Not related much, but imagine being a citizen of ancient Greece having to walk for hours under killing sun, gushing barbarians' eyes and slicing wolves on your way to the Olympic games only to be told by a feller with a lisp: "Excuse me, sir! Video recording is not allowed here.". It's a comfy time we live in actually.
In that case you wouldn't have gotten the security part and your time and, maybe, money would have been lost, but you not having this certificate, ironically, demonstrates you learned enough
#2. Use a VPN. Mullvad is great but they recently removed port-forwarding so if you care about port-forwarding I recommend going with something like ProtonVPN (paid).
#3. Bind your VPN to your torrent client. (I recommend using QBittorrent)
Maybe before suggesting these two, which are more go-to than they should be, you should have suggested checking their national, cultural and legislative view on piracy and, if at least two result positive, should have suggested to search for websites that are totally shady but look good and work better, that host downloadables either via torrent or direct downloads. Many nations have their own.
Feel free to consider the above as #2 and then go from there, my bud PRUSSIA_x86
AFAIK tor wouldn't be able to handle regular streaming of 4k movies, constant sending/receiving of e-mail, downloading of AAA videogames and uploading porn 1080p/60fps. Tor is an instrument which has its purpose. It's like saying stirring tea with a screwdriver should be normalized.
Not related much, but imagine being a citizen of ancient Greece having to walk for hours under killing sun, gushing barbarians' eyes and slicing wolves on your way to the Olympic games only to be told by a feller with a lisp: "Excuse me, sir! Video recording is not allowed here.". It's a comfy time we live in actually.
Edit: spelling