Hey friends,
I’d like to:
I am:
Given the complexity of fingerprinting techniques, I am under the impression logging in to a remote computer and doing all this work from a browser there has one of the highest likelihoods of success. I’d measure success by not getting spammed with work-related ads, whenever I have to disable Ublock Origin at least. It seems likely a social network will know I’m using a remote desktop (based on IP and loading time/delays), but seems difficult for them to understand who exactly is using the cloud machine if I only use it for a singular purpose. I would hope data brokers aren’t efficiently tying VM usage back to VM leasers.
I understand a VPS isn’t typically suited for GUI usage, and VPNs can leave me more vulnerable to fingerprinting.
Finally, it looks like most of the low-end cloud PC options would support web browsing at a reasonable speed.
Questions:
Caution: aggressive anti-privacy corporate behemoths below
Too cheap to be true? Requires some agreement…
Yay Amazon. Inexpensive.
Priciest option.
A little guy!
Thank you!
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
[Matrix/Element]Dead
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
From my knowledge VPNs hide your IP from the destination, and the destination from your ISP.
Fingerprinting is mostly about the browser you use.
For VPN any VPN should do (eg. Mullvad VPN $5/month) and for Browser just have a non-big tech browser with ad-blockers and tracking protection (eg. Mullvad Browser or other Firefox/fork with good config).
Or Tor
Also, how serious is the “not getting tracked” need? It sounds like you are getting hunted by the social media site? Wouldn’t that need full OPSEC mode with Tails and Whonix like the real darknet hackers?
For the VM, I can’t help you much. There should be tones of cloud hosting providers out there, just a Linux VM on another guy’s computer after all.
PS: I am a newbie just repeating stuff I heard before like a parrot.