Thanks, I’ll give this a shot in the coming week!
Thanks, I’ll give this a shot in the coming week!
I also route everything through my pfsense firewall to mullvad VPN. I’ve been looking at various ways to access the internal network from the outside internet safely, and I’m a bit hesitant to open that hole just yet. Cloudflare tunnel seems like the easiest option but apparently they can see everything you put through the tunnel and I’m not real comfortable with that.
Does one need a dynamic dns to use wireguard to tunnel back in, or is there another way of ensuring you can connect to the correct location? Does the wireguard server run on docker?
I’m confused as to how outbound and inbound would be different. Would the traffic not go from the VPN endpoint to your device?
How do you do this? Are you playing with steam? Is there a reason to use wine over proton?
Clearly it isn’t so useless, or they wouldn’t do it.
Note that m.2 is a form factor, not a protocol. There are m.2 SATA SSDs. If you want a faster SSD, ensure it is nvme.
What does port forwarding gain you on a VPN? Sorry if the question is ignorant
I got my phone through my carrier. Unbeknownst to me at the time, carrier provided phones have locked bootloaders so you can’t install grapheneOS on them, or if you can, I haven’t found a guide to reliably do so. The phone was $800 off through the carrier so I can’t complain too much, but I would have got it straight from Google if I had known prior to buying that you can’t install grapheneOS on it.
I just learned the hard way that getting a p7 via carrier means it can’t be bootloaded, which means I can’t install grapheneOS on it. They gave me $800 off the phone if I bought through them, which was a nice discount, but it still sucks because I can’t do what I want on the hardware. Lesson learned for next time.
A lot of people are also just dumb. FOSS won’t fix dumb.