I waited and switched my laptop back to Debian Linux from Windows 8.1
and build my WiFi Driver from source. (it was a Microsoft Driver for
the Edimax Nano Wifi) (the source was from edimax) and afterwards I
was able to connect to Tor without crashing the entire WiFi Network. I
wonder if Microsoft's Driver was tapped or something. I agree the US
is not as safe as it used to be.
Quoting Yuri <y...@rawbw.com>:
On 02/01/2015 13:50, Matthew Finkel wrote:
Wow. That is quite coincidence. Can you ask your friend to contact
CenturyLink and ask them why this happened. It appears no one has
experienced this or, at least, no one updated the Good/Bad ISP wiki
page with this[0].
I didn't get the OP's e-mail, but (assuming this is in US) customers
have a lot of leverage. Just keep tor and torrent clients running,
and call their customer service, and demand an explanation why the
service they charge you money for doesn't work. Let them send the
live technician to fix the problem. Escalate this as much as
possible. Eventually they will have to fix your connection (with the
mentioned services running). And if they don't, you can sue them in
small claims court and demand compensation for all time, effort,
suffering, emotional distress, deprivation of service, etc, etc,
etc. And you will likely easily win the case.
Just trying to work around the problem in technical ways with
bridges, Pluggable Transport, trying to hide tor traffic isn't
necessarily the right way to deal with the problem.
Yuri
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