
Jmpace52
Gold
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2019
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Hey, its been a while. This is just an article I've decided to post here, hopefully @Master can help us avoid this to prevent the same fate as all the other places, like Parler, 8kun, the Daily Stormer, Kiwi Farms and so on. You don't have to read this garbage, I just feel about adding my two cents because I'm still new to this. The title of this should be "how to avoid censorship online". Let's start with the regular internet (sometimes called "clearnet"):
>Clearnet: 99% of registrars won't provide service, and for the few that do, they're either some small non-English speaking company or a certain country-specific top-level domain (like .st, .rw, .to, .su or whatever), which even then, they can still issue a complaint with the register instead. Then you have server fees to cover from DDOSes. Cloudflare won't help you, DDoS-Guard won't help you, and neither will BitMitigate (now owned by that lying kike faggot that ruined Gab) or even Vanwanet (owned by the same person that created BitMitigate), ever since that lying boomer faggot Jim Watkins took it over. Even more expensive providers like DiamWall or Vsys won't help you, so you're gonna need an open source DDOS protection tool instead of relying on the goodfaith of another company.
Then you have to worry about maintaining it, otherwise you would have to self-host a static or dynamically generated website and constantly defend it, and self-hosting is expensive and you'll need a business plan from your ISP. And whatever website ypu're running is gonna have to be maintained constantly, and that is too much hard work for one website (unless you are that dedicated). Same applies to VPS. You're always gonna have to find the right provider (like, say, SkySilk or something, even though you'd be working with a smaller platform as opposed to Amazon AWS or DigitalOcean). And that's not mentioning other services you'll need (along with any related problems).
>Tor: not immune to DDOSes, but at least self-hosting is a lot easier on the Tor network, I will say that. I even heard the Tor project is centralized to the point that the Tor project (or even activists) can deplatform you by denying exit nodes to your website (or at least public list blocks) and the only way to circumvent this is to use private ones that aren't publicly listed to keep your website afloat.
>Lokinet: still in beta mode, and their network has gone down due to large amounts of traffic before in the past.
So really, the only options are modifying hosts file for local DNS lookups only or ZeroNet, and even then, Zeronet is fucking glowware, and if you're not running a connection through Tor (because this is P2P) you'll risk exposing your real IP number (like what happened tp those 08ch fucks). There are other ways, but most of them are illegal, sadly.
Also, section 230 reform from Biden when?
>Clearnet: 99% of registrars won't provide service, and for the few that do, they're either some small non-English speaking company or a certain country-specific top-level domain (like .st, .rw, .to, .su or whatever), which even then, they can still issue a complaint with the register instead. Then you have server fees to cover from DDOSes. Cloudflare won't help you, DDoS-Guard won't help you, and neither will BitMitigate (now owned by that lying kike faggot that ruined Gab) or even Vanwanet (owned by the same person that created BitMitigate), ever since that lying boomer faggot Jim Watkins took it over. Even more expensive providers like DiamWall or Vsys won't help you, so you're gonna need an open source DDOS protection tool instead of relying on the goodfaith of another company.
Then you have to worry about maintaining it, otherwise you would have to self-host a static or dynamically generated website and constantly defend it, and self-hosting is expensive and you'll need a business plan from your ISP. And whatever website ypu're running is gonna have to be maintained constantly, and that is too much hard work for one website (unless you are that dedicated). Same applies to VPS. You're always gonna have to find the right provider (like, say, SkySilk or something, even though you'd be working with a smaller platform as opposed to Amazon AWS or DigitalOcean). And that's not mentioning other services you'll need (along with any related problems).
>Tor: not immune to DDOSes, but at least self-hosting is a lot easier on the Tor network, I will say that. I even heard the Tor project is centralized to the point that the Tor project (or even activists) can deplatform you by denying exit nodes to your website (or at least public list blocks) and the only way to circumvent this is to use private ones that aren't publicly listed to keep your website afloat.
>Lokinet: still in beta mode, and their network has gone down due to large amounts of traffic before in the past.
So really, the only options are modifying hosts file for local DNS lookups only or ZeroNet, and even then, Zeronet is fucking glowware, and if you're not running a connection through Tor (because this is P2P) you'll risk exposing your real IP number (like what happened tp those 08ch fucks). There are other ways, but most of them are illegal, sadly.
Also, section 230 reform from Biden when?