Anonymous ID: 0762a4 April 17, 2018, 11:49 p.m. No.1087182   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7394

>watching YouTube videos, look at the top of my browser and notice it looks different…

 

Done this more times than I can remember. Google overlords always manage to magically fuck up my unfucking. Friendly reminder you might want to do the same…

Anonymous ID: 0762a4 April 18, 2018, 12:35 a.m. No.1087343   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7360 >>7390

7 simple steps to control your privacy:

 

Quit Facebook

Install an ad/tracker blocker

Destroy your smartphone

Paint your face before going outside

Write opt-out letters to each of the 4,000 data brokers

Avoid other humans (FB gets your data from them)

Move to a remote forest

 

>let's just keep this between us, ok?

 

<us and the abundance of [under]paid shills and the [C]lowns [I]n [A]merica

Anonymous ID: 0762a4 April 18, 2018, 12:55 a.m. No.1087404   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1087390

>retreat

 

OH SHIT! Is that why it says Edward Snowden Retweeted?! Been racking my brain for hours trying to figure that out. Thanks, ObservantAnon!

Anonymous ID: 0762a4 April 18, 2018, 1:04 a.m. No.1087441   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7458 >>7479

Here's how many IP addresses Russia has blocked to cut access to Telegram

 

On the morning of April 16, Russia’s federal censor ordered Russian ISPs to start blocking access to the instant messenger Telegram. At first, Roskomnadzor ordered Internet providers to cut service only to Telegram’s own IP addresses. Soon, however, the government also banned hundreds of thousands of IP addresses belonging to Amazon’s cloud service, which Telegram was using to circumvent Russia’s block. Roskomnadzor later blocked more than a million IP addresses in Google’s cloud service, as well. Now there’s even a special website dedicated to tracking how many IP addresses Roskomnadzor blocks in its battle with proxy servers.

 

https:// meduza.io/en/short/2018/04/17/here-s-how-many-ip-addresses-russia-has-blocked-to-cut-access-to-telegram