![]() ![]() It's fairly equivalent to Air from a user standpoint except Proton has more servers with lower loads close to me. Connects quickly, fast, very few glitches, no leaks, dirt simple interface. I've been using the paid version of Proton for about a year and have no real issues with it. Thanks in advance for any and all assistance. I would love to get input from the most tech savvy here as to whether the cautionary anecdotes in this thread are still applicable. the CEO seems to contradict himself in his statements, and the whole thing suggests that given the technical ineptitude, perhaps all of the acclaim for/trust in ProtonMail should be tempered a bit.ĭoes anyone have an update on Proton VPN? I’ve been using the paid version of Speedify the past year as a backup to AirVPN and am very interested in trying Proton’s VPN Plus service. at best, ProtonVPN seems put together by a technically incompetent company, and at worst, they are providing full access to Tesonet. ![]() i will stick with Air since i can send the TV over the WAN gateway and it works. I am still using Airvpn and bought another year when they had a discount a few weeks back. i wasted hours on trying to get it to work. i don't believe it was their fault and they still refunded my money. I had the service about a month and then i asked for a refund and they have my 90 dollars back out of the 96 i paid. were significantly slower than their standard servers, but as it states you go through 2 tunnels for security.įor my pfsense box i set up 2 tunnels, one for the TV (the more secure server plus) and a standard server for surfing and it ran GREAT) The proton plus secure servers on that plan. tried several DNS settings, but they really did not dig in deep to the pfsense part, i don't blame them at all. especially since my computers would work. i spent a week going back and forth with their support which did try to fix this for me but the end result i believe the tv was the issue. IF i set my windows 10 laptop or macmini over the proton vpn tunnel it WOULD play netflix. then it stopped working on the only device i wanted it to work on my LG tv. i originally bought the VPN to use Netflix over their VPN and it DID work for 2 weeks flawlessly. I have to be honest i purchased the 2nd highest plan from Proton (plus i believe it is) and was very happy with speed results obviously depending on the server. Transparency-wise Proton leaves a lot to be desired it seems - for the steep price they ask that's almost unacceptable. Had a short-term subscription with them, speed's were mostly fine but I didn't find a good reason to renew as their service is quite expensive, too. ![]() ![]() As contributors to the "open source community" as they proclaim I find it strange that they don't publish the source code of their own client that furthermore does not run on GNU/Linux. The answer given in the link posted above is very disappointing and unconvincing in this regard. Whether it is challenging governments, educating the public, or training journalists, we have a long history of fighting for privacy online and contributing to the open source community. Our team has a long track record in security, having previously built ProtonMail - the world's largest encrypted email service. We are one of the only VPN companies that provide transparency so you know exactly who is running the service. So they say that they did not share Tesonet employees, and then they say that they did share a Tesonet employee, who even had full access to sign their applications, and if that was not enough, they did not even notice ("until recently") that the company they have nothing to do with, a company that is specialized in data mining and also controls NordVPN, signed their own application certificate? What else they do not know about their very own applications and partners? Back when he first joined us several years ago, we outsourced HR to a third party as it didn't make sense to incorporate a new company for just a single employee.Īs Algirdas was formally employed through Tesonet, he put Tesonet into the cert, and nobody noticed it until recently." "This is an unfortunate mistake made by Algirdas, our first (and amazing) Vilnius team member. We don't share employees, infrastructure, etc" "We used Tesonet as a local partner before we had an official Lithuanian subsidiary, and rented office space from them. To make things worse the replies by Proton are even internally inconsistent. ![]()
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