Wireguard with systemd is even better. You set it up and then literally never touch it again.
Wireguard with systemd is even better. You set it up and then literally never touch it again.
I work in a technical field, and the amount of bad work I see is way higher than you’d think. There are companies without anyone competent to do what they claim to do. Astonishingly, they make money at it and frequently don’t get caught. Sometimes they have to hire someone like me to fix their bad work when they do cause themselves actual problems, but that’s much less expensive than hiring qualified people in the first place. That’s probably where we’re headed with ais, and honestly it won’t be much different than things are now, except for the horrible dystopian nature of replacing people with machines. As time goes on they’ll get fed the corrections competent people make to their output and the number of competent people necessary will shrink and shrink, till the work product is good enough that they don’t care to get it corrected. Then there won’t be anyone getting paid to do the job, and because of ais black box nature we will completely lose the knowledge to perform the job in the first place.
In fairness, I’ve had several machines running versions of windows server with lots of uptime and zero stability issues. But the last time I ran a windows server is was advanced server 2003 so…
There are also plenty of medical reasons for even sexually inactive women to take hormonal birth control. This isn’t only about pregnancy, which as you say can have all sorts of physical consequences.
The way they handle port forwarding is particulalry good, as compared with pia, that assigns a random port every time you bring up a connection, so you have to have a script to update your port in your client.
Airvpn is fine, and also the cheapest option you’ll find with any real hope of protection, which is why people are recommending it. It can use openvpn or wireguard, which will work on fedora just fine. I’d personally recommend wireguard, because you can set it up to automatically connect using systemd.
Otherwise, you could try installing riseup’s client from the source, available at https://0xacab.org/leap/bitmask-vpn. It’s linked on their main site. Don’t know if you’ll have luck with that. You’ll likely have to manually install the dependencies.
You could also try tor.
Clearly you’re not talking about Debian.