Virtulization is a piece of technology that allows you to, as the name suggests, virtualize operating systems without actually installing it into your computer. To virtualize an operating system, you must install a program called VirtualBox (you may also install another program that does the same thing (Linux has a few options) but, in my opinion, VirtualBox is the most user-friendly of them all)
Virtualization allows you to try out new operating systems, which is a great way
to learn Linux.
Operating systems are stored in a file that ends with iso. When you install an operating system, the installer piece of code within the iso file gets run, and it performs the install.
Creating a virtual operating system is simple; download the correct iso, open VirtualBox, and press new, then follow the instructions. You can just default everything. Note: The virtual operating system will be contained in a folder, and the size will most likely be big. You can set the size to a smaller one, but there is a minimum storage requirement for each OS.
Special install notes for jewdows 10:
you will need to go into your virtual machine's settings, and disable the internet by putting an invalid setting (which will prevent internet access).
Go search for jewdows 10 activation keys. This is legal, as these websites have been up for a long time, in most cases. The reason why microjew does not go after these websites, is because you end up using their product, anyways, and give the jews your data.
Once that is done, you can do the nasty jewish install where you are forced to agree to be spied on to use the computer (no worries if vm, of course) that you own.
Jewdos has the ability to detect when it is ran in a virtual machine. If you have installed jewdos, go to the task manager. You will see that it says that it is virtualized.
Virtual machines have security benefits. The virtualized operating system can be viewed as a "container". Therefor, what happens inside the virtual machine, stays in the virtual machine.
I have read that Jewdows can see/read what is inside a virtual machine. I do not know if this is true or not, as there is not any way to see what information microjew is collecting. You can encrypt the virtual machine, but that requires an extension that can be installed.
So what is the point to virtualize, if it is not safe?
This is where Whonix comes in. Whonix is a Linux operating system that only runs in a virtual machine. It is essentially two virtual machines, in one package. The way it works differs from your usual operating system. The two virtual machines are Whonix Gateway and Whonix Workstation.
Note: BOTH must be ran at the same time. They can not work by themselves.
The way Whonix works is as follows:
The Whonix Gateway is configured to go through Tor. Your internet access goes through
the Whonix Gateway first, which goes through Tor.
The routed traffic comes back to the Whonix Gateway, which sends it to the Whonix
Workstation.
The Whonix Workstation goes through Tor, and then you get internet access.
All of that routing may make your internet pages load slow. However, you are now quite hard to unmask. If an attacker/hacker were to try to figure out your actual IP address, they would have to first trace back the Tor traffic to the source IP, which would be the Tor IP from the Whonix Gateway. So they have to again trace back the traffic. If you are wise, and you have a VPN, that would be yet another obstacle for them to break (which is a good thing). That is a lot of layers to go through. But, keep in mind that breaking the barriers is not impossible. A company like microjew got hacked, and they have some of the tightest security measures in the world (so nobody can know how much the jews actually know about us).
There is an even more sophisticated OS that you can use to even further protect yourself.
It is called Qubes OS. This one, however, can not be ran in a virtual machine. This one requires you to actually install it on your drive. This means that you always boot into Qubes OS, unless you dual-boot, but getting rid of the installed operatin system is not always easy. You can loose all your data if you do not know what you are doing.
Qubes is a virtualized operating system, however, it its self is not virtual, but all components
are virtualized, with the Qubes OS being the brain that controls it all. Your internet, programs, etc, is all a virtual machine that only has access to what it needs to run, and it does not communicate with anything else. Yes, it is an operating system that launches everything as a virtual machine.The secuity benefits are extremely high. If anything were to try to hack through, it would end up in a void, as there is nothing to go to. All the hacker would is land in containers. Tor may be used, too.
For security reaons, you should not allow copy/pasting from host (your actual operating system) and the virtual machine. That is just one extra piece of information that you can avoid giving away.
From my understanding, jewdows 11 can not be virtualized. Also, that operating system forces you to make a microjew account, and to my knowledge, there is no work-around. I would strongly encourage you to learn Linux, and make the switch to Linux. Yes, it is not as user-friendly as Windows, yes, there are very few games that are playable on Linux out-of-the-box (there are ways), but the security benefits are much higher, and no annoying updates!
And that is it for the cybersecurity series! Stay safe! This series covered the major steps
you can take to secure your privacy online, and reduce the amount of data that you give to the jews.
HAIL ENKI!!!!
HAIL ENLIL!!!!
HAIL ISHTAR!!!!
HAIL SHAMASH!!!!
Virtualization allows you to try out new operating systems, which is a great way
to learn Linux.
Operating systems are stored in a file that ends with iso. When you install an operating system, the installer piece of code within the iso file gets run, and it performs the install.
Creating a virtual operating system is simple; download the correct iso, open VirtualBox, and press new, then follow the instructions. You can just default everything. Note: The virtual operating system will be contained in a folder, and the size will most likely be big. You can set the size to a smaller one, but there is a minimum storage requirement for each OS.
Special install notes for jewdows 10:
you will need to go into your virtual machine's settings, and disable the internet by putting an invalid setting (which will prevent internet access).
Go search for jewdows 10 activation keys. This is legal, as these websites have been up for a long time, in most cases. The reason why microjew does not go after these websites, is because you end up using their product, anyways, and give the jews your data.
Once that is done, you can do the nasty jewish install where you are forced to agree to be spied on to use the computer (no worries if vm, of course) that you own.
Jewdos has the ability to detect when it is ran in a virtual machine. If you have installed jewdos, go to the task manager. You will see that it says that it is virtualized.
Virtual machines have security benefits. The virtualized operating system can be viewed as a "container". Therefor, what happens inside the virtual machine, stays in the virtual machine.
I have read that Jewdows can see/read what is inside a virtual machine. I do not know if this is true or not, as there is not any way to see what information microjew is collecting. You can encrypt the virtual machine, but that requires an extension that can be installed.
So what is the point to virtualize, if it is not safe?
This is where Whonix comes in. Whonix is a Linux operating system that only runs in a virtual machine. It is essentially two virtual machines, in one package. The way it works differs from your usual operating system. The two virtual machines are Whonix Gateway and Whonix Workstation.
Note: BOTH must be ran at the same time. They can not work by themselves.
The way Whonix works is as follows:
The Whonix Gateway is configured to go through Tor. Your internet access goes through
the Whonix Gateway first, which goes through Tor.
The routed traffic comes back to the Whonix Gateway, which sends it to the Whonix
Workstation.
The Whonix Workstation goes through Tor, and then you get internet access.
All of that routing may make your internet pages load slow. However, you are now quite hard to unmask. If an attacker/hacker were to try to figure out your actual IP address, they would have to first trace back the Tor traffic to the source IP, which would be the Tor IP from the Whonix Gateway. So they have to again trace back the traffic. If you are wise, and you have a VPN, that would be yet another obstacle for them to break (which is a good thing). That is a lot of layers to go through. But, keep in mind that breaking the barriers is not impossible. A company like microjew got hacked, and they have some of the tightest security measures in the world (so nobody can know how much the jews actually know about us).
There is an even more sophisticated OS that you can use to even further protect yourself.
It is called Qubes OS. This one, however, can not be ran in a virtual machine. This one requires you to actually install it on your drive. This means that you always boot into Qubes OS, unless you dual-boot, but getting rid of the installed operatin system is not always easy. You can loose all your data if you do not know what you are doing.
Qubes is a virtualized operating system, however, it its self is not virtual, but all components
are virtualized, with the Qubes OS being the brain that controls it all. Your internet, programs, etc, is all a virtual machine that only has access to what it needs to run, and it does not communicate with anything else. Yes, it is an operating system that launches everything as a virtual machine.The secuity benefits are extremely high. If anything were to try to hack through, it would end up in a void, as there is nothing to go to. All the hacker would is land in containers. Tor may be used, too.
For security reaons, you should not allow copy/pasting from host (your actual operating system) and the virtual machine. That is just one extra piece of information that you can avoid giving away.
From my understanding, jewdows 11 can not be virtualized. Also, that operating system forces you to make a microjew account, and to my knowledge, there is no work-around. I would strongly encourage you to learn Linux, and make the switch to Linux. Yes, it is not as user-friendly as Windows, yes, there are very few games that are playable on Linux out-of-the-box (there are ways), but the security benefits are much higher, and no annoying updates!
And that is it for the cybersecurity series! Stay safe! This series covered the major steps
you can take to secure your privacy online, and reduce the amount of data that you give to the jews.
HAIL ENKI!!!!
HAIL ENLIL!!!!
HAIL ISHTAR!!!!
HAIL SHAMASH!!!!