Behind The Veil Make Noise Don't Be Heard optimised • simplified • for everyone Linux Based
Behind The Veil, Make Noise Don't Be Heard optimized • simplified • for everyone Linux Based Made By 1tayH No coding necessary Flood Your ISP with Random, Noisy Data to Protect Your Privacy on the Internet
To complete this tutorial, you need a GitHub.com account and Internet access. You don’t need to know how to code, use the command line, or install Git (the version control software GitHub is built on).
Tip: Open this guide in a separate browser window (or tab) so you can see it while you complete the steps in the tutorial.
Open Source Project Can be Run on All Platforms For Proof of concept this will be based off setting up Raspberry Pi With NullZone* recommend a minimum of 8GB class 4 or class 10 microSD card. Download the image
Official images for recommended operating systems are available to download from the Raspberry Pi website.
Alternative distributions are available from third-party vendors.
If you're not using balenaEtcher, you'll need to unzip .zip downloads to get the image file (.img) to write to your SD card.
7-Zip (Windows)
The Unarchiver (Mac)
Unzip (Linux)
Writing an image to the SD card
Before you start, don't forget to check the SD card requirements.
You will need to use an image writing tool to install the image you have downloaded on your SD card.
balenaEtcher is a graphical SD card writing tool that works on Mac OS, Linux and Windows, and is the easiest option for most users. balenaEtcher also supports writing images directly from the zip file, without any unzipping required. To write your image with balenaEtcher:
Download balenaEtcher and install it.
Get to NullZON3 Net neutrality is dead and your internet service providers can collect all the data they want. While VPNs are a great way to protect some of that privacy, they're not perfect. There is another option, though, called NullZON3 it was inspired by Squawk, which is a bit of HTML code added to websites that cause the pages to send additional random requests, but Noisy makes it an easy-to-use and modify Python program
To Incude ADD FILTER
Pi-hole Network-wide ad blocking via your own Linux hardware
The Pi-hole® is a DNS sinkhole that protects your devices from unwanted content, without installing any client-side software.
Easy-to-install: our versatile installer walks you through the process, and takes less than ten minutes
Resolute: content is blocked in non-browser locations, such as ad-laden mobile apps and smart TVs
Responsive: seamlessly speeds up the feel of everyday browsing by caching DNS queries
Lightweight: runs smoothly with minimal hardware and software requirements
Robust: a command line interface that is quality assured for interoperability
Insightful: a beautiful responsive Web Interface dashboard to view and control your Pi-hole
Versatile: can optionally function as a DHCP server, ensuring all your devices are protected automatically
Scalable: capable of handling hundreds of millions of queries when installed on server-grade hardware
Modern: blocks ads over both IPv4 and IPv6
Free: open source software which helps ensure you are the sole person in control of your privacy
Codacy Badge Build Status BountySource One-Step Automated Install
Those who want to get started quickly and conveniently may install Pi-hole using the following command: curl -sSL https://install.pi-hole.net | bash Alternative Install Methods
Piping to bash is controversial, as it prevents you from reading code that is about to run on your system. Therefore, we provide these alternative installation methods which allow code review before installation: Method 1: Clone our repository and run
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/pi-hole/pi-hole.git Pi-hole cd "Pi-hole/automated install/" sudo bash basic-install.sh
Method 2: Manually download the installer and run
wget -O basic-install.sh https://install.pi-hole.net sudo bash basic-install.sh