thomaslsmith90 0 Posted ... I have been using Express VPN for a time now but hows Air VPN compare to Express? What are the advantages? Share this post Link to post
zhang888 1066 Posted ... Tried to compare but cannot. Totally different kind of service and target audience.All their "servers" are just cheap VPS instances with no statistics. I can't find anything about logging as well,but since it is shared servers, be sure they are in place. 1 LZ1 reacted to this Hide zhang888's signature Hide all signatures Occasional moderator, sometimes BOFH. Opinions are my own, except when my wife disagrees. Share this post Link to post
jonnymoon96 4 Posted ... i have never used their service as far as i know there service is for those who want to watch netflix in a foreign country while airvpn markets promotes privacy i would recommend using this resource https://thatoneprivacysite.net/ in reality its whats the best vpn for you is the one you should choose Share this post Link to post
trev 1 Posted ... I tried Express VPN but was disappointed; BBC I Player was inaccessible using that service, so I tried AirVPN and it worked.YMMV.Their Customer Service was tops though, very attentive and refunded my subscription very quickly. Share this post Link to post
nikidewajgae 0 Posted ... I have been using Express VPN for a time now but hows Air VPN compare to Express? What are the advantages?ExpressVPN is the one I use too and I am satisfied with its performance. Share this post Link to post
LZ1 672 Posted ... Hello ! I once asked them about their servers and they weren't willing to give any real information. So in terms of a comparison, Air is much more transparent than ExpressVPN is; which matters a lot in terms of security. Sent to you from me with datalove 1 willieaames reacted to this Hide LZ1's signature Hide all signatures Hi there, are you new to AirVPN? Many of your questions are already answered in this guide. You may also read the Eddie Android FAQ. Moderators do not speak on behalf of AirVPN. Only the Official Staff account does. Please also do not run Tor Exit Servers behind AirVPN, thank you. Did you make a guide or how-to for something? Then contact me to get it listed in my new user guide's Guides Section, so that the community can find it more easily. Share this post Link to post
willieaames 3 Posted ... Expressvpn is good for streaming and only provider that actually works with netflix. (using denver servers). But many users were complaining about refund policies, routers, smart tv issues in this expressvpn user reviews Share this post Link to post
LZ1 672 Posted ... Expressvpn is good for streaming and only provider that actually works with netflix.I don't think it's reasonable to say they're the only provider who works with Netflix. Even Air works, it's perhaps just a little more touch and go. I'm inclined to imagine it's more luck than anything, that they work, seeing as it can't possibly be a lack of knowledge on Airs part. Sent to you from me with datalove Hide LZ1's signature Hide all signatures Hi there, are you new to AirVPN? Many of your questions are already answered in this guide. You may also read the Eddie Android FAQ. Moderators do not speak on behalf of AirVPN. Only the Official Staff account does. Please also do not run Tor Exit Servers behind AirVPN, thank you. Did you make a guide or how-to for something? Then contact me to get it listed in my new user guide's Guides Section, so that the community can find it more easily. Share this post Link to post
ethanpearson 0 Posted ... Both of them accept bitcoin, provide high encyption and don't safe any logflies (as they promise). But AirVPN has only one protocol (OpenVPN) and fewer servers' number. Share this post Link to post
Staff 9972 Posted ... Both of them accept bitcoin, provide high encyption and don't safe any logflies (as they promise). But AirVPN has only one protocol (OpenVPN) and fewer servers' number. Providing PPTP should be considered negatively at least when some security is required. About the VPN servers amount, it looks like we have more servers than ExpressVPN. In the machines amount, we only count real, physical machines with a dedicated line and port, or at least a dedicated line for each of our racks. We don't count VPS or IP addresses geo-located to some country but assigned to datacenters in a different country and similar "tricks". It also looks like we provide a greater variety of protocols and destination ports, with the options to tunnel OpenVPN in additional stunnel and SSH tunnels, but we might be wrong, and a wide array of ports and alternative, partially hidden entry-IP addresses. Kind regards 1 zheshibushibi reacted to this Share this post Link to post
korsko 2 Posted ... I use AirVPN and sometimes ExpressVPN for Netflix (because it still works). But something irritates me: When i check the logfiles of the ExpressVPN app i see that their actual app uses OpenVPN 2.3.14 which is at least two years old. AIR uses 2.4.6 in the newest Eddie beta. Is using an old version of OpenVPN something concerning or doesn´t it matter much in terms of security if the servers of the VPN Provider are patched with new versions of OpenVPN and just the clients run old OpenVPN versions? Share this post Link to post
Staff 9972 Posted ... Hello! The first three things that come to mind are that you can't use tls-crypt with OpenVPN 2.3.x and we also detected some severe IPv6 bugs in those versions. Last but not least at all, you can't use TLS 1.2 with 2.3.14 (which supports only SSL 3 and TLS 1.0). TLS 1.2 is supported in OpenVPN 2.3.3 or higher versions. If the problem is only client side, you can easily upgrade, but if the problem is in their servers, and they do not offer any server with the above features (such as our 90 "Gen 2" servers), it might be a bad symptom of insufficient care toward security. Kind regards Share this post Link to post
Staff 9972 Posted ... I use AirVPN and sometimes ExpressVPN for Netflix (because it still works). Hello, to access Netflix USA you can use AirVPN as well, from all servers except UK servers, from now on. Feel free to test and report back. As usual it is mandatory that you use VPN DNS to access Netflix USA. UK servers traffic is not re-routed to Netflix USA because access to Netflix UK from most of our UK servers remained possible up to now. Kind regards Share this post Link to post
korsko 2 Posted ... I use AirVPN and sometimes ExpressVPN for Netflix (because it still works). Hello, to access Netflix USA you can use AirVPN as well, from all servers except UK servers, from now on. Feel free to test and report back. As usual it is mandatory that you use VPN DNS to access Netflix USA. UK servers traffic is not re-routed to Netflix USA because access to Netflix UK from most of our UK servers remained possible up to now. Kind regards Great, good to know! Do you think ExpressVPN is lying about their encryption if they mention on Torrentfreak that they use the following setup: ExpressVPN apps generally default to our recommended protocol for security and performance: OpenVPN UDP. Our apps use a 4096-bit CA, AES-256-CBC encryption, TLSv1.2, and SHA512 signatures to authenticate our servers." They still use OpenVPN 2.3.14 for their apps, so TLSv1.2 should not be possible or am i wrong? I asked why they use old OpenVPN versions but got only the answer that their servers are patched and that theres no problem in terms of security if they still use 2.3.14 for their clients. Whats the deal on updating to a current version of OpenVPN, why don´t they do it? Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 362 Posted ... I use AirVPN and sometimes ExpressVPN for Netflix (because it still works). Hello, to access Netflix USA you can use AirVPN as well, from all servers except UK servers, from now on. Feel free to test and report back. As usual it is mandatory that you use VPN DNS to access Netflix USA. UK servers traffic is not re-routed to Netflix USA because access to Netflix UK from most of our UK servers remained possible up to now. Kind regards Great, good to know! Do you think ExpressVPN is lying about their encryption if they mention on Torrentfreak that they use the following setup: ExpressVPN apps generally default to our recommended protocol for security and performance: OpenVPN UDP. Our apps use a 4096-bit CA, AES-256-CBC encryption, TLSv1.2, and SHA512 signatures to authenticate our servers." They still use OpenVPN 2.3.14 for their apps, so TLSv1.2 should not be possible or am i wrong? I asked why they use old OpenVPN versions but got only the answer that their servers are patched and that theres no problem in terms of security if they still use 2.3.14 for their clients. Whats the deal on updating to a current version of OpenVPN, why don´t they do it? Unless they've done like PIA in the past - use their own custom openvpn based on 2.3.14 but updated to include newer capability, security fixes, etc. I'm not defending them, just bringing up that possibility. Share this post Link to post
Staff 9972 Posted ... Kind regards Great, good to know! Do you think ExpressVPN is lying about their encryption if they mention on Torrentfreak that they use the following setup: ExpressVPN apps generally default to our recommended protocol for security and performance: OpenVPN UDP. Our apps use a 4096-bit CA, AES-256-CBC encryption, TLSv1.2, and SHA512 signatures to authenticate our servers." They still use OpenVPN 2.3.14 for their apps, so TLSv1.2 should not be possible or am i wrong? I asked why they use old OpenVPN versions but got only the answer that their servers are patched and that theres no problem in terms of security if they still use 2.3.14 for their clients. Whats the deal on updating to a current version of OpenVPN, why don´t they do it? Hello! Correct, OpenVPN 2.3.14 does support TLS 1.2. TLS 1.2 support started in OpeVPN 2.3.3:https://community.openvpn.net/openvpn/wiki/Hardening (search for As of OpenVPN 2.3.3, OpenVPN supports TLS version negotiation. Earlier versions only supported TLS 1.0 ) We're very sorry, in the previous message we considered OpenVPN 2.3.1, and not 2.3.14. About the security patches: of course nothing prevents to fork OpenVPN and recompile some old version with backports or own code to change anything you want. As a general rule we try to not modify the OpenVPN source code except when we are definitely forced to do so (for example, in the past, to fix a critical bug which prevented usage of IPv6 in some 2.3.x version, or even when we patched, many years ago, a bug related to connections of OpenVPN to a proxy: anyway patches which were submitted for acceptance or rejection). The reason because forking is a delicate matter with some software is that the main branch is always audited by a wide community, extensive usage etc., while with a fork you always take a risk to insert some vulnerability, so an audit of any fork (in our sector, where security is a top priority) should be mandatory before putting it into production. Kind regards Share this post Link to post