A Short Article About Offline Anonymity

Security

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Friends, many of you are running a business on the dark side or have some kind of dealing. Surely many of you are concerned about security and anonymity, because everyone wants to sleep soundly.
Nothing written below is a direct guide to action. All information is provided for informational purposes only.

So, let's get started.

The problem of trust prevents us from being completely carefree. We must trust the software we work with, the people we communicate with, and so on. Based on this concept, we will begin building our layer cake of anonymity with the first layer: the mental one.

"Your tongue is your enemy."

We've all seen "The Matrix." Remember Neo, who wrote DDOS bots and Trojans at night and worked for a corporation developing commercial software during the day? Be like Neo and realize the following: from the moment you start running a business on the dark side or conducting any kind of business, your life should be clearly divided into two parts that do not overlap: offline and online.

Nothing in common: people, logins, email addresses, instant messaging accounts (and their nicknames) should not match in real life and online. Let me remind you of the owner of Silk Road, who was so foolishly identified after several years of a carefree business. Long ago, when launching Silk Road, our glorious pirate screwed up with his nickname, which allowed his identity to be linked to his personal Gmail account.

No personal contact with people online: you've been chatting heart-to-heart with your "forger" for three years and decided to meet in person and have a beer together? They're already on their way. You never know who's on the other side of the screen; even when you telegram your mom, you can't be 100% sure she'll be the one to answer. Meet and date people in real life.

Don't gossip: no one, I repeat, NO ONE in real life should know what you're doing online. Don't brag about being a top-notch hacker/carder/virus writer. Especially don't tell your family, close friends, or loved ones about your activities. This puts them at risk. Along with the cryptorectal method, this is a way to pressure you and extract information. Even if you earn millions selling cardboard and Yandex DDoS, in real life you should be a simple, honest person. Divide your earnings, if you have a lot, into parts and invest. A white-collar business in real life will help you slowly launder your earnings—hello, Walter White. Find a cushy job that won't take up much of your time and where you can sit quietly at your laptop, communicating with clients.

Maximize the gap between your real life and the internet. The fewer people in real life who know what you're doing online, the better off you are. Just get used to it. It works.

P.S.Remember that true security and anonymity are primarily in your head. Be careful and don't foolishly expose yourself. Don't carry anything that could get you into trouble.