Christian Britz <cbr...@t-online.de> writes: > Am 16.11.24 um 05:42 schrieb Greg Wooledge: > >> If your Windows machine can run an ssh daemon that you can log into, >> then you could use it as your SOCKS proxy, though I have no idea how >> you'd go about setting up an sshd on Windows. > > Should not be to hard using Windows' built-in WSL (you can even run most > parts of Debian on it) or the free Cygwin environment.
None of that is needed, Microsoft bundles openssh client and server in Windows 10 and 11. Probably exempting any limited editions but present in Windows 10 & 11 Pro. Enabling those is done via "Optional features" in settings.