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It depends on what sites :)
And most importantly, so that the history of what you watched is not preserved.
Everything is legal that does not violate the current legislation.
And whether you violate it or not - it is no longer your understanding and interpretation of the law for a particular zone of your dwelling that decides, but completely different factors that you cannot influence in any way.
This is the whole "salt" of the current realities of people's lives on this planet...
The question, apparently, is whether it can be illegal to obtain any information.
Simply “going in”—launching the Tor browser—is harmless in and of itself.
To raise an i2p node is to become an intermediary, in theory: someone else's infa will pass through your computer in a highly encrypted form, it is not known which one. But in practice, there is no way to determine this, and malicious intent at launch is probably unprovable. And there are no laws directly prohibiting this yet, but they are already preparing, probably)
Entering these darknets of yours, purposefully finding and downloading there some information that is obviously prohibited for distribution, for example, leaking the personal data base of some mobile operator is already a gray area. If a. If you find such a base on your computer, questions will arise, from where, and most importantly, why. But in order for there to be such an increased attention to the computer and the person, apparently, some more stupid things need to be done.
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