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A Public DNS/ICMP Tunneling Service for evading filters, paywalls and firewalls - Page 2
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A Public DNS/ICMP Tunneling Service for evading filters, paywalls and firewalls

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Comments

  • I hardly think the 500mb or so you could download in a day over DNS tunnel speed would cause any issues for the hotspot owner...

  • @linuxthefish said:
    I hardly think the 500mb or so you could download in a day over DNS tunnel speed would cause any issues for the hotspot owner...

    It doesn't matter.

  • @TropiThomas said:
    Anyone got an easy tutorial for Android that would be perfect

    Yup, a tutorial to set up this on android would helpful.
    Anyone?

  • @elwebmaster said:
    Thus, we can say that paywalls on public WiFi frequencies are fences erected by the rich to exploit the poor by interfering with their designated WiFi spectrum and by reselling a public good (WiFi signal) without reimbursing the public (by means of leasing spectrum for commercial use from the government).

    Nice pet theory. However, WiFi signal distances are limited by tech and laws. This isn't like radio spectrum that excludes an entire metropolitan area and beyond from using the same frequency, or satellite TV spectrum that excludes entire geographic zones from using the same frequency.

    Also, there are zoning restrictions, so you rarely have a business offering a powerful WiFi signal right next to residences. Not saying it doesn't happen ever, but, much more often, they'd just be competing with the neighboring business' WiFi.

  • What happened to this?

  • @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

  • @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

    The DNS one doesn't. C.dnstun.com doesn't resolve

  • @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

    The DNS one doesn't. C.dnstun.com doesn't resolve

    You can setup your own ones if I remember (?)

    Also, probably you can try contacting the author or owner of that domain.

  • @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

    The DNS one doesn't. C.dnstun.com doesn't resolve

    You can setup your own ones if I remember (?)

    Also, probably you can try contacting the author or owner of that domain.

    I'm away in France is a little hard I tried it and couldn't get it to work oddly

  • netomxnetomx Moderator, Veteran

    @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

    The DNS one doesn't. C.dnstun.com doesn't resolve

    You can setup your own ones if I remember (?)

    Also, probably you can try contacting the author or owner of that domain.

    I'm away in France is a little hard I tried it and couldn't get it to work oddly

    It is super easy, literally 5 minutes using their guide

  • @netomx said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:

    @yomero said:

    @OpticalSwoosh said:
    What happened to this?

    Nothing, it works AFAIK.

    The DNS one doesn't. C.dnstun.com doesn't resolve

    You can setup your own ones if I remember (?)

    Also, probably you can try contacting the author or owner of that domain.

    I'm away in France is a little hard I tried it and couldn't get it to work oddly

    It is super easy, literally 5 minutes using their guide

    Umm I tried it and couldn't get it working? I was using it to bypass threes tether limit

  • yomeroyomero Member
    edited August 2016

    Related question, how can a provider/carrier know you are tethering or not?

    My only guess, is about the User Agent on HTTP traffic, but that's the only one that I can think.

    Thanked by 1netomx
  • @OpticalSwoosh I think David (the guy who wrote that tutorial) closed the TOR exit.

  • @yomero said:
    Related question, how can a provider/carrier know you are tethering or not?

    My only guess, is about the User Agent on HTTP traffic, but that's the only one that I can think.

    I've tried and it didn't work. But ICMP didn't work either so it's something more advanced

  • MaouniqueMaounique Host Rep, Veteran

    Come to Romania, tethering is OK here, after you use your TB, the speed goes down to 128/128 which is still fine for many things. Of course, if you are cheap like me, you get a 2 Eur subscription which includes only 5 GB data and then slows down, but for 6-7 you can get 1 TB 4G.

    Thanked by 1vimalware
  • @Maounique said:
    Come to Romania, tethering is OK here, after you use your TB, the speed goes down to 128/128 which is still fine for many things. Of course, if you are cheap like me, you get a 2 Eur subscription which includes only 5 GB data and then slows down, but for 6-7 you can get 1 TB 4G.

    Three feel at home. Doesn't allow tethering abroad :/

    Would love to come to Romania. You paying for flight haha?

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