Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
The local provider inside the vpn tunnel cannot restrict you anything. The point is most likely in the DNS, if they do not go inside your vpna either; or where VPN is terminated, these resources are also blocked.
All answers in the topic in the topic.
I will add, instead of a complicated vpn setup, you can buy a cheap vps-ku (maximum) with linux and without configuring anything in it, run local ssh to it with the -D1080 key, where 1080 is the local socks5 proxy port, which will be raised in this way on a remote server, enable it in the browser plus resolve names through a proxy (checkbox in the settings) and that's it, all browser traffic will go through 'vpn', for the provider you have an ssh session, limit and even block them from our frenzied printer until the spirit is missing (unfortunately, the key word yet).
ps but there is, for example, when Rostelecom accumulates a certain amount of traffic (it seems gigabytes) within one ip address, regardless of the protocol, it greatly reduces the speed personally to it by about half a day or a day, so the strategy is to drive all traffic through vpn/ proxy is not effective, you will have to separate what to watch locally and what is remote.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question