- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
- mullvad@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- privacy@lemmy.ml
- mullvad@lemmy.ml
This is a nice write-up from Mullvad. I’ve been using their services for a while and will continue to do so.
I just wish they weren’t so pricey for a casual vpn user. I’d be down with a cheap plan that throttles way down after like 20 gigs a month or something.
It’s $5 a month. And you get five simultaneous logins. So you and five of your friends could get together and get the price down to $1 a month.
Haha friends, that’s a neat trick
What is a f…. fr… freee… frennnd? 🥲
five simultaneous logins…you and five of your friends…get the price down to $1 a month.
You (1) + 5 friends = 6, which is more than 5. So where does the extra dollar go and who doesn’t get to login?
Your right. You and four friends.
Been using Mullvad for over 10 years, first through my dads account and recently bought my own subscription for a year. Very respectable people and a great service. I recommend this to anyone looking for a VPN.
The leaks seem to be limited to direct calls to the C function
getaddrinfo
.The Chrome browser is an example of an app that can use
getaddrinfo
directly.So a Google browser…
The above applies regardless of whether Always-on VPN and Block connections without VPN is enabled or not, which is not expected OS behavior and should therefore be fixed upstream in the OS.
We’ve been able to confirm that these leaks occur in multiple versions of Android, including the latest version (Android 14).
And a Google OS…
We have reported the issues and suggested improvements to Google and hope that they will address this quickly.
It’s a feature, not a bug.
This is not terribly new, and requires more investigation. One of the bugs appears to be due to Mullvad, other is potentially an Android bug.