> "When anonymity is a factor, pay with an un-trackable currency," explains Andrew from PrivateInternetAccess.
> "For example, signup for an anonymous e-mail account using Tor and use a Bitcoin Mixer to send Bitcoins to a newly generated address in your local wallet.
Kind of pointless to go to such lengths when the VPN provider has your IP address.
Many VPN services claim that they do not maintain connection logs. Also, it's much safer to use bitcoins and a masked email address in case of breach by a party that doesn't have the authority to subpoena your ISP for the IP info. Also, there are plenty of ways to misdirect via IP if there is any suspicion that logs are maintained, and in that case they won't be able to easily tell who you are, as they would if you had filed a real credit card (or even a real email address).
> Many VPN services claim that they do not maintain connection logs
If you're paying for the service, then you need to authenticate to it either with a password or certificate. Either way, the VPN provider knows when you're connected. Also, to prevent sharing of accounts, they will often limit the number of IP addresses you can connect from (within a certain period of time), which means that almost all of them log IP addresses and connection times. That information, combined with other evidence, could be enough to connect you to certain activities.
For example, suppose you're harassing someone on a forum and they get the cops involved. They know the date and time of all of your posts, so they go to your VPN provider, and you're the only person who was connected every single time a post was made. Now, it's good to catch people like that, but if you require strong anonymity just use Tor.
There is absolutely no reason they would have to to log ip addresses to prevent account sharing. They can easily limit you to one logon at a time or simply ignore sharing and limit each account's bandwidth, preferably rounded to the megabyte or coarser.
Exactly, this. It's hard to be truly anonymous. But I have considered one day modding a satellite dish + network adapter to use the local library's WiFi instead (or the neighbors' if the library's walls are too thick). I've heard of people doing it and it seemed interesting at the time, but I can't find any cheap dishes on my local Craigslist.
EDIT: Just to clarify, I agree with the use of untraceable currency and an e-mail address not linked to your identity when you're signing up for services where you want anonymity.
Admittedly I know almost nothing about bitcoins but suggestions like "use a patched Bitcoin client" and linking to Bitcoin-OTC,"a marketplace located in #bitcoin-otc channel on the freenode IRC network" imply a certain level of geekiness to even use this thing. Are there any good "bitcoins for dummies" kind of resources, or software that hides most of the complexity under a friendly UI for mere mortals?
Despite the title, this article isn't aimed at people looking for general-purpose private/secure communication. It's specifically for those who want to torrent pirated music/movies/tv, but do not want to leave any way for a subpoena from the US government to reveal their contact information. The goal isn't just privacy, but anonymity.
VPNs still work perfectly for private/secure communication, as long as you trust whoever's on the other end -- for most people, this is their employer.
For those who truly do need to be anonymous, Tor is still the standard. It doesn't work if you need to transfer terabytes of data anonymously, but it's fine for browsing or small-scale file exchange (eg wikileaks).
So this seems to be about using IP tunneling that is terminated at a commercial tunnel provider who promises anonymity, to hide your real address. As opposed to the usual meaning of VPN referring to IPSec or similar for confidentiality/integrity, and/or tunneling into the soft inside of the corporate "intranet".
> "For example, signup for an anonymous e-mail account using Tor and use a Bitcoin Mixer to send Bitcoins to a newly generated address in your local wallet.
Kind of pointless to go to such lengths when the VPN provider has your IP address.