this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2024
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I'm about to get into the market for a new VPN, who's the top dog privacy wise nowadays? Been using TorGuard, but the bulk subscription I purchased will expire this fall, and they have since on-shored their operations.
Use cases at the moment: General/Adblock Occasion p2p/torrent
I see Mullvad recommended a lot here, but not sure if it’s the best. I would like to know too.
Edit: I just checked out the site and it seems like it would be great. You can pay using Monero, Send Cash, Buy a voucher in store, or using credit card.
You only have an account number and they don’t require an email address. You can add time to your account in 30 days increments.
Just based off of this I trust them more than the ones shilled on YouTube.
They’re based in Sweden.
Yeah I'd say you summed it up well. They also have a great track record. Even when raided by Swedish police last year the police got nothing out of the raid.
#GreatAdvertisement
As someone writing his master thesis about vpns, I would hands down stick with independent VPN providers, such as Mullvad(MozillaVPN - is WL of Mullvad), Windscribe, ProtonVPN and IVPN.
Don't buy into the Vpns with sketchy parent companies such as Kape Technologies who owns Express VPN, PIA, Cyber Ghost to mention a few..
Mullvad appears to have been review bombed lately due to removal of port forwarding and people say it has back slid recently... any opinions on that?
Proton VPN looks solid though
Mullvad remains top dog when it comes to privacy. You can still torrent without port forwarding, it's just more limited. If you need port forwarding, then is give Windscribe a go. While most people will recommend ProtonVPN, with good reason, I personally prefer to stick with the underdogs.
This is a fascinating topic for me, I would love to hear your reasoning for sticking with the underdog. Is it just a "stick it to the man" scenario or is there some more practical reason?
It's basically the same reason for why I choose to shop locally rather than buying things online. I despise monopoly and will always, if still practical, choose the second option. Also sometimes you can tell there is more passion coming from smaller Devs and communities, I feel like that's the case here too.
Windscribe has hilarious marketing, seriously, check it out. But their products are also just solid, and works on Linux. They also make the service called ControlD, which is also a great service.