Also asked them if torrenting legal stuff is allowed and they said no.
- There’s an issue with your VPN. - What VPN service do you use? 
 
- If you are on VPN they cannot know shit. Only that you use a VPN… So either they are detecting the VPN and lying about what they know or you fucked up setting the VPN and the torrentina doesn’t go through the VPN. - They’ll still see upload/download volumes, speeds and patterns. Just not destinations. That alone could indicate torrent. - That could indicate a lot of things. It would be very difficult to distinguish a torrent from something like cloud folder sync. And that would still be a statistical guess. No ISP is going to go after customers because their VPN traffic is potentially torrent traffic. - Besides, even if they could detect that torrenting is taking place, they will not know what data is being transferred from and to where. It’s a meme, but torrents are actually sometimes used for non-copyright infringing data. - I was providing Linux distros and Machine Learning datasets some time ago, because official servers where slow. I’m the meme I guess 
 
 
 
- If you’re on qbit, did you bind your vpn to qbit? - Also your vpn might just be bad, what do you use? - I did not but it was a system wide VPN. - Start the VPN and connect to a location. Open qBittorrent. Go to Preferences, and then Advanced tab. Change Network interface to the VPN (usually its name, like “Mullvad”). Restart qBittorrent. - Basically when you bind it, if your vpn ever happens to turn off etc its gonna stop the download/upload 
 
 


