Hmm, doesn't this undermine the whole purpose of encryption? If I understand that right, there will always be unencrypted stuff of me? Also when I completely shutdown?
Hehe, no stupid questions I guess! When googling about this type of stuff, I often stumble across some claims I simply cannot verify myself. Some people say it's unsafe, some people say it slows down everything and so on and some answers are from >10 years ago, so I feel the need to clarify what's the status quo. Thanks for your view on that.
I will take that into consideration. I already encrypted my older laptop (hard drive) with LUKS.
Is there something special, when it comes to encrypting SSD's? Do you experience speed losses of SSD after doing so?
Let's say the torrent started with a working DNS and the issue occured some hours later. Maybe the client wants to check for IP-updates then, but won't find any, because DNS doesn't work anymore. It will still keep the IP-adresses resolved at the beginning, right? Because then it would make sense, that I saw some working torrents, even though the issue already appeared.
Yeah, did that. Couldn't DNS-resolve the website because of the issue, but going via direct IP of the "check-website" (found via who.is) made me at least check my IP, which turned out to be the VPN-IP. Torrent-IP-Checking won't work, because torrents seem to need at least DNS-resolving at the beginning of download.
Yeah, I tried that with disconnecting and the torrents stopped immediately, which is good.
Just wondering, why I cannot open any websites in the morning, while the torrents are still working...leaves a bad feeling, but maybe I'm also overreacting about this.
I'm using Debian too. I switched to linux because of privacy reasons and my second thought was that it would be nice if it's completely developed by an open community without a bigger corporation behind it.
Works great so far. See no reason to change distros.
Already opened a PeerTube account. From time to time I take a look whats going on there.