00:00:00
You know, I I just can't deny it. It's
00:00:02
getting way way worse in a record amount
00:00:05
of time. You know, ladies and gentlemen,
00:00:07
I don't want to sit here and like doom
00:00:08
scroll with you, but I believe the
00:00:10
internet is the last big bastion of
00:00:11
freedom. And, you know, somebody that,
00:00:13
you know, has made content on things
00:00:15
like the dark web and and unsavory parts
00:00:17
of the internet and really the the the
00:00:19
the not so much the darkest end, but
00:00:22
sometimes the most obscure parts of the
00:00:24
internet. I believe the freedom is a
00:00:26
great thing. All right. I believe that
00:00:28
getting to access the internet is
00:00:29
awesome. All right, getting to access
00:00:30
the internet unfettered is amazing. And
00:00:34
even though that there are bad parts of
00:00:36
the internet, I like to think that
00:00:37
overall a lot of the really illegal
00:00:40
stuff does get taken care of by the
00:00:42
internet. Now, obviously things are not
00:00:44
perfect, and that's pretty true. But
00:00:47
what isn't perfect is the online safety
00:00:50
act that apparently has kicked in the
00:00:52
last few days. So, we already had [ __ ]
00:00:54
like Steam and it io getting fisted by
00:00:57
the payment processor cartel. Now, we've
00:01:00
got governments over here pushing the
00:01:02
online safety act. Now, what is the
00:01:05
online safety act? Well, it protects
00:01:06
children and adults online. It puts a
00:01:10
range of new duty on social media
00:01:12
companies and search services, giving
00:01:14
them legal duties to protect their users
00:01:16
from illegal content and content harmful
00:01:18
to children. The act gives providers new
00:01:21
duties to implement systems and
00:01:22
processes the redu to reduce risks their
00:01:25
services are used for illegal activity.
00:01:28
Now a lot of the stuff on the internet
00:01:30
that is illegal especially when it comes
00:01:32
to mainstream platforms like you know
00:01:34
YouTube the site that you're watching on
00:01:36
tend to get taken care of relatively
00:01:38
quickly uh just because there's a lot of
00:01:40
tools freely accessible tools that
00:01:43
YouTube has created that fight against
00:01:45
truly illegal content. And generally
00:01:48
speaking, even if we're talking about
00:01:49
illegal content in the sense of deep
00:01:51
fake technologies, there's a lot of new
00:01:53
emerging technologies that are designed
00:01:55
without the government getting involved
00:01:57
to take care of a lot of the bad stuff.
00:02:00
Now, do I think the United Kingdom is
00:02:01
necessarily there to give a [ __ ] about
00:02:04
the actual online safety of children?
00:02:06
Absolutely not. every kind of law that
00:02:08
I've seen, and there's plenty of these
00:02:10
laws where, for instance, accessing, you
00:02:13
know, the hub, accessing, you know,
00:02:14
adult websites now require you, ladies
00:02:17
and gentlemen, to dig for your wallet.
00:02:20
Okay? Find out where your identification
00:02:22
is. All right? I'm not going to show it
00:02:25
for you, but and then present that over
00:02:27
to, you know, an online platform. So,
00:02:29
you take a photo of your ID, you send it
00:02:31
over, and they verify it. Now, usually
00:02:33
these IDs are supposed to be deleted in
00:02:36
a matter of 24 hours, but given what
00:02:38
we've seen with an app called T in the
00:02:40
last like week uh in the last few days,
00:02:43
it doesn't seem like all this
00:02:45
information just magically gets deleted.
00:02:47
Sometimes it can be up there, sometimes
00:02:49
it can be unsecure and sometimes people
00:02:51
can just grab this information and it's
00:02:53
a scary world. Okay, we are absolutely
00:02:55
creating new uh repositories that could
00:02:59
possibly be hacked and our information
00:03:01
could be shared around our very private
00:03:04
information. Okay, it's a [ __ ] wild
00:03:06
world. Now, overnight a lot of the
00:03:08
biggest sites on the internet, for
00:03:10
instance, started throwing out these big
00:03:12
blockages. So, for instance, if you were
00:03:14
in the UK and you saw this on a post on
00:03:17
Twitter, due to local laws, we are
00:03:19
temporarily restricting access to this
00:03:21
content until X estimates your age. So,
00:03:25
obviously, they're going to be requiring
00:03:26
you to send in a selfie or a driver's
00:03:28
license and verify if you're actually
00:03:30
like a real, you know, adult or
00:03:32
something. Now, of course, when you go
00:03:33
down into it, you can even see that
00:03:35
again when people were researching this.
00:03:37
Offcom, the agency that is uh, you know,
00:03:40
sort of uh leading the charge with the
00:03:42
online safety act says age assurance
00:03:44
methods supported are things like facial
00:03:46
age estimation. So, this is usually
00:03:48
where like, you know, you point a camera
00:03:51
at your face, an AI looks at your face
00:03:53
and guesses what your age is, and of
00:03:55
course, it checks a person's age via
00:03:57
their credit card provider, bank, or
00:04:00
mobile phone network operator. So much
00:04:02
like a lot of sites, I think Only Fans
00:04:04
does it too where you know you uh in
00:04:07
order to do anything on the website, you
00:04:08
have to actually uh you know connect a
00:04:11
credit card and they do like a little uh
00:04:13
10-centent charge and they basically you
00:04:15
know you have to tell them how much
00:04:16
money you charged just to verify you
00:04:18
know if the credit card provider is a
00:04:19
valid one and through the credit card
00:04:21
provider or the bank they can verify if
00:04:23
somebody is of age. Then you've got
00:04:25
photo ID matching, which is where they
00:04:27
take your driver's license or any valid
00:04:29
ID that you show at a bar that would be
00:04:31
sent over to whatever server and they
00:04:34
would validate that way. Or you could
00:04:36
even send a passport or a similar ID
00:04:38
which you check against a selfie. So
00:04:41
again, it's really up to the agency. So
00:04:43
for instance, it's up to you. It's not
00:04:46
done through the government. You
00:04:47
actually have to go through a
00:04:48
third-party organization. And this is
00:04:50
where again they want to adopt these
00:04:53
measures where they want to you know not
00:04:55
exclude adults from accessing legal
00:04:57
content that may be adult but should
00:05:00
protect their privacy as well. Age
00:05:02
assurance methods uh deployed by the
00:05:04
adult content platforms are subject to
00:05:07
the GDPR. So there's a lot of red tape
00:05:10
and regulations put around it. And I
00:05:13
think it's not so much the government
00:05:15
wants to just censor people or track
00:05:17
them. If the government wants to censor
00:05:19
you, let's say the government wants to
00:05:20
track what websites you're going to,
00:05:22
it's very easy for the government in
00:05:24
this case to just literally go and uh
00:05:29
you know, put a put a flag on you and
00:05:31
just uh see what you're looking through
00:05:32
at the ISP level. There's almost no way
00:05:35
to really avoid that. There's nothing
00:05:37
that stops a government agency from
00:05:39
launching malware against you. Again, if
00:05:40
the government wants to track what
00:05:42
you're doing on the internet, it's
00:05:43
actually very easy. No, what I think
00:05:46
here is it's almost like a business
00:05:48
interest. I think somebody in the VPN
00:05:50
lobby has sort of guided the government
00:05:52
to doing this because overnight I think
00:05:54
ProtonVPN got like a,000% like upticks
00:05:58
in signups or or or just interest. And I
00:06:01
think a lot of it also benefits these
00:06:03
companies that are doing third-party
00:06:04
verification in general. But ultimately,
00:06:08
look, at the end of all this, this is
00:06:10
making the internet just significantly
00:06:11
more inaccessible. Now for a lot of big
00:06:14
uh providers like Twitter or YouTube or
00:06:17
Reddit uh and even some of the biggest
00:06:19
adult websites, they could just provide
00:06:21
the third party support and they can
00:06:23
weather the financial cost. But the
00:06:25
thing is for smaller websites or
00:06:27
websites that operate on a shoestring
00:06:29
budget like Wikipedia, which we'll look
00:06:31
at in a second, that ladies and
00:06:33
gentlemen may be a death nail for those
00:06:36
platforms. So, for instance, if you're
00:06:38
somebody on Discord right now in the
00:06:41
United Kingdom, according to this online
00:06:43
safety act, you now have to provide your
00:06:46
information to access Discord and verify
00:06:50
yourself for having an age appropriate
00:06:52
experience, I guess. So, how do you do
00:06:54
the verification? Well, apparently you
00:06:56
take a video selfie or you scan your
00:06:58
identification. Okay. Then of course
00:07:01
your age group is saved after this
00:07:03
verification and then they'll DM you
00:07:05
those results once they've verified your
00:07:07
thing. So obviously for something like
00:07:09
Discord I imagine they probably are
00:07:11
working with an outside AI company that
00:07:13
will take your uh you know driver's
00:07:14
license ID or your you know video selfie
00:07:17
and be able to approximate an age or be
00:07:20
able to you know just OCR an entire
00:07:22
driver's license and validate the
00:07:24
absolute like you know uh you know just
00:07:27
just to validate like you know what it
00:07:29
is. Now, does this protect children in
00:07:31
any case? Absolutely not. Because
00:07:32
remember, uh this is easily bypassed if
00:07:36
children can grab access to their
00:07:38
parents or grandparents IDs and just
00:07:40
provide them in place of whatever their
00:07:43
ID would be for Discord. And there
00:07:45
really isn't any way for any of these
00:07:46
sites to truly validate this
00:07:48
information. I mean, somebody could
00:07:50
literally go to their mom's purse, grab
00:07:52
an ID, send it over here, and I don't
00:07:54
know, it would probably be validated,
00:07:56
especially if they match usernames,
00:07:58
ages, everything in the sign up process.
00:08:01
Now, one thing that I want to also talk
00:08:03
about too is obviously people will say,
00:08:06
"Hey, just get a VPN. It'll bypass a lot
00:08:08
of this." And it probably will for the
00:08:10
most part, but nothing stops a lot of
00:08:13
the government from, you know,
00:08:15
tightening some of these restrictions or
00:08:17
tests, right? Like imagine if you're a
00:08:18
social media service, they can just go
00:08:20
on you and say, "Okay, you're not doing
00:08:22
enough." So the social media service
00:08:23
instead of just, you know, looking for a
00:08:25
VPN check or looking for a location
00:08:27
check, a geoloccation track, it may
00:08:29
start to look even deeper. And what a
00:08:32
lot of people don't know is that their
00:08:33
web browser gives a lot of information
00:08:36
about themselves that uh they may not
00:08:38
know. For instance, my browser gives
00:08:40
time zone offsets, the location of my
00:08:43
general area, which would be in Toronto.
00:08:46
Uh, just from my time zone systems,
00:08:48
it'll get an idea of what my screen
00:08:50
resolution looks like. It'll get an idea
00:08:52
for my fonts. You can identify a lot
00:08:56
about an individual's location beyond
00:08:58
just their geol location. You can use
00:09:01
flags that will identify their local
00:09:04
settings on their system, right? I mean
00:09:06
why would somebody who lives in the
00:09:08
United Kingdom or for example let's say
00:09:11
that you're accessing a website right
00:09:12
why would somebody who is uh accessing a
00:09:16
website from the uh United States for
00:09:19
instance having all of their browser
00:09:21
fingerprinting all of their hardware
00:09:23
fingerprinting matching that account or
00:09:25
computer uh that that would exist in in
00:09:28
a country like the United Kingdom for
00:09:30
instance right these would be checks
00:09:31
that would be validated and checked
00:09:34
constantly and a lot of the stuff would
00:09:36
be used to identify who you are even
00:09:39
beyond a VPN. So I think that's one of
00:09:41
the things that people kind of have to
00:09:43
watch out for. Now whether you use a
00:09:44
more hardened browser or whether you use
00:09:47
something like tour to completely
00:09:49
obuscate yourself as much as you can,
00:09:51
the thing is there are a lot of ways to
00:09:54
censor the internet or block people from
00:09:57
accessing websites that the government
00:09:58
doesn't deem okay. And again, it's easy
00:10:02
to use adult content to weasle your way
00:10:05
into this, right? But again, a lot of
00:10:07
the problems with this law is that the
00:10:10
description of adult content or harmful
00:10:12
content can in some ways be a little
00:10:14
vague. So maybe the government can use
00:10:17
this to block, you know, uh, certain
00:10:20
political speech, certain speech in
00:10:22
general that, you know, may not be
00:10:23
favorable. Maybe they might say that,
00:10:26
hey, showing people how to use a VPN or
00:10:29
how to use privacy techniques may in
00:10:32
fact be harmful. Why are you teaching
00:10:34
people that? That could be removed. That
00:10:36
could be considered adult. Again, when
00:10:38
you have vague definitions,
00:10:41
it's tough to identify. It's it's it's
00:10:43
it's tough to not see that as a way for
00:10:46
the government or any organization to
00:10:48
abuse that down the road when things
00:10:50
become more entrenched. Now, you can
00:10:53
read the actual legal case for yourself,
00:10:55
too, but there's a lot of actual, you
00:10:57
know, uh, worry that some of the actual
00:10:59
depictions of what they want regulated
00:11:01
is possibly a bit too vague, right? So,
00:11:04
things like abusive material that
00:11:06
targets, you know, specific minorities,
00:11:07
so on and so forth, hate enticing
00:11:09
content. A lot of these things could
00:11:11
theoretically be vague, right? like you
00:11:13
know obviously a blanket term like hate
00:11:15
speech could in theory be allowed
00:11:17
allowing the government to have any
00:11:19
control over the kind of stuff that you
00:11:20
say over on the internet and this
00:11:22
absolute liability falls squarely onto
00:11:24
the actual social media company. Now a
00:11:27
couple months ago even Wikipedia
00:11:29
challenged the online safety act. So
00:11:31
again it's not just about social media
00:11:33
companies or even the spooky adult
00:11:35
websites and children accessing them
00:11:37
based on the vagueness of the law that I
00:11:39
just talked about. Wikipedia considers
00:11:42
itself to be a target for this. So for
00:11:44
instance, Wikipedia says that they are
00:11:46
actually suing the UK government over
00:11:49
the online safety act. The complaint is
00:11:51
centered around the way organizations
00:11:52
are categorized for the purpose of the
00:11:54
act. Category 1 services rated on
00:11:57
criteria such as the ability to forward
00:11:59
or share content and number of users are
00:12:02
subject to greater requirements and that
00:12:04
includes user verification, swift
00:12:07
removal of harmful content and age
00:12:09
verification. So category 1 companies
00:12:11
include basically every major social
00:12:13
media network. So things like Facebook,
00:12:15
things like you know Twitter, YouTube,
00:12:17
so on and so forth. And because of the
00:12:19
way Wikipedia technically operates, one
00:12:22
could even consider it to be a category
00:12:24
one system. Now again, I want to look at
00:12:27
the law that Wikipedia is kind of
00:12:28
talking about when it comes to category
00:12:30
1. So this is how vague things can be.
00:12:33
So category 1 website which Wikipedia
00:12:36
believes it could fall under are met
00:12:37
when a reg by a regulated userto- user
00:12:40
service. So I believe the users in this
00:12:42
case are the Wikipedia like
00:12:44
contributors. in respect to the
00:12:46
user-to-user part of the service. It has
00:12:48
a average number of monthly active UK
00:12:50
users that exceed 34 million and uses a
00:12:53
content recommener system. So that's
00:12:55
basically just like a YouTube um
00:12:57
algorithm kind of thing, right? Like
00:12:58
it's just a recommended engine. So has a
00:13:01
average number of monthly active UK
00:13:03
users that exceeds 7 million. Now I
00:13:05
don't know if Wikipedia has a algorithm
00:13:08
thing that like feeds you new articles.
00:13:10
like I don't know if it has a similar
00:13:12
recommendations engine, but then again,
00:13:14
I'm not a Wikipedia contributor, so
00:13:16
maybe I'm missing something here. And
00:13:18
number three is provide a functionality
00:13:19
for users to forward or share regulated
00:13:22
UGC, which obviously would be like the
00:13:24
photos, videos, and so on and so forth
00:13:26
required to make all of the Wikipedia or
00:13:29
just the Wikipdia
00:13:31
um uh pages, right? So, this is like
00:13:34
where it gets really wild, right? Like
00:13:36
when Wikipedia is fighting against this,
00:13:39
there's there's there's an explanation
00:13:41
that this is obviously way too vague.
00:13:43
Now, regardless of what you think about
00:13:45
Wikipedia, I don't think I would put a
00:13:47
porn site and Wikipedia in the same
00:13:50
category. The only way those things are
00:13:52
similar is if you're looking up like
00:13:53
oral sex or something on Wikipedia and
00:13:56
you happen to see an image. No, the
00:13:58
reality is these kind of laws exist so
00:14:00
that you can make the internet as
00:14:02
annoying to access as you want. Because
00:14:04
here's the thing, most people aren't
00:14:05
going to dig out a VPN. Most people
00:14:07
aren't going to bypass these or even
00:14:09
attempt to bypass it. Okay? They were
00:14:11
added so much friction to this [ __ ]
00:14:13
that the only people thinking of
00:14:14
bypassing it are nerds like me and you.
00:14:17
Okay? This is a simple way for them to
00:14:19
basically inflict as much pain on these
00:14:21
websites as possible. And the thing is
00:14:24
sites like Facebook might be able to get
00:14:25
through it because they have the money
00:14:26
for it. But a site like Wikip Wikipedia
00:14:29
for instance, which if you go to the
00:14:31
actual website and you actually just go
00:14:33
to Wikipedia, they will constantly be
00:14:35
asking for donations. I mean, not super
00:14:37
in-your-face, but they will ask you for
00:14:39
donations to their website because
00:14:41
ultimately this website runs off of
00:14:44
donations. They need donations. It's one
00:14:46
of the most visited websites in the
00:14:48
world that obviously falls under, you
00:14:51
know, uh the amount of viewers recom
00:14:54
needed to be a category one site, but it
00:14:57
doesn't nowhere generate the the money
00:14:59
needed to implement these like
00:15:02
third-party uh rec uh facial
00:15:05
verification or or just these like uh
00:15:07
verification systems. And that's where
00:15:10
it tends to like fall down. Okay, that's
00:15:12
where it tends to lose. If enforced on
00:15:14
Wikipedia, category 1 duties would
00:15:16
undermine the privacy and safety of
00:15:18
Wikipedia volunteer users because they
00:15:20
would have to basically provide their
00:15:22
identification, expose the encyclopedia
00:15:24
to manipulation and vandalism, and
00:15:26
divert essential resources from
00:15:28
protecting and improving Wikipedia and
00:15:30
other Wikipedia Wikipdia projects.
00:15:32
Because no, the government isn't putting
00:15:34
their resources, I believe, into the
00:15:36
line. They're basically giving a lot of
00:15:38
third-party companies the business
00:15:40
advantage of jumping in and being the
00:15:43
verifiers of this, right? So, it'd be
00:15:45
one thing if the government was truly
00:15:46
the one responsible for storing,
00:15:48
vetting, and basically being the ones
00:15:50
that would, you know, uh, check your IDs
00:15:53
or your facial maps, but since we're
00:15:55
handing this out to third party
00:15:57
organizations, that is always a recipe
00:16:00
way that that's always a recipe for
00:16:02
disaster, so to speak. So again, it's
00:16:04
not just Wikipedia, but even areas like
00:16:06
again 4chan, parts of the internet where
00:16:08
it can be considered one of the runchy,
00:16:11
you know, hubs has even said that for
00:16:13
their British users, starting July 25th,
00:16:15
in accordance with the online safety
00:16:17
act, 4chan will immediately block and
00:16:20
cease all access to all of its content
00:16:22
for visitors from the UK and British
00:16:24
overseas territories. The UK law
00:16:26
requires extensive monitoring and
00:16:28
verification filters of our platform for
00:16:30
its internet subjects of which our small
00:16:32
dedicated team is neither equipped nor
00:16:35
capable to comply effectively. So again,
00:16:37
Wikipedia or Wikipedia was operating
00:16:39
with again just a [ __ ] shoestring
00:16:41
budget quite literally in comparison to
00:16:44
something like YouTube for instance,
00:16:46
right? And 4chan obviously doesn't have
00:16:48
that crazy amount of money either. We
00:16:51
also do not want to compromise our users
00:16:52
privacy, liberty from consequences, and
00:16:55
freedom of expression to meet these
00:16:56
overwhelming demands. After a difficult
00:16:58
yet considerate interest of both UK
00:17:01
users, it has been decided that UK ISPs
00:17:03
and domains will no longer be able to
00:17:06
view nor engage with any content on its
00:17:08
sites or its functions. So, for a lot of
00:17:11
the British 4chain users, you just can't
00:17:13
access your website anymore by going to
00:17:15
4chan.org. Now ultimately in the end
00:17:18
there's a lot of ways around this and
00:17:20
all those ways involves VPNs. So for
00:17:23
instance if you want the long way of
00:17:25
doing it I made a video where I talked
00:17:27
about MudVPN where I actually got a free
00:17:30
account in some of these cloud services
00:17:32
like Amazon for instance. So, you can go
00:17:34
to Amazon's AWS, you can make a free
00:17:36
account, and I believe you can get 6
00:17:39
months of Amazon for free, the uh AWS,
00:17:42
and as long as you go under Amazon EC2,
00:17:45
you can set up an OpenVPN container and
00:17:48
actually have your own VPN that routes
00:17:50
to the United States. So, if you're
00:17:52
somebody that lives in the United
00:17:53
Kingdom and you now can't access a lot
00:17:55
of websites because they're just
00:17:56
limiting you, uh, you know, because of
00:17:58
this new law, you can make your own VPN.
00:18:01
I've shown you there's free packages.
00:18:03
You can self-deploy this all on your own
00:18:06
and browse the internet as if you were
00:18:08
an American citizen on the interwebs.
00:18:11
Now, the other way to do this is to
00:18:13
obviously go to the VPNs. Now, I I'm not
00:18:15
going to just promote any random VPN. I
00:18:18
will show you the VPN that I used. Now,
00:18:20
this is Malvad VPN. And MolvadVPN is
00:18:23
important because I've been using them
00:18:25
for years now. And they don't even know
00:18:27
that I'm one of their customers. Why?
00:18:30
It's because they're very anonymous. So,
00:18:32
the way that it works, and I'll show you
00:18:33
real quickly, is if you go to their
00:18:35
login page, you can make a brand new
00:18:38
account. And the way that this works is
00:18:40
you generate your account number. So,
00:18:42
here's a fresh number. You write this
00:18:44
somewhere down because this is the only
00:18:46
login information you have. And of
00:18:49
course, at that point, you go to the
00:18:50
account. Uh, you basically put in that
00:18:53
number like so. You log in. And from
00:18:56
here, you can absolutely send them cash.
00:18:58
You can send them a credit card. Whether
00:19:00
your credit card company allows you or
00:19:02
not, that's a different question. Or you
00:19:05
can wire them money, but what I prefer
00:19:07
is using a cryptocurrency like Monero,
00:19:10
Bitcoin, something truly anonymous. And
00:19:13
then as soon as you add stuff to their
00:19:14
account, you can go to the downloads
00:19:16
page, you can download Molvad for
00:19:18
Windows, Mac OS, Linux, iOS, Android,
00:19:22
and basically get access to a pretty
00:19:24
banger for I think it's like€5 a month.
00:19:28
and that will be all you need to access
00:19:30
the parts of the internet that the
00:19:32
United Kingdom now wants you to suddenly
00:19:34
verify yourself for. So they've really
00:19:36
imposed a lot of these [ __ ] laws
00:19:39
that even if you know sites are even
00:19:42
even if it's annoying to access certain
00:19:44
websites I think it's downright scary to
00:19:46
see parts of the internet now not
00:19:49
servicing one of the biggest countries
00:19:51
in the world the United Kingdom one of
00:19:53
the one of the most important
00:19:55
historically uh you know uh in the world
00:19:59
I if the internet is not free that's a
00:20:01
scary world we live in now is this going
00:20:04
to get repealed I don't know probably
00:20:05
not. Honestly, this is probably the
00:20:07
first step in a long step to see
00:20:10
multiple countries investing in their
00:20:12
own censorship. And as somebody that's
00:20:14
went to parts of the world where
00:20:15
accessing the internet is not a free
00:20:18
experience, okay, I've been to plenty of
00:20:19
countries where you cannot access the
00:20:22
internet freely, you know, there's
00:20:24
always the great firewall of China that
00:20:26
blocks you or whatever, you know, ISP
00:20:28
firewall. And I've always been so
00:20:30
blessed to come back to North America
00:20:32
and be able to open up my like phone,
00:20:34
open up my browser and just just browse
00:20:37
the internet to my heart's content. And
00:20:39
you know, again, I'm not from the UK,
00:20:42
but I definitely feel for anybody on
00:20:44
that side of the world that is now
00:20:45
living in a a a society where they are
00:20:49
ultimately there is censorship. I mean,
00:20:51
if 4chan and and and maybe Wikipedia
00:20:54
down the road isn't even servicing you,
00:20:56
is that not to an extent what censorship
00:20:58
is, right? Like, hey, yeah, the private
00:21:00
company was snuffed out because they
00:21:02
couldn't support some of these actual
00:21:04
crazy laws that they passed, these
00:21:06
verification requirements, and boom, all
00:21:08
of a sudden things are gone. Only the
00:21:10
biggest players in the game, you know,
00:21:11
notably Discord, I think YouTube can
00:21:13
really service the kind of people there.
00:21:16
But that's just a [ __ ] situation to
00:21:18
happen. Now, obviously, I think for a
00:21:20
lot of my UK viewers, right, which I
00:21:22
know there's a fair bit of, uh, one of
00:21:24
the things that is so important in this
00:21:26
is obviously the tour browser. Ignoring
00:21:28
all the VPNs, this is the only
00:21:32
networking framework that will at least
00:21:34
allow you to access the internet against
00:21:36
any forms of government censorship,
00:21:38
tracking, or surveillance. And I think
00:21:40
there's no better time now even to
00:21:43
access parts of the clear web now for
00:21:44
people in the EU than to start actually
00:21:47
using things like the tour relay because
00:21:50
the moment you have I think it's just
00:21:52
absurd that you have to start even
00:21:53
considering using this stuff to access
00:21:55
things in the western world. You know,
00:21:58
we're living in a time of censorship
00:22:00
coming at us from both the government
00:22:02
end and from private entities. And
00:22:04
honestly, we have to find some way to
00:22:06
fight back. And if it's using the tour
00:22:08
browser or if it's using VPN services
00:22:10
like Mulvad which have been raided with
00:22:12
search warrants and have still survived.
00:22:15
That's the world we live in ladies and
00:22:17
gentlemen. Truly dark times. Really is
00:22:20
what it is. But yeah, I wanted to talk
00:22:22
about it because overnight it seems like
00:22:24
for one of the biggest countries, the
00:22:26
internet suddenly became
00:22:31
the most restricted [ __ ] they've ever
00:22:33
had to seen. Anyways, if you like what
00:22:35
you saw, please like, comment, and
00:22:36
subscribe. Dislike if you dislike it. I
00:22:37
am