03-30-2025, 03:39 AM
Even though a VPN is way better than a proxy, if it doesn’t have the right features, you’re still at risk. Always pick a reliable, secure VPN with the right tools to keep your opsec tight and your identity safe.
Here's 3 basic points why (in my opinion) a VPN is way better for opsec on red teaming, making sure your op stays under the radar.
1. Full Encryption vs Partial Encryption
VPN: This one is the heavy hitter. When you use a VPN, everything gets encrypted, all your traffic, not just part of it. This means the connection between you and the VPN server is secure, and everything you do on the internet is protected from snooping. Whether you’re browsing, sending data, or even doing things like running tools, it’s all encrypted. It’s like wrapping yourself in an invisible cloak.
PROXY (even with encryption): Only secures the connection between you and the proxy server. Once your traffic leaves the proxy and heads to the destination server, its unprotected unless it’s using encryption there too (like HTTPS). So, yeah, the proxy’s encryption is partial, it doesnt cover the entire journey. That leaves a lot of room for things to get compromised along the way.
2. Hiding Your IP Completely
VPN: A VPN changes your entire connection’s IP. You get a new IP address that’s associated with the VPN server, not your actual location. This makes it super hard to trace the attack back to you. It masks everything about your origin, so even if someone tries to track your traffic, they’re going to hit a wall.
PROXY: A proxy can hide your IP, but only for the specific app or service that’s going through it. And if you’re using multiple proxies or you’re hopping between different services, it can get messy and you might leak your real IP somewhere.
3. Legal and Privacy Protection
VPN: Most VPN providers don’t log your activity (especially the good ones), so you get that sweet privacy protection. Your traffic is basically invisible, and even if someone subpoenas the VPN provider, they can’t hand over what they don’t have. Plus, VPNs from countries with strong privacy laws (like Switzerland or Panama) give an added layer of protection.
PROXY: Many proxies, especially free ones, log your data and can hand it over to authorities if needed. Plus, free proxies might be run by shady entities looking to harvest your data (free VPNs too). So if you’re running a red team op, this is a big red flag. You can’t afford to have your data exposed.
So yeah, VPNs are the go-to tool for full security and privacy. If you're serious about your red team ops, don’t mess around with proxies, even the encrypted ones.
But hey, VPNs aren't miraculous. There’s other stuff to think about, like geopolitics, but we’ll save that for another thread.
Tell me your opinions fellas
Here's 3 basic points why (in my opinion) a VPN is way better for opsec on red teaming, making sure your op stays under the radar.
1. Full Encryption vs Partial Encryption
VPN: This one is the heavy hitter. When you use a VPN, everything gets encrypted, all your traffic, not just part of it. This means the connection between you and the VPN server is secure, and everything you do on the internet is protected from snooping. Whether you’re browsing, sending data, or even doing things like running tools, it’s all encrypted. It’s like wrapping yourself in an invisible cloak.
PROXY (even with encryption): Only secures the connection between you and the proxy server. Once your traffic leaves the proxy and heads to the destination server, its unprotected unless it’s using encryption there too (like HTTPS). So, yeah, the proxy’s encryption is partial, it doesnt cover the entire journey. That leaves a lot of room for things to get compromised along the way.
2. Hiding Your IP Completely
VPN: A VPN changes your entire connection’s IP. You get a new IP address that’s associated with the VPN server, not your actual location. This makes it super hard to trace the attack back to you. It masks everything about your origin, so even if someone tries to track your traffic, they’re going to hit a wall.
PROXY: A proxy can hide your IP, but only for the specific app or service that’s going through it. And if you’re using multiple proxies or you’re hopping between different services, it can get messy and you might leak your real IP somewhere.
3. Legal and Privacy Protection
VPN: Most VPN providers don’t log your activity (especially the good ones), so you get that sweet privacy protection. Your traffic is basically invisible, and even if someone subpoenas the VPN provider, they can’t hand over what they don’t have. Plus, VPNs from countries with strong privacy laws (like Switzerland or Panama) give an added layer of protection.
PROXY: Many proxies, especially free ones, log your data and can hand it over to authorities if needed. Plus, free proxies might be run by shady entities looking to harvest your data (free VPNs too). So if you’re running a red team op, this is a big red flag. You can’t afford to have your data exposed.
So yeah, VPNs are the go-to tool for full security and privacy. If you're serious about your red team ops, don’t mess around with proxies, even the encrypted ones.
But hey, VPNs aren't miraculous. There’s other stuff to think about, like geopolitics, but we’ll save that for another thread.
Tell me your opinions fellas