Choosing the VPN That's Right for You
Choosing the VPN That's Right for You
There are only three good ones, in no particular order:
Any other VPN used is a mistake.
There’s a reason why I didn’t mention Air instead of those three I named:
What isn’t free software…?
I think you should make it clear if you are talking about VPN services or client-side apps here. If they provide normal standard protocols like Wireguard and OpenVPN, they can be used without having to install any provider-specific apps.
Regardless of provider it’s generally preferred to use third-party software to connect. VPN providers that don’t even have their own apps don’t qualify as good for you either?
Demanding the whole stack be FLOSS is a bit silly in this context. None of the ones you mentioned open-source most of their backend systems either AFAIK.
I think you should do your homework better before you speak so widely and absolutely dismissively with such claim of authority. It is not helpful.
They’re Swedish, but the company was bought by Malwarebytes later on
What piece of software are you talking about ?
What piece of software are you talking about ? Azire in particular.
Azire what? They’re a Wireguard VPN provider with a web portal.
I guess same confusion as here: discuss.tchncs.de/comment/23696262
You can combine VPN and DNS-based ad blocking, usually. Mullvad has it’s own dns server with ad filter. However you can use any other.
I don’t think Android supports two different VPNs.
First thing to keep in mind as new is that “VPN” is a technical term with pretty clear meaning among the technical people but it has a very fuzzy meaning in marketing and branding. Referring here to “VPN apps” that may just be a local DNS relay (ie: it will only tunnel and filter your DNS requests; all your actual traffic still goes through your normal connection as clear as always). Android has not helped here.
In either case, yes, you can usually chain things. What if any benefits you get from that depends on both technical specifics (which protocols) and your circumstances and threat model.
For example, if we consider only Wireguard (one of the VPN protocols Mullvad offers).
No VPN/proxy: Your ISP sees everything 1 proxy: ISP sees that you are connecting to proxy but not what servers you’re actually talking to. VPN provider now sees everytking instead.
2 proxies: Proxy A sees your encrypted traffic to Proxy B. Proxy B sees all your traffic but doesn’t know where you are.
3 proxies: Congratulations, you have manually built a shitty onion circuit (Tor works like this)
Mullvad VPN works well on Android and has some DNS based ad blockers & content filters in the VPN app (though off by default iird). Mullvad browser is not ported to Android.
That said, it’s important to understand that VPNs don’t provide privacy in any absolute sense. They can (maybe) obscure data about your browsing habits from your ISP. But they won’t stop all the other, more effective tracking exists nearly everywhere else on the web.
I’ve always been a little chicken to dig deeper myself since I don’t own any crypto or anything of the sort nor am I willing to link my bank details to it, but anybody know anything about Cryptostorm VPN? I only know about it from stumbling across it on one of those Hidden Wiki onion sites.
I also found another one I’m probably a little wary of, called Njalla VPN, from some supposedly privacy focused domain name registrar, Njalla, supposedly out of Costa Rica according to their onion site.
I doubt either are all that private, but I have no way to confirm or deny that.