A
A
Arkady Abramov2017-05-12 12:12:22
VPN
Arkady Abramov, 2017-05-12 12:12:22

How to bypass vpn provider ban?

I work from Egypt. A couple of days ago, the Cisco VPN Client program stopped connecting me to a server in Moscow. At the same time, the Opera browser stopped working in VPN mode, from which I concluded that working with VPN was blocked at the provider level. Due to local specifics, it is unrealistic to resolve issues through the provider's support.
Therefore, the question is - is there a way to get around this ban? In which direction to dig?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

4 answer(s)
E
Eugene, 2017-05-12
@misant

Make an ssh tunnel and work through it. As an option - an ssh tunnel to some server from which the necessary VPN to Moscow has already been installed.
https://ru.wikibooks.org/wiki/SSH_%D1%82%D1%83%D0%...
https://habrahabr.ru/post/81607/
https://putty.org.ru/articles /putty-ssh-tunnels.html
rus-linux.net/MyLDP/sec/SSH-Tunneling.html

E
Erelecano Oioraen, 2017-05-12
@Erelecano

SoftEther VPN, when using its own protocol (and not emulating OpenVPN and others), it can work in a variant indistinguishable from regular https.

M
Max Kostikov, 2017-05-12
@mxms

The option of encapsulating Cisco VPN traffic into another VPN channel should be quite working.
Try running a PPTP or L2TP VPN client on your router, which is unlikely to be blocked, to access any commercial VPN provider outside of Egypt (I have personally worked with PureVPN for several years and am quite happy).
You can set up a VPN server yourself somewhere on a VPS. For example, on FreeBSD via MPD5, this is done in about 5 minutes.
If the router does not support connecting both to the provider and as a VPN client at the same time, then buy a second router. Almost any cheap one will do, as they are all capable of PPTP/L2TP.
It works for me in the case of the IKEv2 protocol, which is successfully encapsulated inside PPTP. IKEv2 itself is blocked by the provider.
By the way, there is no VPN in Opera - there is a slightly finished proxy.

7
7365656c65, 2017-05-12
@73656c6565

Test OpenVPN . Although, if they started to cut, then they will reach it ... But if you really want to dig, then you can dig towards Europe (if you find oil, say thank you!) Don’t dig through Israel, they don’t like it!

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question