How to download more hot dudes fucking - faster!
-
Many "free" wifi hotspots block all porn sites - UNLESS you use a VPN proxy such as NordVPN or Privado.
I never turned my VPN on at home, and only used them to access gay porn in places like churches, parks, libraries, hospitals, etc. (I am partially kidding). Anyway, I have found that at home, the download speeds are actually about twice as FAST when using the VPN proxy! I don't know why, other than my ISP might be throttling me, but it is faster.
You might want to teste this out on your own homo computers in your bedrooms.
Let me know what results you had. Specifically if your download speeds were faster WITH your vpn proxy on. -
@lololulu19 This is likely because your ISP is throttling P2P traffic. While this is a practice that is banned in Canada now, it is something that happens in many other countries. When you use a VPN, your ISP does not see the P2P traffic, but rather, sees the VPN traffic, which gets categorized and prioritized differently from P2P traffic.
-
@MrMazda Thanks for that information. Up until about 10 years ago, my ISP throttled me SEVERELY even though they assured me over and over that they were not. I know they were, and there was PROOF of it.
The speeds I get are so fast that even when they do throttle me, I still get everything I want (unless it vanishes from the site an hour after it was posted).
-
@lololulu19 Yeah... ISP's in Canada used to do the same thing. They'd be all shady and swear up, down, and sideways that they do not throttle you, but then a bunch of independent IT gurus started running various tests and found that P2P traffic would get slowed right down to a crawl, but when the exact same P2P traffic was run through a VPN, the issue did not exist. Long story short, it went to the CRTC (the Canadian version of the FCC) and many providers got into a LOT of trouble as this practice was not properly advertised in their ToS.
Thankfully, in Canada now, the practice of throttling a customer is outright banned. The ONLY time that they're allowed to throttle a customer is in a case where their plan only includes a set amount of data that can be transferred before the throttle applies, in which case, they must specify in the QoS section of the ToS exactly how and when the throttle applies, meaning they must specify how much data must be transferred in how long of a period before the throttle applies, as well as what speeds they get throttled to, and for how long the throttle applies. As this is generally too much hassle for most providers to do, generally the only way you'll find any kind of throttling now in Canada is on mobile data packages.
As for the mobile data packages, the QoS in the ToS is often very clear that say 20 GB of data must be transmitted in a billing period, at which point, the customer usually gets throttled to 512kbit symmetrical for the remainder of the billing period. As for more traditional connections such as Cable, DSL, or Fibre, you'll be hard pressed to find one that throttles traffic now in Canada.