jean claud 44 Posted ... I know that European Court of Justice rules against mass data retention in EU and that in Sweden ,contrary to internet ISP, VPN are not submitted to this obligation .In another side terrorism and international tensions push governements to enforce internet surveillance . So what are the VPN obligations in differents European countries ?Thank you for your replies Quote Share this post Link to post
giganerd 781 Posted ... Do you mean terms of use or terms of running a VPN server/provider in the countries? Because in Germany for instance, there are no real obligations when it comes to using a VPN. You can be sued for using it as one way of interpreting one or a few of the "Computer Misuse Acts" ("circumventing access restrictions") but this almost never happens, precisely because every lawyer can interpret it another way. And because many services are hosted on another country's territory. We do have our fads with wild data retention ideas when someone drives a truck into a crowd, though... Quote Hide giganerd's signature Hide all signatures Four simple things:There's a guide to AirVPN. Before you ask questions, take 30 minutes of your time to go through it.Amazon IPs are not dangerous here. It's the fallback DNS.Running TOR exits is discouraged. They're subject to restrictions on the internet and harm all AirVPN users. Furthermore, I propose that your paranoia is to be destroyed. If you overdo privacy, you'll be unique among the mass again. XMPP: gigan3rd@xmpp.airvpn.org or join our lounge@conference.xmpp.airvpn.org Share this post Link to post
jean claud 44 Posted ... Thanks for the reply )Do you know what prevails:The laws of country where vpn is based or the laws of the country where the servers is based ? Quote Share this post Link to post
giganerd 781 Posted ... I believe this question has been answered a few times in the past. The VPN server is in a datacenter, the datacenter is in a country registered as a company. Most of them at least. So in the first place the company will be contacted about possible abuse of a server, and only they decide what to do.If a VPN provider is based in another country the VPN server's country has no power over the VPN provider. How could it, the provider is registered somewhere else and plays by its local rules. Matters change when the provider and the server are in the same country. 1 jean claud reacted to this Quote Hide giganerd's signature Hide all signatures Four simple things:There's a guide to AirVPN. Before you ask questions, take 30 minutes of your time to go through it.Amazon IPs are not dangerous here. It's the fallback DNS.Running TOR exits is discouraged. They're subject to restrictions on the internet and harm all AirVPN users. Furthermore, I propose that your paranoia is to be destroyed. If you overdo privacy, you'll be unique among the mass again. XMPP: gigan3rd@xmpp.airvpn.org or join our lounge@conference.xmpp.airvpn.org Share this post Link to post