 | ie. you have to sign into the page (eg. insidenetwork.signinpage.com), and THEN you can access the internet?
What exactly are you trying to do, and are asking for help in breaking whatever AUP / regulations this inside network has on what content you can view? Your question isn't quite clear.
Regards |
 NN @183.62.37.x | Thanks for your attention.
In fact, I'm trying to break through the blocks in the public network that prevent me from rearching website such as facebook and filesonic.
You kown I'm now live in a country that you can't even visit google because they block it.
VPN just a solution that I found to break this block.
However now I'm using web login gateway system from an inner(local) network, and it needs me to keep the login page open in order to visit the public network.
This web login page can only be acess from IPs inside the inner(local) network.
And here is the problem: After I used a VPN, my IP changed, right ? Then, I can't visit this web login page because I don't have an IP inside the inner(local) network now.(In fact, it's the page it self can't reach me now. It seems like using a flashplayer10 plugin to exam whether I'm accessilbe to this web page.) No login page, no access to the public network.
Thus I can't reach the public network because the VPN changed my IP.
Is there any solution or alternative to let me break the block ? |
 1 edit | reply to NN I would think that, after you access the ISP's login page and keep it open (or whatever the requirement is), then you could visit/launch your own VPN and it would be allowed
...the whole point of VPN is that it's a secure tunnel that others cant "see" into, so as long as your ISP will allow you to get to the point of creating the VPN tunnel - after the tunnel comes up, they can't mess with that.
"After I used a VPN, my IP changed, right?" - No, not exactly... You're right that your machine does get a new IP address "from" the VPN, but that is private/internal to your machine only, not accessible to the ISP, so any login page forced by the ISP should not care about or see that. You still keep the original IP as assigned by your ISP.
It seems like your ISP's login page, and the fact that this window has to be kept open, might be a sort of VPN itself - and the issue becomes how to direct your traffic over your VPN and not their VPN - as flash player will always take the first/default route.
Perhaps if you were to setup a virtual server, or had a friend in another country, I think you could use join.me or remote desktop/terminal services to access a PC in another location.
Perhaps webevader.org may help you to access some blocked sites, even without having to use a VPN.
Obviously, you pursue this at your own risk. Have you researched what the penalty is if you are caught circumventing the restrictions china has in place? |