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This Video Is Sponsored By ███ VPN - YouTube
Channel: unknown
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"--but her achievements were never recognised..."
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...in her lifetime.
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In 1942, penniless and forgotten,
she died of polio.
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She couldn't protect herself from viruses,
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but you can protect your computer
by using a VPN.
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Okay, look, I just want to say,
I do not want to start drama with
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people who take sponsorships from VPN companies.
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With a VPN, all the data you send and receive
goes through an encrypted tunnel,
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so no-one can see it.
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Without a VPN,
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every time you connect to free wifi
in a hotel or a cafe,
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you're risking people stealing your passwords,
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your banking details,
and your private data.
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That's not true.
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You’ve probably seen the adverts at the
end of every educational channel’s videos,
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and look,
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it's just that I do this sort of
computer security stuff,
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I am supposed to know about it
and understand it.
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Like, if I took a sponsorship
from a boat manufacturer
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and then it turned out the boats sank,
that would suck,
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but I'm not expected to know about boats.
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I am expected to know about VPNs,
Virtual Private Networks.
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And some of the claims that VPN adverts make
are wrong.
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Password-stealing over wifi was a serious
threat, a few years ago.
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Someone could run an ARP spoofing attack,
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make their computer
pretend to be the network hub,
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and steal every plain-text password that went
through that wifi network.
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It required very little technical knowledge.
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Or they could compromise the hub itself and
look at all the traffic that was going through it.
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But you know what else sends data through
an encrypted tunnel?
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Every single web site with a
padlock in the browser,
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every iPhone app since 2016,
every Android app since 2018.
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Anything that sends any sort of personal data
now uses a trusted encrypted tunnel, HTTPS,
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that padlock,
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and unless you’re using web sites or apps
from the past,
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if anyone tries to intercept your data,
it won't work.
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Now, people on the network can see what sites
you're connecting to,
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so, just the name of your bank,
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and they could see the contents
of dated web sites,
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the ones where the browser now shows "Not
Secure".
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But that's all.
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No passwords, no bank details.
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Those attacks don't work any more.
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One VPN company even had their advert banned
by the UK regulator
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because of those misleading claims.
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VPNs use military grade encryption to keep
your data safe.
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Military-grade encryption means "AES",
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which is the same encryption that's baked
into every web browser and app.
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You're using military-grade encryption to
watch this video.
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The claim’s not wrong,
it's just not special either.
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Plus, a VPN stops your internet service provider
spying on what you're doing online.
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Now, that is true, to an extent.
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Yes, without a VPN,
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your internet service provider, your ISP,
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can see what domain names
you've been connecting to.
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There can be very good reasons to hide those.
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Your country may allow ISPs to sell that data
to advertisers,
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or to build up a profile on you.
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Maybe you are studying at a fundamentalist
Christian college
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and don't want university administrators knowing
that you're questioning your faith,
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or questioning your sexuality.
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Some ISPs also prioritise some apps, sites
and traffic types over others,
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and a VPN means that they can’t do that.
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Or maybe your government is planning to introduce
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an ill-advised and often-delayed
block on adult content
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and you want to work around it.
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That's all reasonable.
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Metadata does give away a lot of information,
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and wanting to keep that private
is a fair idea.
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But that's not what a lot of the VPN ads are
implying,
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they're implying that your ISP can read the
content of your messages.
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And again, if there's a padlock in the browser,
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or if you’re using a modern app,
that's not true.
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And if you do use a VPN, all you're doing
is changing who can see that metadata.
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Your ISP can't any more,
but the VPN company can
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because at their end of the tunnel,
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they have to look at that metadata
to work out where to send your traffic to.
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But maybe that's worth it for you.
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And besides...
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A good VPN doesn’t keep any logs of who
you're talking to.
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It is a brave move for a VPN not to keep any
logs, given that if that's true,
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their service will inevitably be used for
a lot of really awful illegal stuff.
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Some do claim that, some have even brought
in independent auditors to try and prove
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that they don't keep any logs.
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And you can’t have 100% certainty of that,
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but they have got as close
as you reasonably can.
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So if you're planning an assassination and
your priority is absolutely covering your tracks,
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then sure, I guess a VPN might be worth it.
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But to customers, a VPN that
doesn't keep logs is indistinguishable
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from one that's been compromised by hackers,
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or that's been given a little government
black box that they don't understand
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but they have to plug into their systems and
not tell anyone about.
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Or from a VPN where a single employee has
been bribed
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and has started logging things for just a
few accounts.
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To be clear, I do not think any of the
VPN services are a front for the FBI,
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or Russian mobsters, or some state-sponsored
plausibly-deniable intelligence operation.
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Genuinely, they are almost certainly not,
and I do not want to scaremonger.
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Any company that was found to be logging stuff
without permission would be bankrupt soon after,
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it would be a very very bad business decision.
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And the enormous amount of money that VPN
companies suddenly have probably comes from
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overenthusiastic venture capital firms.
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Actually, it almost certainly comes from them.
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But if you wanted to see what the most paranoid,
security-conscious people are connecting to,
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and you wanted to install software
on their systems
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that is designed to read all their network traffic
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and then redirect it through
a single choke point,
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then setting up a VPN service with a huge
advertising budget would be a great way to do it.
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And if you use a VPN, you can connect to streaming
services around the world,
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as if you were in those countries!
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And that's the real reason a lot of people
use VPNs.
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Are you going to China, or somewhere else
that blocks off access to a lot of web sites?
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That's a fair reason.
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Do you want to watch another country's streaming
content,
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or download just enormous amounts of BitTorrents
without being tracked?
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Those are valid uses of VPNs, even if they
are legally questionable.
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It's just that "great for pirating stuff and
getting around the law"
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is the sort of marketing that gets a company
in trouble,
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and "we stop bad people stealing your passwords"
is the sort of marketing
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that scares people into buying something that
they might not need.
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So, with that in mind, I wrote a more honest
advert for VPN services,
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and I found a company that was willing to
sponsor the video.
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Unfortunately, they kept asking for changes,
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and we disagreed on those,
so at the last minute,
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I have had to blank their name out.
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Do you want your hide your sexuality from
your college administrators?
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Do you want to download huge amounts of pirated
content with an extremely low,
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but not zero, risk of being found out?
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Are you planning an assassination and want
to hide your tracks?
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Then you need [bleep] VPN,
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the best choice for gay people, pirates, assassins,
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and gay pirate assassins.
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[bleep] VPN is a tool that can be used both
for good and evil,
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and it's extremely unlikely to be a front
for the FBI.
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But you should know:
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unless you are being personally targeted by
well-funded hackers using exploits that the
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world doesn’t know about yet,
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it doesn't make your passwords and
financial data any more safe.
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They’re already pretty safe.
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And if you are being targeted by hackers like
that, you have bigger problems.
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But if you want to hide your identity,
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pretend you’re in another country,
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or make sure your connection is secure as
you work out the
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lethal doses of particular chemicals,
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then go to [bleep].com/honest for [bleep]
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That was a lot of money left on the table.
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Lot of money.
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