

I used the GDPR export which worked, now I just have to find a replacement.
I used the GDPR export which worked, now I just have to find a replacement.
It’s really sad, I am a VIP user for 10 years now but a 100% price increase is just too much for me. Are there any valid alternatives? The other commercial ones mentioned here cost pretty much the same so that not really and option for me.
Also, you mentioned you can export your data? Were you referring to third party export tools like traktextract?
*edit: Found the GDPR export.
How is it a replacement when the price is pretty much the same? I am happy with trakt, I am a VIP member for exactly 10 years and like the feature set, I just can’t justify a 100% price increase.
Stop with the low effort comments and learn to read. You would do everybody, including yourself, a favor.
Just to be clear this is a killswitch, that’s what you want right? So that it’s only possible to connect through the VPN (tun0). And if the VPN goes down your internet gets “killed” so you don’t leak your IP.
In that case you want to start ufw when you system starts, so you would need to whitelist your VPN but if your VPN is already connected it should work without whitelisting the IP I guess but never tried it since that’s not recommended.
Here is how I do it:
sudo ufw default deny outgoing
sudo ufw default deny incoming
sudo ufw allow out on tun0 from any to any
sudo ufw allow out to VPN_IP_ADDRESS proto udp
You have to do the last line for all your VPN server ips or the initial DNS request will not go through. If you connect through udp.
Indeed
If you need a car just once a week you shouldn’t own a car at all. Take the bus!
Stop spreading this nonsense. He made ONE comment that made it clear he is not accepting contributions for political reason from people not part of the project.
The “freakout” was entirely external.
Man now I want one as well, so one you imagined. :)
FYI: /etc/grub.d/10_linux
should not be edited directly for permanent changes since those changes get replaced when grub is updated.
Use /etc/default/grub
for permanent changes.
Honestly, I have no idea what you are referring to either. Would you mind sending me a message if you don’t want to go into detail in public?
Not op but no it’s not.