this post was submitted on 08 Feb 2026
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The authorities apparently got tired of asking and just went in themselves.

Canada-based Windscribe, a VPN provider, just said that one of its European servers has been allegedly seized by Dutch authorities without a warrant. According to the company’s post on X, law enforcement said that they will return it to the service provider after they “fully analyze it.” It’s unclear why law enforcement impounded just a single rack from Windscribe’s cabinet, but the VPN provider said that it only uses RAM disk servers, meaning anyone who would look through the installed SSDs would only find a stock Ubuntu install on it, so the servers shouldn't hold any trackable data.

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[–] flowers_galore2@lemmynsfw.com 29 points 1 day ago (14 children)

RAM disks alone will not be enough; the law enforcement can literally freeze the DRAM for forensics.

[–] BozeKnoflook@lemmy.world 22 points 1 day ago (11 children)

Police have had, since the late 90s I think, the "Hotplug" which is a special battery pack / generators that provide a special power plug where you can gently loosen the existing plug, slide the generator's plug in place over it, then remove the computer from the main supply while keeping it powered on.

Power plug locks only buy you time or prevent casual mayhem; the police can work around those.

[–] Strawberry@sh.itjust.works 14 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (5 children)

I'm intrigued how that would work with some styles of plug that disconnect before coming out of the socket like the uk type-G plugs. Unless they're not touching the socket itself and connecting somewhere else? I have no idea, i'm not an electrician.

[–] mojitas@lemmynsfw.com 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

This probably works in the UK and US. Rest of Europe, not so much unless you gently strip the cable which is pretty dangerous.

[–] timwa@lemmy.snowgoons.ro 3 points 19 hours ago

I just read the manual for the Euro version; basically, they assume you take the power strip/PDU with the computer.

So, you plug the special UPS into a spare outlet on the PDU; it monitors the power supply, and as soon as power from the PDU drops it jumps in and starts supplying. So plug into an outlet, then unplug the PDU from power, and the UPS takes over. Since at this point the pins on the PDU plug are live, they provide a safety cap to put over the end of the cable. The computer itself is never unplugged.

[–] frongt@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 day ago

It's not that dangerous. They make strippers that will only take off the outer insulation, and then you can use vampire taps on the wires.

Or you might be able to pop the case and jump the power on the DC side. You could easily do that on an ATX power supply, but servers are a little more complicated, because hotplug PSUs use wafer connectors instead of molex plugs.

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