Not sure if it was just released today, but I got the email update about it just now. I’m pretty excited about this because I mostly just want VPN for web browsing, and the linux app kinda sucks.

2 points

Yeah Linux experience with proton vpn has been hit or miss. I’m excited to try this out!

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7 points

Ngl, I’m very surprised and very pleased proton has lasted. They seem to be on track to remaining sustainable and true to their stated goals.

I haven’t run their paid tier VPN yet, because of the linux issues, but the free tier always worked well when I was between providers and deciding who to go with.

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1 point

What Linux issues are those?

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5 points

No wireguard. Unable to launch on login for some DE.

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2 points

Wireguard is up. Cannot speak to the other instances.

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1 point

Also slow ass GUI, no auto-connect on startup. I wrote a script for this. Luckily the offer a CLI

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1 point
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Deleted by creator
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1 point

I don’t use the Client, but the OpenVPN scripts. No problem so far.

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2 points

In a recent e-mail they mentioned an open Linux dev position, so hopefully the Linux client will catch up soon enough!

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Pretty neat. Paid plans only, though.

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2 points

I only use paid VPNs, but I generally want all traffic to go through them because it’s hard to not have “random” stuff go out otherwise.

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2 points

Their paid plans are really sweet tho. If I pick servers close to my location I get sub 40 ms ping, even tunneling through two servers, and you have basically unlimited bandwidth. Easily > 500 MBit/s.

And that’s only like 7.something €/$ per month, including all their other stuff, (500 GB cloud storage, E2EE calendar, multiple mail addresses and whatever else is to come).

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That does seem like a pretty good value. Once drive is usable, I may just have to get a paid plan.

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-6 points

If Proton cared about privacy for VPN for clients, they would remove the login requirement and make ProtonVPN an anonymous services.

If there are concerns about abuse for the network, that’s way the login, how could they figure that out without seeing people’s traffic.

I use RiseupVPN and CalyxVPN for being open source and anonymous.

Until ProtonVPN removes login in their free client, it is not an option.

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2 points

Proton is open source

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-2 points

Ok, I accept that ProtonVPN is open source. The free service is not anonymous, that’s a deal breaker for me.

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4 points

Counter argument, if your VPN is free, you’re the product

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-1 points

Not with RiseuoVPN, they ask for donations in the app to run the free service.

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3 points

You are looking for Tor in those cases not a centralized VPN service. A centralized VPN service is good for reduced visibility with the understanding that they can be more easily compromised (the more you pay the more they can work to make that not the case).

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2 points

What’s the advantage of using the VPN via the browser extension instead of the VPN app (in my case, the MacOS app)?

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2 points

VPN can sometimes be unreliable. I’ve gotten disconnected from zoom meetings when using the zoom app and a system wide VPN. Also have lagged during online gaming. The extension could be useful if you are only looking to increase web browsing privacy, while keeping a better network connection for other programs.

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1 point

Isn’t this what split-tunneling is for though?

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1 point

Ah, yeah I guess so. I don’t think that was available on the linux app which is the only one I used on a non-phone, so I didn’t think of that…

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1 point

It is a question of whether you really need all your traffic going through a VPN. Your app might support split tunneling. VPN browser extensions such as Proton, Mullvad, and Brave will only route that browser’s traffic through VPN. Since I am running Linux, a DNS resolver and am generally off of most corp and government servers, my need for VPN is more limited. I activate ProtonVPN extension in Librewolf browser where I open news sites. I use other browsers without VPN for safe stuff such as my own and friendly fedi sites to get full bandwidth. I use split tunneling on Android to similarly exclude safe apps from VPN for a private and efficient setup.

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