Comment on Are ISPs responsible for bots having residential IPs or is this a user problem?
Mordikan@kbin.earth 4 hours ago It would be like running TOR, but not a relay, it would be like an exit node.
That should be enough to warn anyone away from using them.
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 2 hours ago
Running an exit node is perfectly legal though. There would be no evidence you have done anything wrong very quickly.
You can just look at the testimonies from others who have run exit nodes. The cost of your "free" VPN is that law enforcement will constantly be in contact and investigating you because your network/machine is being used to download CSAM.
There is no "oh don't worry, A.B.C.D is just a tor node, we can give it a pass". Every time that happens, it has to be treated with a full investigation.
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 47 minutes ago
Let them waste their time investigating, actually how do they even know your address?
waldfee@feddit.org 29 minutes ago
They’d not only waste their time though, they’d also confiscate all the electronics they can find at your place
Ok, this I can answer personally as we did multiple cases of this happening (CSAM, bomb threats, etc) at work.
So, anonymity on the Internet is not actually a thing. Whether its an IP address or telecom switch or whatever, there is a path back to you even if only for either billing or connectivity purposes. So, for IP, we would receive a subpoena signed by a judge to hand over any and all information regarding the identify of the a given IP address (they include a long list of things whether applicable or not in the order so every potential base is covered). Once legal was able to review and handed it off to us, we take that and look at the DHCP logs to see that on a given date at a given time that the IP address was assigned as part of shelf A / slot B / port C. That shelf/slot/port combination is tied physically to an address/account. We provide the relevant logs and personal information of that user to law enforcement.
For bomb threats over the phone, telecom switches love to tell every other telecom switch who they are (again, connectivity purposes). So, when you make a call to a business/school doing that, their PBX is going to log to the millisecond when that call occurred and who the switch was. Again, subpoena and we pull the SIP logs. We can even provide the RTP/RTCP packets and reconstruct the phone call audio if the subpoena asks for that.