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201 points sdsantos | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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fujigawa ◴[] No.45118394[source]
Commercial VPNs will go down as one of the greatest money-making schemes of the last decade. Outside of a few specific use cases their sales often rely on leveraging non-technical users' fear of what they don't fully understand.

I have non-technical friends and relatives that have fully bought into this and when I asked why they use a VPN I got non-specific answers like "you need it for security", "to prevent identity theft", or my personal favorite: "to protect my bank accounts".

Not a single person has said "I pay to route my traffic through an unknown intermediary to obscure its origin" or "I installed new root certificates to increase my security."

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1. NoMoreNicksLeft ◴[] No.45118693[source]
I was a Suddenlink cable internet customer, and they threatened to reveal my identifying information to copyright trolls. The $4/month was cheaper than a court judgement against me or the $250/month+ it'd cost to subscribe to all the various streaming services and premium cable channels (magazine/books/music/movies is probably closer to $4000/month in retail price tags). Last week I thought to myself "what if I downloaded the entire Book-of-the-Month-Club since 1924?"

VPNs work. I never got another single nasty letter from Suddenstink.

A few months back, I sat down for a week with a free trial of an obscure webapp, downloaded all of their data and formatted it into json via the javascript console, and pirated by first webapp. Since it's not making xhr calls constantly, it's even snappier than the official one. I'm inventing new piracy methodology. Some of us are more dedicated than the rest of you.