Your article is like "security for 12 year olds", the entire VPN business is a scam...
Allowing a 3rd party to install a keylogger and keep 100% of your traffic forever is "fake security".
https://gist.github.com/joepie91/5a9909939e6ce7d09e29There is NO WAY for you to verify anything that a VPN service claims to do.
That's why MYST behavior is so troubling... it's a 100% trust-based business...
So you want the Devs to be known, highly qualified and dead serious...
Unlike, say, the complete idiots behind VPNcoin who are basically some random Chinese gamblers.
I still have yet to hear them address the most glaring issue - with any VPN, when a user surf say child pornography, the VPN has logs of up to 6 months (most do anyway) has to give up the IPUser's name who did this. In this case, does the FBI bust down the door of the Mysterium VPN provider who is doing for coin?
How are the Mysterium VPN providers protected in this case? Or will this end up existing VPN providers will join due to the nature of the business - in this case getting in legal trouble due to shady VPN users.
If you read their WP
https://mysterium.network/whitepaper.pdf on point 4.1, it look like they are going to create another Tor network with incentive as added value.
Considering that, I suggest to check that following link
https://www.torproject.org/eff/tor-legal-faq.html.enBasically, the legal risk should be for the exit Mysterium node, not for the relays. Anyway, that's really a shame that the "dev" of Mysterium is unable to come here and respond himself.
Name: MysteriumNetwork
Posts: 14
Activity: 14
Position: Newbie
Date Registered: May 01, 2017, 08:34:04 AM
Last Active: July 02, 2017, 07:36:44 PM
@MysteriumNetwork why you created that thread if you don't use it to respond to your community and investors?