
Originally Posted by
Artemis
Back to your original question although not for BT the one I have 'used' in the past is StrongVPN specifically to enable the protected content on Kindle Fire devices in my country. It works perfectly for this application. The other option (which is cheaper) is to configure a small VPS with a Linux distro like fedora and install OpenVPN. If you are interested in this option I can give you some pointers.
I looked into OpenVPN yesterday, and the site mainly focuses on driving people to their "Private Tunnel" service. The site specifically goes into anti-BT/filesharing in its TOS section.
I am leaning towards the following security precautions since the free internet has fallen in the US:
Change my DNS to OpenDNS (in order to keep my searches out of the hands of Concast) cost: Free
Find a trustworthy VPN service (to keep my BT activities private with the sole exclusion of bandwidth) cost: ~$10 per month
Connect to sites via HTTPS (I already installed an extension for Chrome) cost: free
Limit the number of items I am sharing at one time (this way, I will not receive numerous notices at one time if detected) cost: free
Limit the amount of time I seed (DMCA notices I have received before all showed how long I seeded, as well as how much data I uploaded- seemingly to eliminate the "OOPS, I
accidentally downloaded something I didn't mean to" argument.) cost: free
I wish this was not necessary, but I am not about to exit the world's greatest library. Adopting these few precautions at a cost of ~$10 per month is very reasonable for the access available to us. I am hoping this blows up, goes to court and is declared as what it is- wiretapping and (once they start collecting out-of court "settlements") racketeering.
Amerika: Land of the free*
*As long as you do EXACTLY as the corporations tell you what to do.

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