Also asked them if torrenting legal stuff is allowed and they said no.

  • ugh
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    20810 months ago

    There’s an issue with your VPN.

    • @sum_yung_gaiOP
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      1610 months ago

      What VPN service do you use?

      • db2
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        6810 months ago

        It probably isn’t which one that’s the problem, it’s more likely your setup.

        If you can, try disabling IPv6 entirely, turn it off in your operating system and your router. I’d bet you’re leaking past the VPN that way.

        • @dragonfly4933@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4010 months ago

          Wouldn’t advise turning off ipv6. We are probably getting near the point where some public services will disable or offer v4 as only best effort, and when this happens, your connectivity will be broken for certain things if you disable v6. Heck, it’s to the point now where all my home hosted services are v6 only.

          The better solution is to just get a VPN that supports ipv6 like airvpn or mullvad. I think pia disables ipv6 while the tunnel is up, which is better than disabling ipv6 altogether.

          To validate the tunnel is working properly you can use something like this.

          https://ipleak.net/

          There is also a Torrent Address detection section, that when you activate it, will provide a magnet link that will show your ip to ensure that it is tunneled properly.

          • @brimnac@lemmy.world
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            3110 months ago

            Dude, it’ll be a longer time than this guy is going to be on his ISP before he’ll need to worry about ipv6.

            OP - feel free to disable it, IMO.

              • @dragonfly4933@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                810 months ago

                Many ISPs are no longer handing out even 1 public ipv4 address per account, and instead opting for CGnat which further breaks and stratifies the internet.

                Tmobile for example is 464xlat which is even worse than cgnat since it requires tampering with dns responses.

                Given the situation many ISP are in, most serious companies offering services on the internet have supported ipv6 for a long time now in order to offer the most competitive service possible. And with cloudflare now serving up a large amount of traffic, a lot of all traffic is v6.

                Believe it or not, but IPv6 is here and gaining ground.

          • @Crator@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            410 months ago

            I actually had to disable ipv6 just because Halo Infinite wouldn’t load the UI. A couple websites were unreachable with it on too. Seems like it will still be awhile.

      • ugh
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        010 months ago

        Express VPN

  • @XTornado@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    If you are on VPN they cannot know shit. Only that you use a VPN… So either they are detecting the VPN and lying about what they know or you fucked up setting the VPN and the torrentina doesn’t go through the VPN.

    • @cccc@lemmy.world
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      1010 months ago

      They’ll still see upload/download volumes, speeds and patterns. Just not destinations. That alone could indicate torrent.

      • @whatsarefoogee@lemmy.world
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        1510 months ago

        That could indicate a lot of things. It would be very difficult to distinguish a torrent from something like cloud folder sync. And that would still be a statistical guess. No ISP is going to go after customers because their VPN traffic is potentially torrent traffic.

        Besides, even if they could detect that torrenting is taking place, they will not know what data is being transferred from and to where. It’s a meme, but torrents are actually sometimes used for non-copyright infringing data.

        • @dtxer@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          I was providing Linux distros and Machine Learning datasets some time ago, because official servers where slow. I’m the meme I guess

          • redfellow
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            310 months ago

            You are assuming the client needs to care about his ISPs claims unless they actually exist, and aren’t false positives.

          • 7945129875
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            310 months ago

            My guess would be that there is a problem with his configuration, and he is leaking traffic that reveals he is using torrents.

  • @DemSpud@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    10 months ago

    You also need to force your torrent client to use the VPN network adaptor. You can do this in qBitorrent advanced settings

    • @CVGPi@lemmy.ca
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      410 months ago

      Because some idiot isps decided that torrenting is considered serving media/files to others and is thus running a server and thus require you to use Business plans that cost 5x as much.

    • breno
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      10 months ago

      Do you mind explaining or pointing to resource about binding to qbit? I use qbit and pia.

      • @aman25ta@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2110 months ago

        Start the VPN and connect to a location. Open qBittorrent. Go to Preferences, and then Advanced tab. Change Network interface to the VPN (usually its name, like “Mullvad”). Restart qBittorrent.

        Basically when you bind it, if your vpn ever happens to turn off or leak etc its gonna stop the download/upload

      • @toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        110 months ago

        Unless something has changed since I used it, you’ll need to set PIA to wireguard only, and the adapter shows up as wg-pia. (or similar)

    • @sum_yung_gaiOP
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      210 months ago

      I did not but it was a system wide VPN.

      • @aman25ta@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        510 months ago

        Start the VPN and connect to a location. Open qBittorrent. Go to Preferences, and then Advanced tab. Change Network interface to the VPN (usually its name, like “Mullvad”). Restart qBittorrent.

        Basically when you bind it, if your vpn ever happens to turn off etc its gonna stop the download/upload

  • Mikelius
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    10 months ago

    Dunno if anyone mentioned it, but if I had to guess, you have a DNS leak. Basically your DNS requests are going through your ISP instead of the VPN, resulting in them knowing where you’re going online anyway. Be sure to check for those DNS leaks and setup a custom one if your VPN doesn’t offer one. Don’t forget, DNS traffic over port 53 is also unencrypted, so unless you force those through the VPN, they could still know where you’re going.

    • Mubelotix
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      510 months ago

      I had a similar problem where my ipv4 traffic went through the VPN, but for ipv6 it was straight to clearnet

  • @Emma@lemmy.ca
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    2310 months ago

    I don’t know why torrenting your linux ISO’s wouldn’t be legal. I also remembered torrenting a game a developer no longer sells anymore, and me using a free tier VPN didn’t even hide my IP. Yeah I was the idiot back then.

  • Dioxy
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    1710 months ago

    What, they don’t allow torrenting legal stuff? So you can’t download Windows 11 as a torrent from Microsoft? Sounds like a sassy ISP.

  • @updawg
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    1710 months ago

    I torrent on a seedbox and then download to my local machine with rsync. ISP shouldn’t care about an ssh connection.

    • darkstar
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      210 months ago

      Do you use a seed box service or how does it work?

      • @updawg
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        310 months ago

        I use ultra seedbox, but there are plenty of other companies you can buy from

      • @derpgon@programming.dev
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        210 months ago

        You basically have a remote server, usually a cloud or bare metal, where you do all your torrenting. It’s fairly easy, as there are plenty of clients with web UI like Transmission that can be setup super easily via Docker. Make sure to protect it somehow though. Or use a torrent CLI tool and do everything via SSH.

  • @huojtkeg@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Review your VPN config, it’s leaking some traffic. Enable it system wide with a kill switch.

    • @sum_yung_gaiOP
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      310 months ago

      Last I tried was with mullvad and it had a system wide Killswitch.

      • @Z4rK@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Do you get specific letters about files you have downloaded, or generic letters about you using torrent?

        If the first, something is wrong with your setup. Mullvad should be fine.

        If the latter, it might be only your DNS setup is leaking and your isp sees the domains you are connecting to.

        https://mullvad.net/en/help/dns-leaks/