Hey friends,
I’d like to:
- Register for a social media account under a client’s company name
- Research the presence companies in the client’s industry have on the site
- Have a reasonable assurance the account will not be linked to my real name nor my network
- Use a VM for 10-30? hr/mo, short term
I am:
- US West Coast based
- Tech savvy but don’t code (unless copypasta)
- Price conscious
- Privacy conscious in terms of social media companies linking my account and my identity
Assumptions and Understandings
Given the complexity of fingerprinting techniques, I am under the impression logging in to a remote computer and doing all this work from a browser there has one of the highest likelihoods of success. I’d measure success by not getting spammed with work-related ads, whenever I have to disable Ublock Origin at least. It seems likely a social network will know I’m using a remote desktop (based on IP and loading time/delays), but seems difficult for them to understand who exactly is using the cloud machine if I only use it for a singular purpose. I would hope data brokers aren’t efficiently tying VM usage back to VM leasers.
I understand a VPS isn’t typically suited for GUI usage, and VPNs can leave me more vulnerable to fingerprinting.
Finally, it looks like most of the low-end cloud PC options would support web browsing at a reasonable speed.
Questions:
- Have I betrayed any misconceptions?
- Is a cloud PC one of my best options, and if so:
- Can you recommend a provider and specs?
- Is there anything I’m missing?
Providers in consideration w/screenshots
Caution: aggressive anti-privacy corporate behemoths below
Azure Virtual Desktop
Too cheap to be true? Requires some agreement…
Amazon WorkSpaces Personal
Yay Amazon. Inexpensive.
Windows 365 Business Cloud PC
Priciest option.
Vagon Remote Windows Desktop Cloud Computer
A little guy!
Thank you!
VM and a VPN is the same as a cloud instance. You certainly will be tied back to any account hosting a cloud instance if it came to that. You might be thinking a little too paranoid about this, when there is a simple solution.
What do you mean by VPNs leaving you open to fingerprinting?
I assume he means with hardware fingerprinting. Basically websites can collect enough info on your computer to identify you and track you across sites.
Running a VM on your own machine (using VMWare or VirtualBox) with a clean install of the OS and a browser in that should suffice to prevent that. Fingerprinting would be mostly on things like installed apps/fonts, screen resolution, free disk space and such.
AWS Windows box