ProtonVPN has it though, which is what I’m using now.
ProtonVPN has it though, which is what I’m using now.
I host a server, I forward the port, my friends can connect to the open port on the VPN side.
My ISP does not offer port forwarding.
No port forwarding really kills the utility though - I mainly use the VPN to do port forwarding (e.g. for video games, Plex, etc.) as my ISP is shit.
Like I’m not worried about state-level de-anonymisation, I just want to be able to share services remotely and have a minimum level of anonymity.
All Cats Are Beautiful
American culture warriors have decided that their ideology is more important - you see this a lot where their ideology’s goal becomes the “greater cause” worth sacrificing the mission: e.g. in journalism.
To bully those who don’t share their American liberal politics.
The SPI is awesome, I wish it were easier to donate internationally too.
This is crazy guilt by association.
Only CVE-2024-31083 is relevant for non-remote server use-cases.
Religion
Because now you can just use Linux or BSD. That wasn’t the case when Linux was developed.
So it only really makes sense for special cases - like Huawei’s new OS for phones (they cannot use Android), or Google’s attempt at a new kernel for Android too (they want to escape the GPL).
He’s winning against the gangs though - every Salvadorean I know supports him.
I think the US you have to use your American one if you have it, no?
A lot of countries have that rule.
This has already happened. Just the niche communities haven’t migrated away yet.
It’ll be fine, I’d argue Arch is actually more “stable” in the ordinary sense since it is simpler - in that partial upgrades are not allowed. So you never end up in a complicated mess like aptitude can be.
I’ve used Arch for over a decade now, and have only had issues 3 or 4 times (usually from the nvidia driver).
Yeah, for both OpenVPN and Wireguard.
On Linux you can do this with full control via network namespaces. I use vopono to automate it - https://github.com/jamesmcm/vopono
But if you can afford it I’d recommend paying for Proton’s services as they offer a lot together, or a low-end VPS (where you could do it yourself, although be careful to find ones that don’t ban hosting Wireguard, etc. for example). Both are really useful if you want to test making something local available on the Internet e.g. ports for multiplayer games or a webserver prototype.
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I never tried the Bose ones, they have great reviews too though.
ProtonVPN has it, and Wireguard support.