Known VPN services have identifiable server addresses that can be blocked. Instead, you can set up a cheap raspberry pi (or other) at your home and use an encrypted SSH connection to that [raspberry pi] from far away. Then turn on your SOCKS proxy (part of WiFi Details on Macintosh) and check to see that your IP address shows to the world you access as that of your raspberry pi. I do this all the time, including right now. It also helps to watch sports events.
Thanks.
That said 8 years in prison seems insane.
i know a little bit more about what has actually been going on, here. Ian is part of the "Libertarian" Movement (self-governance), and the FBI and the U.S. Government have been looking for ways to take him down for years. at several of the regular meetings he holds for people he has been approached to get bitcoin for buying drugs. they are so ridiculously transparent about it and quite obviously and blatantly "sting entrapment" agents that i heard he even told them so, as he was asking them to leave.
it would not in the least bit surprise me if many of these "victims" also turned out to be "sting entrapment", but also, just as sadly, it would not surprise me if they were actually real. this is one of the dark sides of anonymous financial transactions: people are not doing their *own* Due Diligence, and they're not properly thinking things through. it's a transistion: we're *so used* to being "Mummy'ed" by Governments telling us "yes this transaction is safe" that of course people when they think cryptocurrency is the same as fiat currency, they fall flat on their faces.
honestly i am astounded that anyone would put USD 300,000 through bitcoin to someone they have *never met*, and it sounds so ridiculously unlikely and suspicious that my opinion is that it's a sting operation.
If you can count your money, you don't have a billion dollars. -- J. Paul Getty