I have unlimited cellular data on my phone but not if I use it as a hotspot.
I have unlimited cellular data on my phone but not if I use it as a hotspot.
What is the difference between cellular data being used on my phone and cellular data being used on my notebook? Data is data.
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How do they even know if you use your data as a hotspot? That's just ridiculous!
27 1 ReplyMakes you wonder what else they know about what you're doing online.
21 0 ReplyRead permanent record by snowden
10 0 ReplyHe wrote that 5 years ago (admittedly I have yet to read it), so who knows what they've been able to do since then than he hadn't even thought of.
5 0 ReplyIt's still very relevant and one of the most mind blowing things I've ever read
7 0 ReplyOh I'm sure it's still relevant, I'm saying things have probably gotten even worse.
2 0 ReplyWell if you ever read it you'll wonder how it can even get any worse haha
2 0 ReplyIt can always get worse. Any time someone says it can't get any worse, it does.
I was told abortion restrictions couldn't get any worse too. Then they started removing rape exceptions.
2 0 Reply
Probably local/system services on the app when the SIM is activated (like it's with sim locked phones)
11 1 ReplyNope, it’s either inspecting the TTL of packets coming from your phone (unless you have a VERY custom setup, the TTL from devices other than your phone will be very different), or it’s deep packet inspection. I tried to trick t-mobile last year into giving me home internet on a phone sim, so I did a whack ton of research.
23 0 ReplyDid you find a way to avoid detection?
6 0 ReplyOn US Mobile (Verizon) using a VPN on my phone when tethering seems to bypass detection. At least the meter on the dashboard says I've used 0gb hotspot.
2 0 Reply
Monitoring DNS requests to their own servers.
5 0 ReplyThey look at the TTL of the incoming packets. This can be modified in the windows registry.
1 1 Reply