![]() What does hotspot have to do with it though? Is this one of those weird US operator things again, like how Unlimited apparently doesn't always mean unlimited over there?Ĭlick to expand.That’s not how I see it. Regarding hotspot data, you will still be limited to whatever phone subscription you have for traffic from your operator, but if they have specific caps for certain services or something weird like that, then yeah, this would circumvent that detection like any other VPN would. And their server in the middle validating pairing is more a downside than an upside in my book. VPNs are nothing new, and neither is peer-to-peer connections. I couldn't find the actual patent but I assume A) it's pending and not granted, and 2) It's very specifically about this way of connecting and nothing actually technologically interesting, because all the concepts they utilise are perfectly common techniques. I wouldn't put too much into them saying they patented it though. It's encrypted between devices according to them. The point is to, for example, access your home network from afarĪs for safety and security, it is closed source software and they even say it contacts their servers to check for pairing permissions - I would probably look for an open source solution if it were me, but if their FAQs don't lie, yeah, it's safe and secure. What exactly are you asking? It's just a personal VPN system limited to 1 device setups. ![]()
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