AlexCross Posted July 11, 2013 Share Posted July 11, 2013 Beamslider^ Thanks for the tutorial and help, I saw it after I made the post above. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlexCross Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 Ok, today I changed DNS to google's, but DNS leak test it stills get my ISP, but I noticed something, I have IPV6, sometimes when reconnect my network I get IPv4 and sometimes IPv6, so this could be the problem? VPNs don't work with IPv6? and this is why sometimes DNS leak test work and sometimes not? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeetPirate Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 OpenDNS provides recursive IPv6 domain resolution services at the following DNS Server IP addresses:2620:0:ccc::22620:0:ccd::2Test your settings:http://www.test-ipv6.com/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlexCross Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 Test result:Your DNS server (possibly run by your ISP) appears to have IPv6 Internet access.Your readiness score : 10/10 for your IPv6 stability and readiness, when publishers are forced to go IPv6 only Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beamslider Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 You can configure the IPv6 DNS server the same way in the network card that you did the IPv4 DNS server. If you prefer google the following are the google servers. Try configuring both. Or you can disable IPV6 in Windows if you have no real need for it.The Google Public DNS IP addresses (IPv4) are as follows:8.8.8.88.8.4.4 The Google Public DNS IPv6 addresses are as follows:2001:4860:4860::88882001:4860:4860::8844 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cerberus Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 Sorry for not getting back on this subject last night but had a busy day then I was tired and went to bed. I see others are pointing you in the right direction in the case of your isp. Its a trial and error till you can figure it out. To be honest there is no true way to hide your tracks. If any angency want to find you they will. In fact in the USA the gov. is working with vpn's now so there is no true secured way of surfing anymore. Never really was. Now if USA sees a vpn or ip hider it sets a red flag and they will investigate. It was on the news. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlexCross Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 Ahh, this world is crazy, can't imagine how the internet will be in 10 years from now on. Thanks to all who helped me, I managed to make my VPN usable with your advices, before these changes I had to try 8-10 servers to find one that can work with hulu or any site who has regional restriction, but now all works. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bgood Posted July 12, 2013 Share Posted July 12, 2013 been a long time dying..here at home since 2010 performing domain names seizures"The domain name seizures affect the world wide web in its entirety since they are performed bypassing the original registrar and forcing VeriSign and Afilias (american companies which administer TLDs like .org, .net, .info and .com) to transfer the domain name to USA authorities property. No proper judicial overview is guaranteed during the seizure."so Google & OpenDNS maybe not so good idea?i think commodo and a search online provides alternatives.some folks well being in other parts of the world may not be as forgiving as here at home.Cheers! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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