• Borgzilla@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      It’s horrible. I’ve had to hack together a shell script to switch between countries using a bunch of openvpn config files. The official app broke my Linux Mint network setup.

    • jjffnn@feddit.dk
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      1 year ago

      Just out of curiosity. How is it poorly supported?
      I haven’t used it much yet, but the times i have it seems to have worked fine.

      • Yote.zip@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        IIRC it’s missing a number of features that ProtonVPN Windows has. I last checked into it a year or so ago and the attitude was that it was a very shoddy application missing most features. I found this github issue expressing this sentiment but I don’t see much in terms of specifics.

        I don’t have a paid ProtonVPN but I just downloaded the VPN on a free account and it only has 3 options on it:

        • Secure Core on/off (only select servers in privacy-friendly countries)
        • Netshield (DNS adblocking etc)
        • Killswitch

        I use Mullvad so I opened that up alongside and will list out the features it has on its Linux client in comparison:

        • DNS adblocking
        • Killswitch
        • Wireguard
        • Auto-launch on pc start
        • Split tunnel support
        • Local network split tunnel allowance
        • Disable ipv6
        • Custom DNS server
        • Protocol obfuscation (UDP-over-TCP)
        • Multihop servers
        • Quantum-resistant tunnel (for Wireguard initialization)

        The main ones for me are split tunneling and Wireguard. Using a VPN that doesn’t support these is a non-starter for me, unfortunately. If any of this is different when you have a paid ProtonVPN account let me know - I don’t have very much experience with it.

        TBH, if protonVPN under linux was any good I would probably have Proton Unlimited. I can’t justify paying for Mullvad and Proton Unlimited, so I DIY my own collection of services to match functionality for about the same price.