AskSatanOperator said:
Sometimes I meet people who do not use the internet safely and therefore I am afraid to tell them about the joy of Satan, tell me they will not be detected by the special services?
Using one VPN [or more] is important not only for browsing JoS sites, but also for everyday, basic browsing [for example, if you just want to read something]. It's matter that which VPN you choose - RiseupVPN has the most transparent policies and is highly encrypted and security-oriented.
Mullvad is similar, but it's paid. ProtonVPN is better used through WireGuard or OpenVPN if you choose this. Changing your DNS address is also essential, because if you use a VPN but your DNS address is the same, you are not safe from your ISP.
Since DNS addresses are generated by default by your ISP in [/etc/resolv.conf], you will know exactly what pages you are visiting. Kundalini-Tool includes Dns-Changer, so it is very important that you use it.
WebRTC, if not disabled, will open the door to your real IP address, even if you are using a VPN. Your IP address can be read if WebRTC is not disabled. You can change this in about:config in Firefox-based browsers. In Chromium-based browsers, you can change it with extensions like WebRTC Leak Shield.
Also disable cookies, JavaScript globally for everyday web browsing, as they can track you. JavaScript is an attack surface on sites, plus they can track you. If a site uses JavaScript, that site is crap. There must be an important reason for a page to use JS.
You don't even need JavaScript for a forum because you can write code in safe PHP [experience].
It's not enough to have a secure Linux distribution, VPN and Tor at the same time. The Tor browser without configuration adds nothing to security except anonymity. The right browser choice, configuration and accessories are essential.
Without add-ons like uMatrix, Adnauseam [Adnauseam includes uBlock Origin], Decentraleyes, ClearURL's and User-Agent Switcher I would never go online. You can track web traffic if you don't disable cookies, JS, jewgle/jewcrosoft/cockflare sites.
One bad thing about JavaScript is that you don't know what it's doing in the background. Because [unless it's in public source] you can't read the code, so you have no idea what it's doing. Also, Xhr is tied to JavaScript, which is also bad.
While using uMatrix, watch a video on jewtube and see how many unsolicited requests uMatrix makes in a single video. If you want to be sure, choose a proper Linux distribution, run the whole system through Tor [Kundalini-Tool - Torify], connect to the Tor browser, configure, add extensions.
Or better yet, while using Torify, you can start a Whonix in VirtualBox and do your thing through that.