I didn't have time last year to move to another email service, so unfortunately I needed to renew my Proton Mail subscription. I plan to move to Forward Email. I am going to get the team plan so I can create email accounts for my family. I also plan to use IVPN.
Edit: Just learned IVPN disabled port forwarding. Damn, that was the reason I was going to use them. I may need a IVPN or MulladVPN account and a separate VPN for port forwarding for torrents. Perhaps AirVPN.
Edit 2: Wait, what do you mean you can't self-host your own VPN? I am going to use Wireguard and a VPS service to run a dedicated server from home available to the Internet and use the VPS service to hide my IP. It's often cheaper to run your own VPN (with some limitations and tradeoffs), plus certain ISPs allow Tor exit relays. There's also alternatives to Tor, such as I2P, which is good for torrents.
as to 2 i do use wireguard and so on on occasion but its not really a good way to obfuscate who you are to some random website or bypass a firewall (unless you own a server in china or something)
ive heard of i2p but afaik it has similar issues with slowness as tor, hosting your own exit relay from that list of isps is still going to result in excessive latency
im talking stuff like daily driver privacy, not 'organizing a revolution' privacy, which really shouldnt be done on the internet to begin with
The purpose of WireGuard in my instance is to hide my IP as I would be self-hosting a website with my home ISP. But yeah, VPNs are not really great for privacy and mostly just serve to hide your IP on peer-to-peer multiplayer gaming, bypass region locks, etc. You would need to take extra steps to maintain anonymity (VPN isn't really one of them), such as hardening your web browser to resist against fingerprinting. I2P is slow, yes, and the list of ISPs good for hosting Tor exit relays was to show ISPs that are lenient on people hosting various, risky things. I was just confused when you mentioned self-hosting a vpn wasn't viable, as it is, but with different costs and may or may not work for certain use cases. Having better security and privacy does tend to come at the cost of performance.
I also agree organizing a revolution should involve relying on as little of the internet as possible, especially when shit hits the fan.
I didn't have time last year to move to another email service, so unfortunately I needed to renew my Proton Mail subscription. I plan to move to Forward Email. I am going to get the team plan so I can create email accounts for my family. I also plan to use IVPN.
Edit: Just learned IVPN disabled port forwarding. Damn, that was the reason I was going to use them. I may need a IVPN or MulladVPN account and a separate VPN for port forwarding for torrents. Perhaps AirVPN.
Edit 2: Wait, what do you mean you can't self-host your own VPN? I am going to use Wireguard and a VPS service to run a dedicated server from home available to the Internet and use the VPS service to hide my IP. It's often cheaper to run your own VPN (with some limitations and tradeoffs), plus certain ISPs allow Tor exit relays. There's also alternatives to Tor, such as I2P, which is good for torrents.
as to 2 i do use wireguard and so on on occasion but its not really a good way to obfuscate who you are to some random website or bypass a firewall (unless you own a server in china or something)
ive heard of i2p but afaik it has similar issues with slowness as tor, hosting your own exit relay from that list of isps is still going to result in excessive latency
im talking stuff like daily driver privacy, not 'organizing a revolution' privacy, which really shouldnt be done on the internet to begin with
The purpose of WireGuard in my instance is to hide my IP as I would be self-hosting a website with my home ISP. But yeah, VPNs are not really great for privacy and mostly just serve to hide your IP on peer-to-peer multiplayer gaming, bypass region locks, etc. You would need to take extra steps to maintain anonymity (VPN isn't really one of them), such as hardening your web browser to resist against fingerprinting. I2P is slow, yes, and the list of ISPs good for hosting Tor exit relays was to show ISPs that are lenient on people hosting various, risky things. I was just confused when you mentioned self-hosting a vpn wasn't viable, as it is, but with different costs and may or may not work for certain use cases. Having better security and privacy does tend to come at the cost of performance.
I also agree organizing a revolution should involve relying on as little of the internet as possible, especially when shit hits the fan.