I heard Tuta/Mullvad are quantum-resistant end-to-end encrypted and that Mullvad VPN is better at avoiding trigging captcha.

While Proton services are hosted in Switzerland which has the strongest privacy laws in the world and avoids the surveillance of NATO.

  • purrtastic@lemmy.nz
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    13 days ago

    Proton’s CEO just crawled up Trump’s ass, so that’s worth factoring in to any decisions about using them.

  • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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    13 days ago

    surveillance of NATO

    NATO as a surveillance group is definitely a boogeyman created by Russian and Chinese propaganda. NATO countries share some military information with each other, but it’s not an intelligence organization.

    You’re probably thinking of the Five Eyes, for which there is actual credible documentation of domestic surveillance.

  • ShotDonkey@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Switzerland does not have the strongest data protection laws in the world. Don’t fall for the Proton marketing bs. Some NATO countries (Germany e.g.) have better laws.

  • asudox@discuss.tchncs.deM
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    13 days ago

    Tutanota’s emails are quantum resistant only when you are emailing other tutanota users. So practically no benefit really. You’re better off buying a cheaper email like Posteo that at least lets you use a goddamn third party client. Then you can use GPG to encrypt your emails or just use something else really, email is not good for discussing confidential stuff.

    MullvadVPN is good, keep using it.

  • Riddick3001@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    I tried Mullvad Vpn and I liked it. Plug and play, 5 € p month, 5? machines, speed ok ( 220 Mbit/s ish on ookla), no other BS. Also you can choose anonymous payments, which is a big plus.

    Proton for email wasn’t intuitive to me at all , some years back. Don’t know about their VPN.

    Also, Sweden is in the EU and CH (=Switzerland) has EU association, so kind of copy pasta concerning privacy rules and citizen rights. The former famous old-skool CH privacy is long gone, if that’s what you were thinking.

    Most (good) VPN have quantum encryption, which Iike many said, is a bit of sales pitch bla bla imo.

    (Ed)

  • drspod@lemmy.ml
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    13 days ago

    Switzerland which has the strongest laws in the world

    what does this mean?