Bitcoin Forum

Economy => Services => Topic started by: softwareseller on August 21, 2012, 07:15:59 AM



Title: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 21, 2012, 07:15:59 AM
VPN
You can only select one server location for your account and can not change server unless it's caused by problem on our side.
Available in US, CANADA, Great Britain,Sweden, Switzerland,Russia,Australia,Italy, Spain, France, Germany,Hong Kong,Netherlands,India
Unlimited Traffic,
Unlimited speed. *minimum 8Mbps/s guaranteed
One simultaneous login,
support PPTP and L2TP .
NO Logs.
Shared IP. No dedicated IP for max anonymity
p2p supported

0.5monthly, 1.1BTC quarterly, 2.9BTC annually

You could pm me to get a trial account before buying and remember to pick the server location you want to use when pm me

-------------------
We do not communicate/cooperate with third party including law enforcement at all and the best thing they can do is to forcefully seize and shutdown one of our many VPN servers that has no valuable info. This has not happened before.

We do not have any contact form, website, or any legal entity to represent us. We do not have Terms of service.
All contact is strictly within this forum.


----------------
How to make VPN more secure?
1.Choose L2TP/OpenVPN rather than PPTP
2.Download software to help block traffic when VPN drops accidentally.
3.Disable IPV6
4.Change default DNS to opendns/Google public DNS with or without VPN to avoid packet leaking.



Title: Re: VPN Try out before you buy. 1.2BTC/quarter
Post by: softwareseller on August 22, 2012, 03:42:08 AM
I got feedback that my VPN also works in China.


Title: Re: VPN Try out before you buy. 1.2BTC/quarter
Post by: softwareseller on August 24, 2012, 07:04:54 AM
Op eidted


Title: Re: VPN. Try out before you buy 3.5BTC/year
Post by: drlatino999 on August 28, 2012, 01:03:05 AM
Green light for torrents across this service?


Title: Re: VPN. Try out before you buy 3.5BTC/year
Post by: softwareseller on August 28, 2012, 02:42:12 AM
Green light for torrents across this service?
Yes. But we hope you didn't choose the U.S server. Yet, you could do so and we have no way of stopping you or ban your account


Title: Re: VPN that skews law enforcement.
Post by: softwareseller on August 28, 2012, 02:04:11 PM
Subject edited just for the lulz.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 29, 2012, 03:48:37 AM
With that said, if you want to do serious illegal shit, you should use our VPN together with tor to add another layer of security and also help us mitigate the risk.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 29, 2012, 02:53:50 PM
Price reduced!


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: SodColin on August 30, 2012, 08:00:57 AM
Are there any user reviews?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 30, 2012, 02:01:29 PM
Why not try it out yourself rather than rely on those user reviews


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 31, 2012, 03:33:19 AM
Tip updated to make VPN secure


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: niko on August 31, 2012, 03:59:28 AM
Are you a cop?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: Shagnasty on August 31, 2012, 05:26:53 AM
Are you a cop?

seriously


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 31, 2012, 05:48:57 AM
Are you a cop?
A cop that sells Cheap Windows keys (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=102409.0)? Not very likely.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: NothinG on August 31, 2012, 05:55:59 AM
Are you a cop?
A cop that sells Cheap Windows keys (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=102409.0)? Not very likely.
You could be a cop that caught a bad guy with stolen windows keys. As a cop, you have "access" to materials such as illegal drugs or "windows keys"...so, you would be able to sell those keys to get a list of people who might be on the VPN's.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 31, 2012, 06:07:31 AM
You could be a cop that caught a bad guy with stolen windows keys. As a cop, you have "access" to materials such as illegal drugs or "windows keys"...so, you would be able to sell those keys to get a list of people who might be on the VPN's.

As I mentioned before,
With that said, if you want to do serious illegal shit, you should use our VPN together with tor to add another layer of security and also help us mitigate the risk.
I couldn't caught you even if I were a cop if you use tor with my VPN.
And you could register a new account to pm me to get the deal.
And I only receive bitcoin.

I would prefer to build a fancy website to attract users around the world rather than phishing criminal here if I were a cop.

Or could you tell me a way that I could prove I'm not a cop? I will give it a try.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: NothinG on August 31, 2012, 06:40:17 AM
Or could you tell me a way that I could prove I'm not a cop? I will give it a try.
Shoe on head.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 31, 2012, 07:08:40 AM
Or could you tell me a way that I could prove I'm not a cop? I will give it a try.
Shoe on head.

Why would that prove I'm not a cop? A cop could put the shoe on his head assuming he has one.

One reason why I could provide such service is that I'm completely anonymous myself. So I can't give my photo away .


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: niko on August 31, 2012, 08:04:52 AM
You could be a cop that caught a bad guy with stolen windows keys. As a cop, you have "access" to materials such as illegal drugs or "windows keys"...so, you would be able to sell those keys to get a list of people who might be on the VPN's.

As I mentioned before,
With that said, if you want to do serious illegal shit, you should use our VPN together with tor to add another layer of security and also help us mitigate the risk.
I couldn't caught you even if I were a cop if you use tor with my VPN.
And you could register a new account to pm me to get the deal.
And I only receive bitcoin.

I would prefer to build a fancy website to attract users around the world rather than phishing criminal here if I were a cop.

Or could you tell me a way that I could prove I'm not a cop? I will give it a try.

Actually, this was good enough for me. I don't think you're a cop, and speaking of thinking, I wasn't thinking at all when I asked that.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErnestoJuarell on August 31, 2012, 08:33:55 AM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on August 31, 2012, 08:48:18 AM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?
No. What's that suppose to mean?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErnestoJuarell on August 31, 2012, 10:20:32 AM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?
No. What's that suppose to mean?
Guys, he checks out. Not a cop.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErebusBat on August 31, 2012, 11:02:47 PM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?
No. What's that suppose to mean?
Guys, he checks out. Not a cop.
Wait......

What about doughnuts?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: niko on September 01, 2012, 02:54:54 AM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?
No. What's that suppose to mean?
Guys, he checks out. Not a cop.
Wait......

What about doughnuts?

Doesn't matter. Even if he is a cop, he is a good cop looking to make some pocket money on the side.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErebusBat on September 01, 2012, 03:21:08 AM
----------------
How to make VPN more secure?
1.Choose L2TP/OpenVPN rather than PPTP
2.Download software to help block traffic when VPN drops accidentally.
3.Disable IPV6
4.Change default DNS to opendns/Google public DNS with or without VPN to avoid packet leaking.



Do you support OpenVPN then?  TCP or UDP?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: jojo69 on September 01, 2012, 03:24:33 AM
I know a very scientific method to determine if softwareseller is a cop. Answer this question softwareseller: Do you have a mustache?
No. What's that suppose to mean?
Guys, he checks out. Not a cop.

seems legit


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 01, 2012, 09:23:17 AM
----------------
How to make VPN more secure?
1.Choose L2TP/OpenVPN rather than PPTP
2.Download software to help block traffic when VPN drops accidentally.
3.Disable IPV6
4.Change default DNS to opendns/Google public DNS with or without VPN to avoid packet leaking.



Do you support OpenVPN then?  TCP or UDP?
No. Only L2TP. If you install some software to block non-vpn traffic, L2TP is as secure as openvpn. And it's much easier to configure for customer if they're not technical savvy or don't want to jailbreak their iPhone[Why not?].


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 01, 2012, 11:40:21 AM
What about doughnuts?
I will usually eat the outer surface where the sugar and chocolate are.
You guys assume cops doesn't like doughnuts?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErebusBat on September 01, 2012, 12:42:24 PM
----------------
How to make VPN more secure?
1.Choose L2TP/OpenVPN rather than PPTP
2.Download software to help block traffic when VPN drops accidentally.
3.Disable IPV6
4.Change default DNS to opendns/Google public DNS with or without VPN to avoid packet leaking.



Do you support OpenVPN then?  TCP or UDP?
No. Only L2TP. If you install some software to block non-vpn traffic, L2TP is as secure as openvpn. And it's much easier to configure for customer if they're not technical savvy or don't want to jailbreak their iPhone[Why not?].
Hrm....  Do you have plans to support OpenVPN?  I am familiar with it.  Also I thought L2TP was not secure without IPSec and that IPSec didn't work well in NAT scenarios.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 01, 2012, 01:57:59 PM
----------------
How to make VPN more secure?
1.Choose L2TP/OpenVPN rather than PPTP
2.Download software to help block traffic when VPN drops accidentally.
3.Disable IPV6
4.Change default DNS to opendns/Google public DNS with or without VPN to avoid packet leaking.



Do you support OpenVPN then?  TCP or UDP?
No. Only L2TP. If you install some software to block non-vpn traffic, L2TP is as secure as openvpn. And it's much easier to configure for customer if they're not technical savvy or don't want to jailbreak their iPhone[Why not?].
Hrm....  Do you have plans to support OpenVPN?  I am familiar with it.  Also I thought L2TP was not secure without IPSec and that IPSec didn't work well in NAT scenarios.
With IPsec, L2tp is as strong as OpenVPN. L2TP without IPsec is of course not secure at all. But I think IPsec could work in most sceneries. And there is no way that you could connect to our server without IPsec, unless I want to skew you up and you want to skew yourself up at the same time.
Quote
If the policy has been disabled on both client and server, it is possible to create an L2TP tunnel without IPSEC
I didn't plan to support OpenVPN in the near future because L2TP is built in to most system and are much easier to configure than OpenVPN.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 02, 2012, 05:36:52 AM
The more customer we have using our VPN, the more anonymous we get and much harder for Police to cross reference our activity.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 05, 2012, 07:18:23 AM
Any more questions?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: perlboy on September 06, 2012, 12:43:35 AM
Any more questions?

You're offering a VPN service with an exit point in Australia. You're also offering unlimited bandwidth in your plans.

a) You claim it is anonymous however you (or your providers, do they know you're running this?) are obligated to record appropriate identification information as part of the Australian Telecommunications Act (and it's associated Interception ones). How will you address this when receiving an information requests from the Australian Federal Police?
b) Bandwidth in Australia is obscenely expensive by comparison to essentially everyone else. You're either offering this service with a poorly structure business plan or overselling your bandwidth from your exit points calling into question the viability of the platform for VPN services. Do you oversell bandwidth?

Stuart


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: JoelKatz on September 06, 2012, 01:29:00 AM
Do you oversell bandwidth?
Since he sells unlimited bandwidth and probably doesn't actually have unlimited bandwidth ...

Of course, everyone oversells bandwidth.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: perlboy on September 06, 2012, 01:36:00 AM
Do you oversell bandwidth?
Since he sells unlimited bandwidth and probably doesn't actually have unlimited bandwidth ...

Of course, everyone oversells bandwidth.


Well sort of, it is possible to sell unlimited bandwidth if you have enough capacity at a fixed rate to sustain it. In Australia you can get unlimited bandwidth but you'll be capped at a set speed. 1Mbit of bandwidth in Australia realistically costs ~200-300/month. It's unlimited but it isn't oversold (cause you can't do more than 1Mbit).

Stu


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 01:56:15 AM
a) You claim it is anonymous however you (or your providers, do they know you're running this?) are obligated to record appropriate identification information as part of the Australian Telecommunications Act (and it's associated Interception ones). How will you address this when receiving an information requests from the Australian Federal Police?
They will record personal info for those who contact with them directly. After that, it's free game. No info/Little info which could be easily forged is needed. If Police contacted the provider,  I simply doesn't care. Best thing they could do is to unplug the server, which could be easily fixed within days.



b) Bandwidth in Australia is obscenely expensive by comparison to essentially everyone else. You're either offering this service with a poorly structure business plan or overselling your bandwidth from your exit points calling into question the viability of the platform for VPN services. Do you oversell bandwidth?

Stuart
I didn't manually limit the bandwidth of my customer. Plus, not many people choose Australia VPN. You could choose servers in other locations e.g. U.S in case you fear the bandwidth in Australia.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: hottweelz on September 06, 2012, 02:05:13 AM
Everyone involved in this thread has no idea about "Bandwidth," (LOL @ Unlimited) "Law Enforcement" (LOL @ Australian Federal Police) and OpenVPN (LOL @ limiting the unlimited bandwidth).

Go to jail?  No.

Server suspended, probably as we speak.

Slap your face for even entertaining this, I can sell you a Bridge over in Brooklyn, its pretty awesome.

...now when the Unlimtied Hard Drives debut.. get me on that list.  I have bitcoins.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: perlboy on September 06, 2012, 02:20:36 AM
Everyone involved in this thread has no idea about "Bandwidth," (LOL @ Unlimited) "Law Enforcement" (LOL @ Australian Federal Police) and OpenVPN (LOL @ limiting the unlimited bandwidth).

Actually, I'd argue I have quite an idea about bandwidth and law enforcement since I've worked in the ISP industry ~15 years.

Quote
Go to jail?  No.

Actually, at least in Australia, Yes. Sure, this guys service provider is protected by the telecommunications carriage act only but only if they maintain appropriate contact information. The same applies for this guy himself. If he fails to collect information about all who have access via his infrastructure probably the only thing stopping him from getting arrested is that he isn't IN Australia.

While being arrested may seem unlikely, the cooperation of a VPN operating business which doesn't collect user information (once again at least within australia) that is utilised for things such as organised crime would be subject to much more stringent laws and fewer legal representation options, notably, the Australian Crime Commission which holds the power to interrogate anyone without a lawyer and imprison them for extended lengths with minimal public oversight. Taking this one step further, the use of the services for terrorism related communication would then involve the Attorney General, ASIO and probably ASIS. This involvement can and does happen on a regular basis including compelling companies to collect all exit data, install wiretapping capabilities for a specific user among other things. All this guy is doing is making sure he's the fall guy for his customers, if he thinks that he'll just ignore Australian authorities he's failed to acknowledge the bilateral intelligence sharing agreements Australia, the UK and the U.S.A have in place.

Quote
I didn't manually limit the bandwidth of my customer. Plus, not many people choose Australia VPN. You could choose servers in other locations e.g. U.S in case you fear the bandwidth in Australia.

So your business model is based on your service not being popular in certain locations... Great...

Stu

P.S. Strictly a personal opinion only.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: bit-joker on September 06, 2012, 03:03:26 AM
What kind of software do you recommend to stop traffic when the VPN drops the connection?


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 03:16:49 AM
What kind of software do you recommend to stop traffic when the VPN drops the connection?
For windows, http://wiki.hidemyass.com/Tutorials:How_to_use_Windows_Firewall_for_blocking_non-VPN_traffic_-_IP_binding in step 9, choose all program
For Mac, IPFW


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 03:20:44 AM


Actually, at least in Australia, Yes. Sure, this guys service provider is protected by the telecommunications carriage act only but only if they maintain appropriate contact information. The same applies for this guy himself. If he fails to collect information about all who have access via his infrastructure probably the only thing stopping him from getting arrested is that he isn't IN Australia.

While being arrested may seem unlikely, the cooperation of a VPN operating business which doesn't collect user information (once again at least within australia) that is utilised for things such as organised crime would be subject to much more stringent laws and fewer legal representation options, notably, the Australian Crime Commission which holds the power to interrogate anyone without a lawyer and imprison them for extended lengths with minimal public oversight. Taking this one step further, the use of the services for terrorism related communication would then involve the Attorney General, ASIO and probably ASIS. This involvement can and does happen on a regular basis including compelling companies to collect all exit data, install wiretapping capabilities for a specific user among other things. All this guy is doing is making sure he's the fall guy for his customers, if he thinks that he'll just ignore Australian authorities he's failed to acknowledge the bilateral intelligence sharing agreements Australia, the UK and the U.S.A have in place.

Stu
They need to find me before they could arrest me. Thus I have to stay anonymous and none of my IP used on this forum or forum related email is my real IP.
I'm not in Australia, UK or U.S.A.
Just search "anonymous hosting australia" You could find all sorts of hosting server in Australia anonymously.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: payb.tc on September 06, 2012, 03:35:36 AM
Do you oversell bandwidth?
Since he sells unlimited bandwidth and probably doesn't actually have unlimited bandwidth ...

Of course, everyone oversells bandwidth.


Well sort of, it is possible to sell unlimited bandwidth if you have enough capacity at a fixed rate to sustain it. In Australia you can get unlimited bandwidth but you'll be capped at a set speed. 1Mbit of bandwidth in Australia realistically costs ~200-300/month. It's unlimited but it isn't oversold (cause you can't do more than 1Mbit).

Stu

so it's limited to 1Mbit?

'unlimited' is an industry-wide lie.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: perlboy on September 06, 2012, 03:43:47 AM
Well sort of, it is possible to sell unlimited bandwidth if you have enough capacity at a fixed rate to sustain it. In Australia you can get unlimited bandwidth but you'll be capped at a set speed. 1Mbit of bandwidth in Australia realistically costs ~200-300/month. It's unlimited but it isn't oversold (cause you can't do more than 1Mbit).

Stu

so it's limited to 1Mbit?

'unlimited' is an industry-wide lie.


Well, yeah... Actually in Aus it's called 'unmetered' because when some providers tried to say 'unlimited' the consumer protections regulator slammed them. I tend to agree 'unlimited' is an industry lie, usually it's unlimited*

* As long as you don't break out usage forecasts. :)

Stu


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 04:07:03 AM
Server suspended, probably as we speak.
I was wondering why that hadn't happened myself. Maybe most customers don't do too serious illegal things and those who does uses tor or another VPN together with mine because they cannot trust me completely for those kinds of "business" and have to use double proxy to avoid risks.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: hottweelz on September 06, 2012, 04:12:10 AM

so it's limited to 1Mbit?

'unlimited' is an industry-wide lie.


Yay!  Someone.

I want an unlimited Hard Drive.  Can I get Unlimited Space.



Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 04:47:33 AM

so it's limited to 1Mbit?

'unlimited' is an industry-wide lie.


Yay!  Someone.

I want an unlimited Hard Drive.  Can I get Unlimited Space.


Yes. Some email provider offer unlimited space. But I guess you have to transform your files to bit and email it to yourself by 10000000000 emails.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: perlboy on September 06, 2012, 05:10:45 AM
Yes. Some email provider offer unlimited space. But I guess you have to transform your files to bit and email it to yourself by 10000000000 emails.

They've done this before: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GmailFS

Access time would be atrocious though I'd imagine. That's how you do 'unlimited space' when the space is your product (as opposed to someone selling someone else some space). Load servers up to the gills with 2/3TB drives then pepper it with all these emails. Some will even show you what sort of minimum budget you'd require: http://blog.backblaze.com/2009/09/01/petabytes-on-a-budget-how-to-build-cheap-cloud-storage/

Stu


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 01:32:42 PM
Maybe someone should be an audit of my service.
1. buy my VPN
2. Use it to download some "files"
3.See what happens and provide feedbacks.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ObviousSock on September 06, 2012, 01:39:52 PM
Maybe someone should be an audit of my service.
1. buy my VPN
2. Use it to download some "files"
3.See what happens and provide feedbacks.

Awesome....

  • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
  • Downloaded <insert your imagination here>
  • Now in jail  :-[
  • Buttsecks  :-X
  • Profit  ???


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: softwareseller on September 06, 2012, 02:10:43 PM
Awesome....

  • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
  • Downloaded <insert your imagination here>
  • Now in jail  :-[
  • Buttsecks  :-X
  • Profit  ???
Do you think you would got to jail if you just download not too illegal files using a server located in another country? Or I would setup a server and build a reputation here just to entrap one person?
 You could use another VPN so that you download the content through double VPN to audit my service.


Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
Post by: ErnestoJuarell on September 06, 2012, 03:04:50 PM
    Maybe someone should be an audit of my service.
    1. buy my VPN
    2. Use it to download some "files"
    3.See what happens and provide feedbacks.

    Awesome....

    • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
    • Downloaded <insert your imagination here>
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • Buttsecks  :-X
    • Profit  ???
    • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
    • Downloaded a car
    • Sped through school zone
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • buttwallet.dat :-X
    • Profit  ???


    Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
    Post by: softwareseller on September 07, 2012, 02:02:44 AM
    • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
    • Downloaded <insert your imagination here>
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • Buttsecks  :-X
    • Profit  ???
    • Bought VPN for BTC0.5
    • Downloaded a car
    • Sped through school zone
    • Now in jail  :-[
    • buttwallet.dat :-X
    • Profit  ???
    [/quote]
    WOw,  there's 3D downloading now. Awesome!


    Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
    Post by: hottweelz on September 07, 2012, 03:51:15 AM
    If I may.

    Here's the problem. 

    Quite a few times, (I'm a BMW Enthusiast) I've gone too look at older BMWs, like E30s for example.  The dude selling the car will pop the hood and say "Here is an amazing BMW V6 Engine..." I stop him right there and say outloud "You're a moron!" and I leave.

    I have to.

    By default I can already assume:  He is NOT the owner of the car.  He does NOT know anything about BMWs.  He CERTAINLY did NOT change the Timing Belt every 100k miles.

    BMW does NOT make a V6.

    Now he may have been "a good guy" and an "honest guy" but he was NOT gaining my trust or my money because of his inexperience. It was too much of a gamble for me.  I'd respect him if he stuck with Fords and Mopar out where he belongs.

    I would bet you are NOT out here to scam someone, you already have proven that reputation on this board... but using improper terms like "Unlimited" and "its anonymous, but i'm wondering how some of my clients haven't gotten caught yet...

    The purpose in selling the VPN is to attract people who are not qualified to build and maintain their own VPN.  And you've scored there for sure.

    But f THEY are identifying loopholes like you pointing out a V6 in a Bimmer then its gonna be hard.

    Bottom line: Have a nice "Sell Sheet" made up and post it around the forums... just be the dude collecting the BTC and these guys won't troll you... (as much)

    .02 BTC  </rant>


    Title: Re: [WTS]VPN that skews law enforcement.[14 countries]
    Post by: softwareseller on September 07, 2012, 09:31:49 AM
    I would bet you are NOT out here to scam someone, you already have proven that reputation on this board... but using improper terms like "Unlimited" and "its anonymous, but i'm wondering how some of my clients haven't gotten caught yet...
    I've added Unlimited speed. *minimum 8Mbps/s guaranteed.
    No. I was wondering why my server hasn't been taken down or why my server provider hasn't emailed me about copyright/illegal activities.