zusammengefasst - aber du kannst dir selbst ein gutes Bild bzgl. der Anbieter und Preise machen
Top Geschwindigkeiten, bieten mehrere VPN Methoden sowie SOCKS HTML Proxys etc. an.
Loggen außerdem zu 100% nichts (Serverfarm in Amsterdam wurde beschlagnahmt, da alle Dateien nur im RAM gespeuchert werden hat das der Polizei allerdings nix gebracht)
Ist auch recht billig und Account Sharing idt erlaubt bzw toleriert.
I work in a datacenter in Germany where some big and some small VPN Providers are customers. None of them have a colocation. Most use some midrange servers(Xeon E3 1230/Desktop QuadCores, ~16Gig RAM and desktop grade Drives). Perfect Privacy is different ofc(RAM Disk). We can of course see how much Traffic they do, but we cant really tell WHO(IP) is using their Servers.
!!! I asked my experienced coworkers about this behause I am a trainee and I only know the Basics of using Juniper Networking Equipment and analysing Traffic!!! This could be wrong or something..
Written from phone.
I did a whois query on the domain linked in OP's rant, and it returned, er....
Domain Name: Registry Domain ID: 121246153_DOMAIN_COM-VRSN Registrar WHOIS Server: Registrar URL: Updated Date: 2019-03-31T06:15:34Z Creation Date: 2004-05-28T07:26:11Z Registrar Registration Expiration Date: 2024-05-28T07:26:11Z Registrar: Network Solutions, LLC Registrar IANA ID: 2 Reseller: Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited Registry Registrant ID: Registrant Name: PERFECT PRIVACY, LLC
PERFECT PRIVACY, eh? Well, that's one hell of a red flag right off the block. If you're a business open to the public, why do you think your business details need to be concealed by an organization that calls themselves "Perfect Privacy"?
I personally do not trust NordVPN... That is my stance on Nord but you can have your own.
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VPNs I trust:
NOTE: This is not in any specific order but rather just off the top of my head. ^(Only PIA and Mullvad have exceptions)
The one I was thinking of was Perfect Privacy, they allow a real unlimited connections, but they all have to be your devices using your account, no friends or family. But seeing looking through their security protocols, this seems like an empty threat. I just wanted to make sure, because I want to split the cost with a friend.
Yeah dude, apparently voat GLHF.
If you want a super reliable, fast, solution for your Mac, I'd look into utilizing the built-in IKEv2 encryption with Perfect Privacy. It will definitely cost more than PIA, but it won't be a POS. For a Mac user, utilizing the built in IPSec/IKEv2 option will ensure your system is leak proof, as it is already integrated with your Firewall settings. Selecting "connect on demand" will force all Mac applications through the VPN. No hassle, no bugs, no leaks, no worries. Done. You can download the specific network configurations for the servers you want to use (or download everything) from Perfect Privacy, and then have one selected server always automatically connected. You can also see connection status at the top of your dashboard, too. It's the most reliable solution I've found for Mac so far, but it won't be cheap. You'll get IPv6 support too, which is rare for a VPN provider. Explained in detail here:
Sorry just a mistake. I always connect to Amsterdam with my VPN (Perfect Privacy) so that's what came to mind first. The Netherlands, Switzerland and Sweden are all good countries for VPNs, from what I know. But the UK is by far the worst thanks to the Investigatory Powers bill.
isn't currently being hosted on Valve servers though - rather, a Network Solutions hosting page, which would explain the difference in IP address ranges.
Where are you getting organisation names from? Both (2).
Copy a reply I made somewhere else.
No Logs VPN Services That Have Actually Been Proven True
tl;dr ExpressVPN, Perfect Privacy, NordVPN, VyprVPN and Private Internet Access
Regarding webtorrent, it's no where near great (garbage) in my experience.
I have tried ExpressVPN, NordVPN and Perfect Privacy.
For watching YouTube, Netflix etc. to avoid geo restrictions, ExpressVPN was the best. Speedy, and had servers almost in any country possible.
For some anonymity etc. I found Perfect Privacy is better for me. However it lacks servers in some countries, so I cannot stream content from all places that I want.
It was also important that I can set up a router with specific firmware, so all devices at home go through the VPN, not just my pc.
I bought the Asus RT86U router, because it had the strongest CPU for Perfect Privacy. It has a specific Merlin upgraded firmware, where the VPN settings could be set up quite well.
Also, Perfect Privacy has built in ad blocking and filtering, which is unique. You can switch it off if you don't want, but this feature alone is such a bonus.
Perfect Privacy oder oVPN machen sich seit vielen Jahren einen Ruf als bulletproof nicht loggende VPN Anbieter, bei denen kann man wahrscheinlich nicht viel falsch machen.
Wurden auch schon wiederholt Server beschlagnahmt ohne dass dabei irgendwas rausgekommen ist.
Get a good paid VPN that allows torrenting and is no logs - , Torrentfreak has some very good insights here. Do not get a free VPN (not secure enough, limits data), get smth like NordVPN, VPNArea or Express, Perfect Privacy.
If you're low on cash, r/vpncoupons has pretty good discounts
Assuming you mean just anonymous whois, not anonymous with your registrar.
Network Solutions uses Perfect Privacy, LLC. for $10 a year per domain. All it does is put their name on your whois. Link
Like /u/hjeondv said, most registrars will offer this for pretty cheap.
+1 I’ve tried and extensively tested Nord, PIA, Mullvad and others... Recently came upon Perfect Privacy and have been pretty blown away by the features and performance. Love the server side settings for ad and tracker blocking. Th neurorouting option is genius and works solidly. Speeds have been consistently higher than other providers. No limit on how many devices you can use is a plus. Of course, you pay for it in price, but for me it’s worth it.
Leaving for China next month. I know they are cracking down on VPN use and the ones I've used in the past might not work. Any suggestions on a VPN that might work with the new security they have put in place. Was planning to use Perfect Privacy since it seems the way they have set up their VPN it should get around the New Great Wall.
A whois search on says the domain is registered with Perfect Privacy, LLC. Perfect Privacy is a Whois search proxy. Think of a VPN which hides your IP address, Perfect Privacy hides your actual ICANN information and uses their information instead. Which is based out of Jacksonville, Florida.
>> is a website that is owned by Perfect Privacy VPN.
> This is a lie. Where is your proof?
There is is no proof, as the whois record points to a whois guard. And that record was last modified... in the last 24 hours. Quite the coincidence. Makes one wonder what was changed. :-)
FACT : ISP's & governments can use 'deep packet inspection' to determine what type of traffic is passing even through VPN's.
Privacy centric providers like Perfect Privacy or AirVPN develop solutions to this intrusive surveillance. Big commercial providers like PIA don't care & will rat you out in a heartbeat.
So the question needing to be asked is "what data is Perfect Privacy writing to RAM disk if they don't log in the first place?".
The more I ponder this, the more skeptical I become of Private Privacy.
We have no way of knowing who is funding - it is hidden by "Perfect Privacy LLC". Unlike - which is run by the Tampa Bay Times (and uses both left and right leaning people to report).
No.
Perfect Privacy is merely the company which Network Solutions (a large domain registrar) uses for their domain privacy feature add-on
>"Die niederländische Polizei hat mehrere Server des Dienstes Perfect Privacy beschlagnahmt"
>"Die Beschlagnahmung erfolgte bereits am 24 August, wurde aber erst jetzt einer breiten Öffentlichkeit bekannt"
Du hast zu Perfect Privacy im anderen Thread geschrieben
> Die sind sozusagen BKA-geprüft
Magst du das elaborieren? Falls die wirklich nicht auf Account Sharing prüfen sind die auch gar nicht sooo teuer ;-)
If "DNS Leak Protection" is enabled, it should show only Perfect Privacy DNS servers (check here: ). If other nameservers show up, something is not set up correctly. In this case I would recommend trying our forum first () or please send us an email to
Very easy, but there are so many seeders (at least for popular files) that you're just a number on a list at a specific point in time. You most likely won't get into any trouble, but using an anonymous VPN that doesn't keep logs (Perfect Privacy is a great choice) will make sure of it.
Something interesting I found: '' is listed as having the Registrant "Perfect Privacy, LLC", a company that prevents your personal information being listed as the Registrant. Could it be Lovejoy? Possibly.
OPSEC wise a VPN won’t help much if at all. Is it because most VPNs keep logs and cooperate with LE ? Yes but if you’re asking this question then your OPSEC obviously isn’t going to be any good in the first place and you’ll be lacking in other areas.
So yes a VPN might help you (only use Mullvad or Perfect Privacy) but you’re most likely leaving other traces and it isn’t really gonna help you with any of the setup for EW.
Surprised no one yet has mentioned Tor Browser as an added measure when searching torrent sites.
Perfect Privacy vpn - no logs, shared IPs. a little expensive but good bandwidth, many exit countries and servers.
Thanks, hadn't heard of Deluge or Tixati. will check out.
Perfect Privacy works well with the native VPN settings on iOS and has a child filter to block out adult content.
Not sponsored or anything, but I have used them so I just saw it in their settings. Might be worth it to check out for your kiddo (although a little more pricy than most).
Can't use Amazon Prime with most VPN due to their blacklisting the exits it seems. Also Netflix will show you Swiss Netflix, not a bad thing just be prepared for a different selection of movies. I use Perfect Privacy (because it also does IPv6) at the router level and everytime I turn it on, Prime stops working (your paid library is still there). Had this with NordVPN and PIA too.
I read on "Perfect Privacy" that they wont currently implement WireGuard due to its BETA status and more import it s need to have some sort of log for ops hence breach of privacy for users.
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If true, so why such hype?
No don’t even bother with this one. The guy running it is super sketch, he “accidentally” deleted his whole front end website AND did not have a backup. I would not trust someone like this with my data.
VPN that I trust are ProtonVPN, Mullvad, IVPN, Perfect Privacy.
Go here to see recommendations for worthy vpns by someone who tests them for a living and is deeply knowledgeable on the subject and trusted by the community:
I use both Express and Perfect Privacy. Web security is part and parcel of my professional life.
Nord appears on their list but my qualm about them is that there is not enough open disclosure about their ownership, and although they are a "Panamanian" incorporated entity I do know that their entire ownership and management structure is located within America - the panamanian company is purely a shell, and we already have numerous examples of several legal systems seeing through offshore shells to obtain information. This means they are subject to pressure and security orders which may never be disclosed publicly. As well, they use leased equipment, not their own physically entrenched secured servers.
Regarding to MGTOW I always suggest a VPN (PIA or Perfect Privacy), never login on this account with your real IP address. Try to create a disposable google account with some random name owner and I think you'd have to create content without monetization and use a disposable number just to confirm your identity and then throw it away.
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Of course do not show your face and change your voice using some app, maybe? Just don't let it get too weird so nobody thinks you're a serial killer lol
_______________________
*Informations like IP address and phone number can be easily leaked to the public by a feminist inside Google and you'd never know who did it.
Maybe your real voice can reveal your identity too, since it's too hard to find 2 people or more with the same voices
An example:
Mullvad user connects to an illegal website at 3:15 on a Saturday. Cops confiscate this website's server and contact Mullvad and ask from what IP did that connection come. Mullvad gives cops the user's home IP. User is now in police custody. No name, email, phone number needed.
I'm not saying they would do this, but we don't know for sure. A company can claim one thing and do another.
Perfect Privacy might be fine though.
Best vpn for Privacy is Perfect Privacy long in buisness and survived multiple server raids from police ( but pretty expensive ).
Air vpn Overall best features , best support , great software probably the best Kill switch out there run by Activists Stops providing servers in unsafe locations and stuff extremely great price for what they offer .
Pia Good privacy , features wise bad , software bad , support ok.
Cyberghost Slowish support , speeds are ok , software good , moved countrys for better privacy laws.
If you want the best out of the best in all areas the nearest that gets to it would be AIR vpn.
Neither ivacy , express vpn, cyberghost , torguard , express vpn or nord or pia can offer it.
Perfect Privacy is pretty badass from my experience. No logs, anonymous, pay with BTC, and its reasonably priced. And the speed is super fast for me. I barely notice that I'm connected to a VPN.
What I don't like is that Netflix doesn't work, but I've not tried to solve this yet. I'm sure I may be able to change servers or my DNS or something and get it to work. Minor annoyance.
Never use OperaVPN or other free VPN services! They monitor/log/monetize your traffic.
Instead use a paid service with no-logging policy - at least out of the range of the five eyes (USA, CAN, UK, AUS, NZ) jurisdiction.
My recommendations:
I‘m using 1. and I‘m permanently connected to their VPN via an on-demand VPN profile.
Also check out those links:
looks like a good option.. They have a client for ever OS.. Is that a good thing or a bad thing. Mullvad seems legit as well but messing with all the configs could be a pain. Perfect Privacy I liked them for having unlimited devices. Its a really hard choice between the three look at them and tell me what you think.
I'm not familiar with PIA, but supposedly using IKEv2 with connect on demand provides the most consistent connection, perhaps PIA uses this. Perfect Privacy and also uses native IKEv2, and their connections have been the best for me, but unfortunately still disconnect from time to time. Good luck with your search and do let us know if you find other options, as I've been trying to find a solution for this as well!
I use Perfect Privacy because I can pay with crypto and they claim not to keep logs. However I can't seem to get the thing configured properly because when I have it installed, I have no internet at all unless I go through the I've messed with all the settings and can't seem to figure it out. Other than that tho, it works great. Just gotta connect to the VPN every time.
I'm currently using Private Internet Access as a VPN. I've been using it for a year now, and my subscription ends on the 28th of this month.
I don't really have any big complaints about it, but I'm looking at other potential VPNs, and one that caught my eye was Perfect Privacy. It SEEMS to offer more security than PIA overall, but to buy a year's subscription would cost me over five times the amount I'd pay to just renew PIA. We're talking $40 vs. $215.
It's not that I can't afford $200, I just don't WANT to pay that if I can get the same results with PIA for a million times cheaper. Is Perfect Privacy really worth the high price? I know you can VPN hop four times on it, which SOUNDS cool, but is it really all that necessary for an everyman?
Te recomiendo . Podes pagar por Pago Facil/Rapi Pago, y si pones datos que no son tuyos, o datos falsos (Nombre y DNI), estarias pagando de forma anonima porque no tienen forma de identificarte
Igual lo mejor de lo mejor, a mi criterio, si bien es caro, es Perfect Privacy. Excelentes servidores con muchas ips, alta velocidad y tambien te dan acceso de alta velocidad a la red TOR. No me acuero si aceptan Rapi Pago/Pago Facil, pero calculo que si
There are proxy websites that will redirect your traffic through them, never been a fan of those myself, to slow and to bloated with ads and shit.
A better way in my opinion is to use VPN but they cost money, this puts all you traffic through a different server, they are generally pretty high speed so won't mess with your browsing habits.
My personal preference is Perfect Privacy, what you do is sign up to their service, download a client for your operating system, you start the client and choose which server you want to put your traffic through, once it connects all of your requests will appear to come from that server rather than your computer.
One issue you can run into is pages serving in the wrong language because you're IP is in Germany or Brazil or something.
While I have no problem with the rest of this reply, I don't know why you keep bringing up other VPN providers. Out of the ones listed on the restoreprivacy site I have experience with NordVPN and PIA. I can say my experience matches that of the reviewers for the most part: PIA is a decent low-cost VPN while NordVPN is a rather shady provider with awful software. I sincerely hope you don't consider NordVPN a high quality provider or a worthy competitor. They're exactly the kind of provider that makes ProtonVPN necessary.
While I don't agree with their ProtonVPN review, I don't think referring to these well known "better ones" strengthens your argument at all.
That said I would like to see him review the likes of AirVPN and iVPN (also no affiliate program) which I've had a positive experience with and which are some of the only serious ProtonVPN competitors in my mind. Perfect Privacy I just find overpriced with a lot of features I consider unnecessary.
Problem ist immer: welchem VPN anbieter will ich wirklich mein OnljneBanking anvertrauen? Perfect Privacy gehört jetzt ner Ami Firma und Traceless sitzt in Deutschland, da hat man also wenig gewonnen. Gut, die wandern bald ab, aber wohin.
You shouldn't. Perfect Privacy was used as an example, they started to block port 445 in 2 days after I told them about this issue (that was 2 weeks ago) and in some days they probably introduce proper fix into their desktop application and unblock port 445.
Depends on the rest of your OPSEC.
I run Tails with 2 cascading VPN's with an SSH tunnel hooked up into large institution proxy chains.
I'd definitely recommend using a VPN. Try AirVPN, Perfect Privacy, or PrivateInternetAccess.
Kommt ganz drauf an was du willst. Wenn du nur Regionalsperren umgehen willst, geht eigentlich jeder x-beliebige. Wenn du Piraterie betreiben oder dich sonstwie in rechtlichen Grauzonen rumtreiben möchtest (oder wenn du dich einfach allgemein gegen Überwachung wehren möchtest), wird man dir andere (generell eher teurere) Services empfehlen. Für zweiteres soll z.B. Perfect Privacy ganz gut sein, aber wie gesagt, das ist rausgeworfenes Geld falls es dir eigentlich nur um Amazon u.ä. geht. Was es so an billigen Diensten gibt, die dafür ausreichen, kann ich leider nicht sagen, da meine Hauptmotivation für VPN bisher eben Datenschutz war und ich mich dementsprechend nur in dem Bereich ein wenig auskenne.
> Womit eigentlich mehr als deutlich gesagt wird, dass deine Session hinterlegt wird.
Naja, das ließe sich doch relativ einfach über anonymisierte Tokens realisieren, somit wäre es kein auf den Nutzer rückführbares Logging.
>Alles was der Rechtsprechung der EU oder der USA unterliegt, würde ich nicht in Betracht ziehen.
Naja, und Perfect Privacy ist in NZ, bekanntermaßen Vasallenstaat der USA, das ist jetzt auch nicht viel mehr wert. Außerdem schreiben sie: "our servers are operated in accordance with the law of the respective countries they are located in."
Die Moral von der Geschicht scheint wohl echt zu sein, dass man ein Stück weit immer die Katze im Sack kauft :-/
No, they don't. The whois information on is for a company 'Perfect Privacy' in Jacksonville Florida.
The favicon doesn't mean shit.
Furthermore you can't own , only (Which grants you the ability to specify DNS info for )
It should be obvious that Perfect Privacy is just a brand name. There is no such thing as "perfect security" and we are not advertising as as such. But a VPN can improve your online security and anonymity. Just to be clear here :-)
And code sent via PM, hope you will like it.
I don't even know if Perfect Privacy keep logs, I think it was something about a PerfectPrivacy IP being the origin of a breach or something. The FBI co-operating witness asks him if he uses PerfectPrivacy in a chat transcript and he responds "yes". There might be more to it than that though
I used to use Perfect Privacy in Shenzhen half year ago. It worked really well. I have no idea how they are blocking VPNs nowadays, but PP offers VPNs in several different protocols and over 10 different server locations, so I would guess they would be okay. It's just bit pricey.
Living in China currently and tried your free service. It works surprisingly well! I currently use Perfect Privacy
Mullvad is a reliable and very well known VPN Service.
If they say No can be sure it is a No log they're extremely transparent about it.
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Nord VPN on the other Hand has a lot to explain..
- They use a Shell company as Adress
- They got bought by a company which has a...questionable...reputation
- They most certainly log - Users reported to got a claim from their ISP even with VPN activated.
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Always remember:
Only trust VPN that got actually a Police raid and nothing was found.
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Perfect Privacy is another such vpn.
realiable, very well known, and "raid proof" ;D
I tried to dig into it a bit but information on this is a bit hard to find, apparently the domain is owned by Perfect Privacy, LLC which is company that is a VPN provider that is not accredited by the BBB. It would probably have to be through advertisements if it was the case that they were being funded by Stake but I see like 0 advertisements so I am lost on their profit model.
I tried Mullvad for a year and plan on switching to it fully, once my current subscription to Perfect Privacy runs out. Feature wise they're identical, but Mullvad is WAY cheaper (without the negative connotation)
Just switched from Perfect Privacy and disappointed by the lack of port forwarding support on Linux. The way PerfectPrivacy handled it was a port calculator on their website, which provided 3 ports based on the randomly-generated internal VPN IP address. Slightly cumbersome loading it every time and copy/pasting into my P2P client but got the job done!
Kauf dir einen VPN, für einen Monat. (AirVPN, Perfect Privacy, NordVPN), mach ein neues Postfach, bspw. bei Protonmail, lösche die Metadaten mit einem Tool(bspw. ) und dann sollte das passen.
In der Regel sollte aber auch so niemand dich verfolgen, selbst wenn du keinen VPN o.ä benutzt.
What is that for a BS question?
Sure, you never can be 100% sure if they log data, but 1. Perfect Privacy already got raided several times and police never could get data from that since apparently nothing is logged for real and 2) I can guarantee you that services costing 3-4€/month MUST have other income streams since it just isn't possible to generate any profits on this little money. Infrastructure just costs more. So, they are logging your data and selling it to e.g. adservers. Or the services are honeypots.
If you just use VPN for netfilx it probably doesn't matter, but you are everything but anonymous in services like NordVPN. So, doing something that might get you prosecuted in some country will probably be exposed at some point.
So, when you are from e.g. Russia or China: Have fun in the Gulag for posting the wrong meme.
Thanks for the Suggestion Bro
But Perfect Privacy is a perfectly good VPN and its working as intended, when i go to checkmyip website i can see the IP and it is the same that i have selected in Perfect Privacy, also i have no DNS leak.
IP changing also works perfectly, when i visit a website that has blacklisted/restricted one of my IP's, after i change the IP it works as intended again So it really is not a IP thing or that my VPN sucks or isnt working properly..
But when i visit multilingual websites, it always shows in my native language.. Google for Example, it doesnt matter if i use a IP from Russia, Iran or whatever it will always show up in my native language unlike with tor browser where the language is changing depending on your IP so i thought there has to be some kind of fingerprint in my firefox browser i need to deactivate which reveals my true identity/location
Dont use Nord. Use IVPN, VeePN, Perfect Privacy VPN or VyprVPN.
Nord and Surfshark both are a part of the same company now Cyberspace. Nord has had issues with privacy in the past. They're linked to Tesonet which is a shady data company and also one of their servers got hack which they tried to hide. Both Nord and Surfshark apps have analytic trackers which is of course, bad.
Thanks for your reply
Perfect Privacy is the VPN i am using. For whatever reason its not allowed to use the word VPN in Topic or Post..
I checked and it doesnt matter which IP i am using, when i check the IP its working and it shows my location to be in france or whatever But still when im connecting to any websites it shows my native language unlike when i connect via tor so that means there has to be some other fingerprint in my firefox browser that shows them where i am from right?
It's important to choose the right VPN with a proven track record. That means PIA, Ovpn, Perfect Privacy, Mullvad, Airvpn and many others. 10 mins of research and anyone can find the rest. Its really gets annoying when people assume all vpns are created equal, and one caught logging automatically tarnishes everyone else.
Thanks, that's appreciated!
At first, I thought it was hard to believe no one else thought to map these links about before. I've seen many lists but this showcases the scale of paid promotion much more. Then after working on it for a few weeks and the map barely filled I realise why. It's just so hard to source and collect information with so much fluff out there.
> Perfect Privacy VPN?
Incomplete but will definitely get them in the 2.0!