Is there any way to subvert a facebook ban? ( I dont want facebook but I'll eventually need it for my Rift S ) -

MilkTheCow

kiwifarms.net
So I got banned for openly stating that wokeness was a mental disease and that those who willingly spread it are a virus and need to be exterminated before they can breed and now I am finding that my Quest 2 is a paperweight and I fear that my Rift S will find the same fate after 2023 or whatever the cutoff date is.

I have other headsets but I prefer inside-out tracking and the G2 is too damn hard to get in a meaningful amount of time right now.

So my question is how can I get a new fagbook account? I tried everything I could think of and no amount of anonymity / browser / vpn / proxy / changing my ip seems to work, I cant fucking figure out how they keep getting me, the instant I even press create account I am instabanned, what the fuck?

I even tried Tor and the fagbook onion node in conjunction with all above mentioned shit and I am still instabanned, what the fuck are they using to track me?!

Maybe I am missing something because I am a high functioning autistic but I don't think so, and it's not like I'm using my real info or info connected with anything already associated with me when I register.
 

Jones McCann

“O brave new world that has such people in it.”
kiwifarms.net
You can try buying a vps or something like that but that won't help you when you go to use your headset. Your first mistake was being based and redpilled, but also using Facebook in the first place. As for how they're finding our it's you it could be they've banned proxies someway or there are cookies that aren't being cleared when Tor closes the browsing session, that would only happen if you've changed cookie settings from default.

edit: try reading through the tor design document and seeing if there's anything that you can apply to your situation that might be helping them identify you.
Despite the uncertainty, all fingerprinting attacks leverage the following attack vectors:

  1. Observing Request Behavior
    Properties of the user's request behavior comprise the bulk of low-hanging fingerprinting targets. These include: User agent, Accept-* headers, pipeline usage, and request ordering. Additionally, the use of custom filters such as AdBlock and other privacy filters can be used to fingerprint request patterns (as an extreme example).
  2. Inserting JavaScript
    JavaScript can reveal a lot of fingerprinting information. It provides DOM objects such as window.screen and window.navigator to extract information about the user agent. Also, JavaScript can be used to query the user's timezone via the Date() object, WebGL can reveal information about the video card in use, and high precision timing information can be used to fingerprint the CPU and interpreter speed. JavaScript features such as Resource Timing may leak an unknown amount of network timing related information. And, moreover, JavaScript is able to extract available fonts on a device with high precision.
  3. Inserting Plugins
    The Panopticlick project found that the mere list of installed plugins (in navigator.plugins) was sufficient to provide a large degree of fingerprintability. Additionally, plugins are capable of extracting font lists, interface addresses, and other machine information that is beyond what the browser would normally provide to content. In addition, plugins can be used to store unique identifiers that are more difficult to clear than standard cookies. Flash-based cookies fall into this category, but there are likely numerous other examples. Beyond fingerprinting, plugins are also abysmal at obeying the proxy settings of the browser.
  4. Inserting CSS
    CSS media queries can be inserted to gather information about the desktop size, widget size, display type, DPI, user agent type, and other information that was formerly available only to JavaScript.
 

MilkTheCow

kiwifarms.net
You can try buying a vps or something like that but that won't help you when you go to use your headset. Your first mistake was being based and redpilled, but also using Facebook in the first place. As for how they're finding our it's you it could be they've banned proxies someway or there are cookies that aren't being cleared when Tor closes the browsing session, that would only happen if you've changed cookie settings from default.

edit: try reading through the tor design document and seeing if there's anything that you can apply to your situation that might be helping them identify you.
Thankyou, I will give it a read
 

Rusty Crab

and it kept getting worse...
kiwifarms.net
They might be tracking you through cookies.

As for signing up through Tor, they probably ban those accounts outright. I honestly don't know why they would even allow signup. Most services don't.
Most services also tend to be really iffy about accounts that are made using a known vpn ip. I've noticed I tend to get instantly locked out of just about everything I sign up for when using one.

My advice: take a laptop out to a coffee shop, make SURE that all of the browsing/cookie data is cleared off and try making a new account. See what happens. After that, you can attempt to log on through a vpn.

As for vpn'ing mobile devices... that's a little iffier. You'll probably need to factory reset the Quest (if it will let you, who would buy VR from facebook lol). You can try something called a double-hop VPN. I've never set one up myself, but I intend to try it soon. I think you can do it with any cheap computer, but there's a lot of guides for how to do it on Raspberry Pi (~$100 for a complete kit).

1608168728255.png


EDIT: I am not entirely clear on if the client mobile device needs to be running special software to interface with the Raspberry Pi vpn. I believe there's ways to set it up so just connecting to your lan does that.

EDIT 2: Depending on where you are, you might also be able to just change your IP. I've done it before by just unplugging my router for a few hours. Make sure you check before and after for comparison. If you can factory reset/clear out everything, then that + ip change might be as good as a VPN, and much simpler than trying to set up a double hop.
 
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MilkTheCow

kiwifarms.net
They might be tracking you through cookies.

As for signing up through Tor, they probably ban those accounts outright. I honestly don't know why they would even allow signup. Most services don't.
Most services also tend to be really iffy about accounts that are made using a known vpn ip. I've noticed I tend to get instantly locked out of just about everything I sign up for when using one.

My advice: take a laptop out to a coffee shop, make SURE that all of the browsing/cookie data is cleared off and try making a new account. See what happens. After that, you can attempt to log on through a vpn.

As for vpn'ing mobile devices... that's a little iffier. You'll probably need to factory reset the Quest (if it will let you, who would buy VR from facebook lol). You can try something called a double-hop VPN. I've never set one up myself, but I intend to try it soon. I think you can do it with any cheap computer, but there's a lot of guides for how to do it on Raspberry Pi (~$100 for a complete kit).

View attachment 1793413

EDIT: I am not entirely clear on if the client mobile device needs to be running special software to interface with the Raspberry Pi vpn. I believe there's ways to set it up so just connecting to your lan does that.
thanks to you as well, and as for why I bought oculus, its just simple and straight forward, its light and the inside out tracking works so nice, its snappy too and the image quality is pleasant, I have used virtually every headset worth its salt from the oculus to the index to the Pimax 5k+ and no matter what everytime I still find myself gravitating back to the rift s for that sweet inside out tracking and it's buttery smooth framerate >.<
 
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