New Proxy Sites — For School

The post was buried on a forum so obscure its background was still default white. The user, “ProxyPunk99,” had written only: Try the library catalog.

“Had to keep you curious somehow.” Mr. Henderson sat down at the kiosk next to him. “Leo, I’ve been running the school’s filter for seven years. Do you know how many kids have tried to build their own proxy in that time?”

He copied the string ProxyPunk99 had left: https://library.jeffersonhigh.sch/book.php?id=1048576#/ new proxy sites for school

Leo blinked at the screen. The school’s own library catalog? That was FortressGuard’s sacred cow—whitelisted, blessed, and never scanned.

This one was different. No pastel logos. Just a black terminal with a blinking cursor. Leo typed “Reddit.” The page loaded in raw HTML—no images, no fonts, just text. It was faster than NebulaNet. Smarter, too. It randomized its packet signatures every thirty seconds. The post was buried on a forum so

Mr. Henderson’s smile widened. “That’s the first thing we’ll discuss at the first meeting. Tuesday. 3:15. Room 117.”

Every click, every tab, every half-finished search for “causes of the War of 1812” was logged, timestamped, and neatly packaged for Mr. Henderson, the school’s IT coordinator. The school’s filter, a glowering digital gatekeeper named FortressGuard, blocked everything from YouTube tutorials to the online etymology dictionary (flagged for “alternative reference materials”). Henderson sat down at the kiosk next to him

It wasn’t that Leo hated learning. He just hated the feeling of being watched while he learned.