VPNBook

The service connects to a VPN via OpenVPN client or a PPTP connection. There are minimal variety of geographic locations. Available servers include the United States, Canada and Romania.[2][3] VPNBook can be used to bypass some governmental restrictions.[4][5]

VPNBook is a virtual private network service.[1]

Description

The service can be connected to by two ways, by connection via a third-party OpenVPN client or through PPTP. The Mac OS X, iOS, Android, Ubuntu, and Windows operating systems all have PPTP support built in.

The software (OpenVPN clients) can be used also, that provides the protocol stack, file system, and process scheduling. OpenVPN uses SSL protocol which is generally more secure than Layer 2 Tunnel Protocol's PPTP.[6]

Reception

In a review done by PC Magazine, it was concluded that the service is a good choice among free VPN services, even though it has certain functionality flaws.[7] TechRadar reviewed VPNBook negatively, criticizing its poor performance and lack of desktop and mobile apps.[2]

gollark: ... then it's not "open".
gollark: The container might be open; the codecs are *not*.
gollark: H.265 has licensing stuff surrounding it.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: They can automatically convert formats if an upload form asks for it? I was not aware of this.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.