Nomen Nescio wrote:
> Being in China for the Olympics, I have found a way where my
> Intenret activities cannot be detected, analysed, monitored,
> cracked, or sniffed. I set up my own DHCP server elsewhere.
>
> This is an Australian radio station, with the servers at a
> colocation facility in California. I simply installed a DHCP
> program on the server, and made it open to any machine in the
> world.
>
> I just simply change the network settings to use my machine
> as the gateway machine. When I boot up, it goes to my
> server, and fetches an IP from the pool of a available IPs
> by my ISP. So I assume a U.S. IP address, even though I am
> in China. Because my server acts as the gateway machine to
> the server, instead of local servers, in China, my activities
> are INVISIBLE to the Chinese authorities, so I can use Skype
> to take calls on my online talk show, or surf some western
> news sites that are blocked by the Chinese authorites, and
> they will NEVER see it. Because my server acts as the
> gateway machine, and assigning and releasing an IP to
> the machine here in China, what I see and do is TOTALLY
> *INVISIBLE* to the Chinese authorites, and WITHOUT having
> to use encryption software, such as VPN (some programs I
> have barf on the VPN tunnel).
>
> I got the idea from a guy I was chatting with in Holland,
> who does a similar thing at work. He found an open DHCP
> server in Thailand, and simply changed the settings on his
> work PC, so that the open DHCP server in Holland assigns
> his work PC and IP, and acts as the gateway machine, and
> effectively makes his surfing INVISIBLE to the network
> admins. Becuase the open DHCP he found in Thailand acts
> as the Internet gateway, there is NOTHING logged at the
> workplace. Where is goes is only known to him, and whoever
> is running that open DHCP server in Thailand. All the
> logging, if any, is being done by the machine running the
> open DHCP server.
>
> All it takes is to go to network settings, and change the
> configuration for the gateway machine to the open DHCP
> server, and to change the DNS servers to the DNS servers
> of that machine's ISP. Then you just simply re-boot the
> machine, and you are good to go.
>
Impressive.
I bet the bandwidth and latency you got equals your server in the U.S as
well?
Erik
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