I can assist you with that free internet method. Please let me know what you need help understanding or implementing.
I can assist you with that free internet method. Please let me know what you need help understanding or implementing.
Hello everyone, I'm really sorry about how I'm going to explain today's topic. I'm not very familiar with it. My friend offered a free internet service that was fast—about 50 Mbps download and 8 Mbps upload, plus unlimited bandwidth. It was also very affordable, especially since I usually pay $20 a month for only 4 Mbps download and 0.2 Mbps upload. That's not great, but he managed it by using SIM cards from abroad. He was replacing them regularly because the logos weren't clear. He also had a VPS to deliver internet to his clients using SSH tunneling with tools like "http injector" or "OpenVPN." I'm curious about how he identified those SIM cards and set up the VPS to work that way. Can anyone help me understand this better? Thanks!
These cards are likely stolen or unauthorized. There should be no need for this action. I'm not confident about their privacy or data security either.
Sure, just shut it down now and reset your history. Just remember, it might be against the law—handle it wisely.
I don’t have it anymore. The companies abroad aren’t in the same country, and those prepaid SIMs don’t work when restarting the VPS. The issue wasn’t with the SIMs—it was the VPS. If you disable OpenVPN or HTTP injector, you won’t get internet, which confirms it wasn’t from the cards. Some people in the Philippines mention this is quite common there.
I reside in Africa... they don't understand anything about these matters!
A friend experimented with sim cards from different ASEAN nations across Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Some functioned when switching countries, while others failed. He maintained a limited set as he moved between regions. His method likely involved lightly sanding the cards to obscure their origin, preventing detection and avoiding shutdowns. In North America, a few individuals relied solely on hotspot usage for a few months before needing service renewal due to changes in functionality. One person even used Alexa with his e-bike, changing songs at intersections while streaming. He also explored storm drains, leaving phones at exits to track the hotspot connection. Most cases involved a chain of eight devices, including the hotspot and the one being streamed from.
I was using a method for more than two years. He would give us different SIM cards regularly, which was really helpful. I used it to stream YouTube, download games from Steam and Origin, and more. It was fast, unlimited, and affordable since my provider charged a lot—like 20 dollars for just 4mbps downloads and 0.2 upload. What a mess! This isn’t the internet; he was charging whatever he wanted because he was the only one in my country. Where are you with this?