> While this is not the answer to the question you are asking.
>
> I used mullvad.net while traveling at public wifi hotspots statewide
> and abroad last year. It woks great on Linux - their client works well
> on openSuSE and 16 and 18 LTS Ubuntu. They use openVPN as well as
> WireGuard on their end. Additionally you can download openVPN config
> files which work great when imported to Network manager. I have not use
> them on Android, so I cannot comment.

This probably also isn't the answer you're looking for but might
actually provide more useful info than just one user's experience who
may or may not care about the same things you do in a vpn service.

I've been curious about a vpn service for a while now. When I worked
as Network Engineer I did a lot of work with corporate / industry VPNs
and firewalls. So I know a lil' bit about the technical security
aspect. Over the past few years I've been working on personal and
community privacy and security.

I especially like what the good folks at Mullvad have to say. "It is
fundamental to a well-functioning society. It allows norms, ethics,
and laws to be safely discussed and challenged. A free and open
society, therefore, cannot flourish and develop nor exist without
privacy.

There's a lot of  independent tech reviewers and security researchers
out there these days that I think would give you a more robust and
thorough understanding of a product/service than any user can.

So, check out this review,
https://www.techradar.com/reviews/protonvpn

I certainly learned a few new and interesting things.

Cheers,

Mike
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