• @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        9
        edit-2
        18 days ago

        If you don’t torrent.

        They pussied out and removed port forwarding mid last year to have more “legitimacy.”

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          618 days ago

          Given their other privacy features, I’m okay with it. It’s easy to get another VPN for a month and do all the torrenting you need.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            918 days ago

            dont even need the port forwarding to torrent just get a client that supports network tunnelling.

        • @daggermoon
          link
          English
          118 days ago

          I haven’t had a problem with it. Am I missing something?

            • @scarabic
              link
              English
              117 days ago

              deleted by creator

          • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
            link
            English
            518 days ago

            Torrents only work if at least one side has port forwarding enabled. And you don’t want to rely on other people having their ports open. In order to ensure you can actually connect to a seeder/peer, it’s best practice to enable port forwarding on your end.

            The issue with this is that many VPN providers have stopped offering port forwarding services, because kiddy diddlers figured out a way to use port forwarding to privately share CSAM. So it has become difficult to torrent with a VPN, because pedos somehow manage to ruin everything.

            • @daggermoon
              link
              English
              218 days ago

              I may have to look into a new VPN provider. What provider would you recommend that isn’t sus? Thank you!

              • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
                link
                English
                318 days ago

                That’s part of the issue; All of the “best” VPNs have stopped offering port forwarding. Mullvad and Proton are the gold standard for VPNs, but neither offer port forwarding. Private Internet Access still offers it, but they were bought out by a marketing company that was caught sneaking adware into their programs. PIA’s service is still good, but it relies on you trusting an ad company with your internet traffic. They claim to not save any logs or use your data, but they’ve also been found to be liars in the past with that adware scandal.

    • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
      link
      English
      918 days ago

      Proton or Mullvad are the two go-tos.

      Private Internet Access used to be trusted (and still has good service, fwiw) but they were bought out by a company that was caught stuffing adware into their programs… So people have been hesitant to actually recommend them in the wake of that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      618 days ago

      A lot of the VPN providers were doing sales at the end of last year, but ProtonVPN is one to consider

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        5
        edit-2
        18 days ago

        Yup, try out ProtonVPN’s free tier.

        I prefer Mullvad, though ProtonVPN is competitive if you get one of their longer-term offers ($5/month). Mullvad is always $5/month, has plenty of servers, and IMO is the best for privacy (you can literally pay by mailing cash or w/ Monero and other cryptocurrencies as well). If you want to support Mozilla, you can buy Mozilla VPN, which is just rebranded Mullvad (though you’ll need a yearly subscription to match Mullvad’s regular cost).

    • @Tin
      link
      English
      218 days ago

      Surfshark is something like $55 for 2 years; well worth it.