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Three easy ways to read blocked sites in your country for free (+ video)
Three easy ways to read blocked sites in your country for free (+ video)
Anonim
Three easy ways to read blocked sites in your country for free (+ video)
Three easy ways to read blocked sites in your country for free (+ video)

By the will of fate, I ended up in an interesting country Kazakhstan, namely in the city of Almaty. While working on the Internet, I came across an amusing phenomenon - here many of our familiar sites are blocked at the level of a monopoly provider who solely owns an Internet channel in the country. In my case, I could not access any blog on the LJ platform (livejournal.com), but for you and us this should not be a problem - we read not what we are allowed to read, but what we ourselves want:) We we offer you as many as three ways of completely primitive bypassing the imposed spell on your Internet.

One click VPN tunnel

To read the blocked resources, you need to do only one thing - wrap your traffic in a VPN (encrypted data tunnel) and no one can block it, since it is not clear what is going through it. I will not tell you how to set up such a tunnel or buy access to a remote service, since there is an easier solution. I had the program installed a long time ago TunnelBear (there is a version for Windows and Mac), which in one click brings up a VPN with an endpoint in the US or UK. I used it earlier to open an account on Spotify and Google Music, pretending to be British:) The program provides free 500 MB of traffic per month and this figure is updated every month. All you need to read blocked sites is to install TunnelBear and enable tunneling. In 10 seconds and LJ in Kazakhstan and YouTube in Turkey and all other sites will be open for you as if you are a resident of Britain or the United States.

This is how it works live.

If 500 MB is not enough for you, then for $ 4.95 per month or $ 49.99 per year you will make your Internet absolutely free.

Read LJ via RSS

You can read LiveJournal entries not only using tunneling, but simply by subscribing to the RSS feed of the desired blog.

Read Websites in Opera

And also, the Opera browser has a traffic saving mode that passes all Internet traffic through Opera's proxy servers, so nominally you get traffic not from LiveJournal, but from the Opera cloud.:) That's how I got access to the blocked LiveJournal in one click in the opera.

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How do you solve the problem of blocking resources in your country?

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