Wouldn't the foreign country-generated IP address a VPN provides look suspicious?

Let's say you're checking on tracking on usps.com, or doing some highly sensitive clearnet activity in which TOR either doesn't load or generates suspicion in itself. You boot up a VPN to give you a new random IP address. If this IP address is from some random country other than America, wouldn't this raise suspicion in itself? Why is a computer from Bulgaria checking the tracking of a US-US package?

It's making me think that choosing a VPN in which you can specify which country you want the IP address coming from is useful.


Comments


[2 Points] None:

Right. Why is there someone from a bumfuck Russia ip checking on a package in bumfuck TN? To me it looks suspicious as hell.


[2 Points] None:

[deleted]


[1 Points] keseysdayglobus:

most vpns have servers in america also


[1 Points] None:

What's the point. You are checking tracking that has your address and probably name attached to it.


[1 Points] redditulousfun:

I choose were my vpn is i have 3 choices in america as well as several other countrys


[1 Points] 666fun:

Why do you need a VPN to track your package? It's heading to your house already, it's not like you need to hide that you're checking on it from your house.

I don't know how usps operates, but to me it would set off a big red flag if a packages tracking was being checked by Tor or a foreign country (unless it was the country the package originated from). So yeah, I agree on that point


[0 Points] _popcorn_time_:

USPS has fraud detection like systems on their tracking websites, believe it or not. I read an article about it (it was posted on here somewhere). Fraud detection like as in, ip checks like that. I read about a large buyers package being found that way