I considered buying a pass this morning due to sale but passed due to confusion over whether the price was monthly or annual (thought it was monthly).
However, my new router that was delivered on my porch today is configured to go through a VPN service, which I also pay for. Since I'm too lazy to configure a second non-VPN tunneled network in my house to shitpost on les chans, I caved and bought a pass.
I didn't even know about this board, but it's a nice bonus I guess. I already can't stand doing Google's botnet image capchas from Hell, which are the primary reason one would want a 4chan pass.
>>16553
Oh yeah, might as well test out since4pass
>>16553
I use goldenfrog, what about you?
>>16592
OP here, using OP pic related. No logs mane, great for torrenting.
vpns are pretty great for certain use cases, i.e. torrenting shit at uni, but i hope no one is under the allusion that they'll protect you from the feds even if they claim to keep no logs
used expressvpn in the past and that was pretty good, would recommend reading up (https://thatoneprivacysite.net/) on various vpns before just picking one tho
>>16553
This could be interesting. I've never had a vpn, but I might get one now that I have a faster internet with optic fiber. Anyone using or knowing about PIA vpn? It's pretty damn cheap compared to others. Dunno about the quality though
>>16966
typically heard good things about them other than their shitty advertising practices
I actually have to test out whether my VPN(Mullvad using Swedish servers; sadly there are not much other VPNs around which offer IPv6 and connections on tcp/443, both of which are crucial for me to access stuff on my home LAN and circumvent HTTP proxies)is banned on a per-IP basis or can be used with a pass.
Until I renewed I have just used a proxy configuration script that merely tunnels connections to the sys subdomain of 4chan (and a few other URLs, like /post on Krautchan), which is used for posting. It points to a proxy running on a cheap VPS which doesn't belong to a bad "network neighborhood" like OVH or Hetzner and therefore usually has no problem with posting on chans.
It's a shame Netflix, Hulu, Vudu and other streaming services are so closed-minded regarding VPNs, geoblocking, and copyright. What the fuck are they trying to protect? It's not like Russian Steam keys, the US already pays a premium for content. Is this so they can Jew Australia or something? I still have to configure the policy-based routing in DD-WRT to exclude my TVs from the VPN.