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An Ethical Guide to Cyber Anonymity

You're reading from   An Ethical Guide to Cyber Anonymity Concepts, tools, and techniques to protect your anonymity from criminals, unethical hackers, and governments

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801810210
Length 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Kushantha Gunawardana Kushantha Gunawardana
Author Profile Icon Kushantha Gunawardana
Kushantha Gunawardana
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Basics of Privacy and Cyber Anonymity
2. Chapter 1: Understanding Sensitive Information FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Ways That Attackers Use Your Data 4. Part 2: Methods and Artifacts That Attackers and Competitors Can Collect from You
5. Chapter 3: Ways That Attackers Reveal the Privacy of Individuals and Companies 6. Chapter 4: Techniques that Attackers Use to Compromise Privacy 7. Chapter 5: Tools and Techniques That Attackers Use 8. Chapter 6: Artifacts that Attackers Can Collect from You 9. Part 3: Concepts and Maintaining Cyber Anonymity
10. Chapter 7: Introduction to Cyber Anonymity 11. Chapter 8: Understanding the Scope of Access 12. Chapter 9: Avoiding Behavior Tracking Applications and Browsers 13. Chapter 10: Proxy Chains and Anonymizers 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

VPN solutions

When it comes to maintaining anonymity and privacy, we cannot ignore VPN solutions. VPNs have been around for a long time, even before the internet was introduced. Before the internet was introduced, there was no common way to connect multiple networks. The only available option was to use someone else’s network that was already implemented to connect two networks. For example, let’s say you had a Local Area Network (LAN) in one geographical location and you had another LAN in a different geographical location. If you needed to communicate from one LAN to another since there was no internet at that time, you could use an already established network maintained by a different company, but the question was that even if the physical network was there, when you connected your LAN to it, the company owning the network could see the communication that you sent through it. To overcome this problem, traffic between one LAN and another LAN was encrypted so that the...

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