this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2023
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For a long time, the main VPN that was recommended was Mullvad. iVPN, Proton and AirVPN were distant alternative recommendations. However, since Mullvad, iVPN, and some others removed port forwarding (for a good reason, you can read their blog post about it, but basically, human scum were using PF to allow others to connect with them while sharing child-based illegal material) many people had to make a choice revolving around PF.
PF allows you and others to keep a healthy "swarm," so it is a vital feature, particularly if you're hoping to download files that aren't recent & are no longer seeded by the original uploader. If the original seeder is gone, and everyone in the remaining swarm doesn't have PF, you're most likely not getting that file. Many people stayed with Mullvad, and some people switched to AirVPN or Proton, so that they could keep utilizing PF. If you're only going to download recent releases, I'd suggest Mullvad. Otherwise, AirVPN or Proton should be fine. I have no experience with either one, other than using Proton's free email service (I'm also testing Tutanota and Skiff, & liking Skiff the best out of all 3 so far).
I would also suggest doing a search for "ProtonMail court order leads to the arrest of French climate activist" and see if that bothers you. Example: see Mullvad's blog about "migration to RAM-only VPN infrastructure." Meaning, all the internet traffic going through their VPN service is kept on RAM, so when they say they don't have any logs, they don't and can't. Will Proton rat you out if they get a court order about you? I doubt it, but who am I to say. Although, email and VPN are not the same, but they are somewhat similar in regards to protecting your privacy. I believe AirVPN is also a trustworthy "no log" policy VPN with PF. Just do your own research and make an informed decision.
Me? I switched to Usenet instead of torrenting for anything other than recent releases. The good thing is that you don't need a VPN for Usenet (as long as you have the SSL connection enabled on SABnzbd in the server section, which should be enabled by default after installation). The bad thing is, it takes a little more research to understand how to best setup Usenet, but you're pretty much guaranteed to obtain your files, even years old. I don't need to keep Mullvad, but I have kept it for now, because it's pretty inexpensive and it's a great service, even without PF.
Short version: use qBittorrent, manually start it each time (do not have it start up with Windows or whatever you're using) after you're VPN is active, make sure to BIND your VPN to qBittorrent (do not rely on just a kill-switch, notoriously unreliable), and using Proton should be fine.
EDIT: You may want to also research "nordvpn data breach" and "kape technologies malware" (Kape owns Private Internet Access) if one of those becomes an option for you. I'm not saying don't use either of them, but you should be aware of those things and make your own decision. I switched from PIA to Mullvad when Kape bought PIA.
Is there a guide on how to get started on Usenet
I'm assuming you didn't read my post later in this part of the thread (responding just below here to "Giu176" - it's lengthy, sorry, but start almost half way down into that post and read the rest for more detailed info and recommendations, beginning with the paragraph that starts: "With Usenet a VPN is not needed, because SABnzbd ......" That info should provide a good guide on how to get started. Anymore than that and it can get overwhelming for some. I'm an analyst for work, so looking at all the available data, including many threads, and trying to make a decision was kind of daunting when I first started looking at it all.
Otherwise, the Reddit wiki is unfortunately the only other source I'm aware of. Start here: https://www.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/index
If you're new (like I was) I'd stick to basics, like I outlined in the post I mentioned. But here is the part for choosing an indexer: https://www.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/indexers
It's my understanding (and it makes sense) that the "Free Membership Sites" are basically worthless. Pay most attention to the "Yearly Membership" section to get started, and look for "Open" in the "Registrations" column. The indexers I referenced (in the other post) are the main ones more experienced users mentioned. However, I believe some of it is marketing by owners/affiliates. Example: some say how great DOGnzb and NinjaCentral are, but I'm convinced it just self promotion. DOG is extremely expensive (see the pricing there, but you have to "buy" a shirt for a subscription, and if you actually want the shirt you "paid" for, you have to pay extra, so I deleted my account after getting an invite and registering). Ninja isn't bad, they do have some rare things, but it's very uncommon for me to find something on Ninja that isn't already tracked by one of my other indexers. The problem is, you have to get an invite, and it can be rare that it opens for registrations or an invite is available (I think by design, you want the thing you can't have). Not really worth it though.
The sub for getting invites to other indexers that aren't "open": https://www.reddit.com/r/UsenetInvites/
Don't just make a post asking for an invite, unless you've already made a post offering an invite to somewhere else. I enabled notifications on this sub so that I knew when an indexer I wanted became available. Read here to understand better how it works: https://www.reddit.com/r/UsenetInvites/wiki/startingout
That's how I got DrunkenSlug (DS) and NzbPlanet (Planet), but Planet isn't that good, imo. You should be able to use it for free though, on a limited basis.
Next, providers: https://www.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/providers
See the two recommendations I already made (I'd REALLY suggest just sticking with one of those), otherwise, understanding the differences can get rather confusing, but I'll provide a brief explanation here. If you have trouble obtaining a file you're indexer is saying is out there, but you have trouble getting it from the provider you have (I don't have problems with Eweka, but just so I don't look like a shill....), having access to another provider, specifically on a different backbone, can be helpful. Here is a link to the provider "Usenet Tree": https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usenet_Providers_and_Backbones.svg -or- I THINK this is a direct link to a more up to date version, if I recall correctly: https://svgshare.com/i/iG8.svg -and- there is also this website, which kind of helps stopping you from getting overlapping providers (but again, see my two recommendations, and you can use this later if you ever have a problem, but you shouldn't): https://whatsmyuse.net/
Lastly, even though I don't use all of this on a server, I installed all the "arrs" on my PC and enjoy having access through them (again, see my other post for an explanation and links to the "arrs". I don't like having the arrs reorder my files, and create their own subfolders, so I just use them to reference files I'm kind of following, if you will. So I disable the "download when available" option.
With this post, and the other, it's already getting kind of lengthy and convoluted. However, if there are any other questions, I'll do my best to answer.
Actually, one more item, when you get more familiar with Usenet and the arrs, you can reference this site for setting up "arrs" profiles if you want: https://trash-guides.info/
This was a great write-up, thankyou for the effort!!