@TheTwelveYearOld@lemmy.world to Privacy@lemmy.mlEnglish • 1 year agoOn SimpeLogin, How do I get past this when creating aliases? I waited 30 mins and it still showslemmy.worldimagemessage-square4arrow-up138cross-posted to: privacy@lemmy.world
arrow-up138imageOn SimpeLogin, How do I get past this when creating aliases? I waited 30 mins and it still showslemmy.world@TheTwelveYearOld@lemmy.world to Privacy@lemmy.mlEnglish • 1 year agomessage-square4cross-posted to: privacy@lemmy.world
minus-square@HumanPerson@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglish20•edit-21 year agoI’ve seen that most commonly with tor, vpns could cause it to. Edit: It is not (usually) them deliberately breaking vpns, they block brute force attacks based on public ip instead of a cookie or something.
minus-square@jet@hackertalks.comlinkfedilinkEnglish12•1 year agoA privacy service breaking VPNs… Hrmmm
minus-square@Jako301@feddit.delinkfedilink12•1 year agoConsidering that most VPN adresses are linked to suspicious, if not outright illegal, activity, its quite reasonable to assume that they end up on automatic block lists.
minus-squareᴅᴜᴋᴇᴛʜᴏʀɪᴏɴlinkfedilink1•1 year agoFirst generation VPN users effectively ruined it for current-gen users who use VPNs for everything now.
I’ve seen that most commonly with tor, vpns could cause it to.
Edit: It is not (usually) them deliberately breaking vpns, they block brute force attacks based on public ip instead of a cookie or something.
A privacy service breaking VPNs… Hrmmm
Considering that most VPN adresses are linked to suspicious, if not outright illegal, activity, its quite reasonable to assume that they end up on automatic block lists.
First generation VPN users effectively ruined it for current-gen users who use VPNs for everything now.
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