Just remember that with this approach you have location privacy and
circumvention, but lose anonymity and make it much easier to both tie your
traffic to your identity *and* have a bit higher risk of data retention on the
VPS side.

~Griffin



-- Sent from my phone. Please excuse typos and 
e̳͖̲̮n̞̟̭̬̯c̞̘̹̜̰̯͍o̬͍̫d̢i͉͈̗͖̳̫ng̢͉̹̤ ̥̻̥ͅer̝͎̰̞̩͉̟r̠̼̩̬̱̹͔o̟̳r̫̜͎̥̹̀s̖̦. On 
Sun, Feb 21, 2016 at 1:17 PM, Scfith Rise up < [email protected] 
[[email protected]] > wrote:
I can point you in a direction that I took to accomplish this without having to
resort to a third party VPN. I am running my own VPN from a VPS and added it to
my proxychains file. Here is the github for proxychains-ng that I highly
recommend. This setup accomplishes what you ask, a list of ip addresses that it
chains through to the final destination. Your tor connection can be one of them
or not as you wish. Enjoy.

https://github.com/rofl0r/proxychains-ng


> On Feb 21, 2016, at 12:56 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>
> Some websites like Craigslist and Fiverr refuse to accept Tor connections.
They may either explicitly state this (Craigslist) or not let you create a new
account with Tor (Fiverr).
>
> Is there a way around this? For example, one can do: home IP ---> VPN IP --->
Tor node ---> Tor Node ---> Tor exit node ---> website.
>
> Can one do the other way: IP, then Tor, then VPN?
>
> In other words, use Tor but the last IP address is something other than the
exit node?
>
> Any suggestion and advice are appreciated.
> --
> tor-talk mailing list - [email protected]
> To unsubscribe or change other settings go to
> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
--
tor-talk mailing list - [email protected]
To unsubscribe or change other settings go to
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
-- 
tor-talk mailing list - [email protected]
To unsubscribe or change other settings go to
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk

Reply via email to