Aaaaaaaa… blocked
Aaaaaaaa… blocked
Ok. But who “we”? Voices in your head?
Then this question isn’t for you.
You’ll be learning soon what I’m up to, you stupid fuck. Soooooonnn. Ahhhaaahhhaaa
Even if I I used an IP of my VPS server to connect to it, how will a client be resolving websites afterwards? You idiot.
You’ve assumed that my VPS has a DNS server installed on it. Why?
Go to whoer[.net]. Under the “DNS” label you’ll see, or should do, DNS requests that reveal your real location. Isn’t this a DNS leak?
This will be the same for your DNS. If you want true anonymity regarding DNS, you should use someone else’s service, preferably over encrypted channels, eg. cyberia.is DoT.
I haven’t asked for a hidden advert
Keep in mind that using your own VPS as a VPN doesn’t bring anonymity. You’re simply replacing one IP tied to your name (your ISP) with another one (your VPS).
Grass is green. Sky is blue. Keep this in mind – in case you haven’t known.
It’s not completely clear what you mean, but I’m guessing you’re only routing a subset of your traffic through wireguard, probably only IPv4, and there may be some IPv6 traffic that is not being routed over your wireguard connection.
Why would you guess that?
You can specify any IPs you want for DNS with wireguard, and if your allowed IPs include those addresses, then it should flow over your VPN.
I do this with Pihole at home, and it blocks ads while I’m away.
How’s that relevant to my question?
But the mailboxes of MailCow are always encrypted
what letter?
How have you been able to measure “way better”?
“May as well” – how about October, March and August?
No, it isn’t