Noob here. This is probably the most repeated question, but I don’t know the technical terms to make the appropiate digging online, and thought of asking humans before slopping my way around.
I don’t trust my ISP or the government above it.
The ISP remotely manages the local network! So I installed a router of my own and my devices only to that one.
I would like to encrypt (?) anything that goes out of my own router, so my ISP doesn’t evesdrop what I’m doing even if they want to (I know I know… if they really wanted, they could just send friends to my house).
Using Linux, Android GOS, and Pihole. They live under a “picked-up-from-a-shelf” router; and that router under theirs.
(I cannot get a different ISP)
Thanks
I don’t trust my ISP or the government above it.
I think everyone here today doesn’t trust their ISP and government.
Use a #VPN or #TOR,Your ISP will only know the destination point, all traffic will be encrypted through a #tunnel
You said you installed a router. How did you configure the modem? In Full Bridge?
Also start changing your #DNS, don’t use your ISP’s default ones
My pihole serves dns. If not found, it goes directly to root tables (I forgot how they are called).
The router, I just connected its WAN port to the ISP’s switch/router/AP. Within the LAN under my router I have DHCP sending everybody to do lookups to the pihole. I don’t know what full bridge is.
The ISP’s modem/router/switch/AP, I cannot configure. It is a fucking “smart” brick remotely controlled.
@certified_expert
so the modem that you have from your ISP it is not possible to configure it as,ONT,Bridge or Full Bridge. 🤔Since you are just starting out, I recommend you start by subscribing to a VPN, (don’t use the free ones)
avoid tor for now, I use Mullvad which only allows 5 devices at the same time, but there are others, choose those that don’t keep logs.
A VPN? That routes the traffic to the other server, so the ISP can only see you’re connecting to a VPN. Most people recommend Mullvad, I personally use Proton and Windscribe, both free, open source, and trusted.
I also don’t trust my ISP nor my national government, which is why the bulk of my private Internet use goes over a fail-close VPN.


