This was posted 9 years 1 month ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Tiger VPN Lite: Lifetime Subscription USD $29 (~AUD $41) (Usually USD $790) @ StackSocial

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Just got an email about VPN so though might be useful to some

The Internet can be a scary place, packed full of hackers, government spies, identity thieves, and other degenerates. TigerVPN protects you from cyber crimes, and guarantees that your Internet activity stays anonymous. How? Connect to TigerVPN Lite’s 15 servers worldwide to get fast, private access—free from location restrictions. Yes, that means you can have your Netflix and watch it too no matter what country you’re visiting.

Provides top-notch security
Encrypts all your browsing w/ a 256bit SSL encryption
Includes 10Gbps servers optimized to limit latency globally
Offers access to 15 nodes: Amsterdam, Atlanta, Bucharest, Copenhagen, Denver, Frankfurt, London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Miami, Montreal, New York, Toronto, Vienna & Zurich
Doesn’t limit your data; plus bandwidth health detection maintains performance at peak times
Includes easy-to-use mobile apps
Allows for a choice in encryption protocol – PPTP, L2TP, OpenVPN, etc.

Referral Links

Referral: random (96)

$10 credit for the referrer and referee.

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closed Comments

  • -2

    Tiger VPN Lite: Lifetime Subscription $29

    How much is it normally ?

    • Their site says $790, how much of that is true I'm not sure. Friend got it on their previous sale for $105 and they are pretty happy with the product/service

  • +1

    Whenever you pay for a VPN service, make sure to read the small print whether you can get your money back. I've never heard of this VPN provider. If you can get the money back, check this VPN using iplocation and dnsleak tests. Most cheap VPN providers do not anonymize your location and leak your dns (defeating the purpose of using VPN).

    • Very few Vpn providers offer decent refund policies (i.e. pro-rata refunds) after a very short trial period (Purevpn don't, PIA don't, pretty sure NordVPN and Cyberghost don't). Indeed when I went on a hunt previously I only found two providers who did offer it, both of which were relative unknowns.
      Considering how much the quality of service can vary over time it seems crazy (from a user perspective, totally logical from a provider perspective) to have such refund (or 'no-refund') policies.
      If going through stacksocial, I suspect getting a refund would be doubly hard because the transaction isn't directly with the Vpn provider.

      • +1

        Just for those who are interested:

        TigerVPN:
        REFUND POLICY
        We provide 3 Days Money Back Guarantee.
        (bunch of other conditions, which could either be interpreted as allowing refunds over a longer period, or severely constrain the conditions under which you can exercise the 3-day guarantee: see https://www.tigervpn.com/terms-and-conditions)

        NordVPN:
        If you wish to claim a refund, you can do so within 30 days following your purchase of NordVPN service. We want you to be be fully satisfied with our services. However, we will troubleshoot an issue you experience first

        PIA:
        If you are less than 100% satisfied with the PrivateInternetAccess.com VPN service, we will gladly refund your payment if the refund is requested within seven (7) days from the date of the purchase. Requests made later than the 7 day purchase date window will be denied.

        PureVPN:
        If you experience technical difficulties, please contact the PureVPN support team for quick resolution via live chat. The PureVPN live chat is available 24x7. You may also email the PureVPN support team ([email protected]) before claiming a refund, as they will be happy to solve any problems that you might encounter.
        Your refund claim is within 7 days of your order date.
        (… other conditions such as not breaching terms of service)

        ExpressVPN
        You may cancel your account with a full refund within 30 days of the initial purchase (“Money Back Guarantee”). Refunds beyond the 30 day purchase window will be considered, in the sole discretion of ExpressVPN, only if a subscriber can demonstrate that the Service was not available or usable during the subscription period and that reasonable attempts were made to contact ExpressVPN to resolve the issue. In this case, ExpressVPN may provide the Account Holder with a pro-rata refund of service fees paid during the period the Service was not available or usable.
        (i.e. they may, at their discretion, refund you but only for the period when their service was broken, not for the rest of the time)

        LimeVPN: NOTE: THIS IS AN AWESOME REFUND POLICY AND I WISH ALL OF THEM HAD THIS!
        Account Holder can cancel their account at any time. The remaining balance will be refunded to them in a reasonable time. Refunds are given based on Pro-Rata.

        TorGuard:
        Answer: If for any reason you are not happy with your service within the first 7 days we'll issue a 100% refund - no questions asked. Please bare in mind users who order "fresh" Dedicated IP's, these are non-refundable, we will subtract the payment for Dedicated IP's and refund the service payment.
        (Seems like you're out of luck after 7 days)

  • +1

    is price USD?

  • Good to know if PureVPN can not give me my answer there is a liter option out there. Cheers

  • Seems like there is mixed reviews
    http://www.vpnreviews.com/tiger-vpn/

  • I got this a couple months back. So far so good. I only use the LA Node, and get about 200ms latency. I max out my bandwidth, but then again I am only on about 10mbps or so…..

    It's got okay reviews when I looked it up so should be fine. Pretty constant connection as well. I mean at 29USD you'll be ahead if it lasts 6 months.

    • Can get a year of PIA for about that at the moment.

      • PIA isn't what it used to be in my opinion (I say as someone who has >1 year left of subscription and is kind of bitter about it).
        Having said that, TigerVPN is basically a complete unknown so PIA may still be better.

        • How come? Slower speeds and dropouts?

          I have PIA but I don't use it enough to tell. I used it in China last week and it was painful to get a reliable connection (although it's most likely China's fault).

        • @ronnknee:
          I have found the speed and the connection reliability have both tailed off over the last 6 months. I frequently have periods where no data will come through for 10-20 seconds despite being connected to the Vpn, which makes it kind of annoying for browsing.

        • @2be8:

          I heard PIA had some problems cause they were rolling out new Australian servers, hopefully it will get better?

        • @g2420hd:
          Hopefully. I now have PureVPN and Getflix subscriptions as well, so it will be interesting to see the differences.

  • Interesting. My PIA expires soon. I don't use it often enough to pay $40 per year.

  • Are there Australia server?

  • is the use of VPN's allowed in Australia?

  • +1

    From TorrentFreak.com
    https://torrentfreak.com/anonymous-vpn-service-provider-revi…

    1. Do you keep ANY logs which would allow you to match an IP-address and a time stamp to a user of your service? If so, exactly what information do you hold and for how long?

    2. Under what jurisdiction(s) does your company operate?

    3. What tools are used to monitor and mitigate abuse of your service?

    4. Do you use any external email providers (e.g. Google Apps) or support tools ( e.g Live support, Zendesk) that hold information provided by users?

    5. In the event you receive a DMCA takedown notice or European equivalent, how are these handled?

    6. What steps are taken when a valid court order requires your company to identify an active user of your service? Has this ever happened?

    7. Does your company have a warrant canary or a similar solution to alert customers to gag orders?

    8. Is BitTorrent and other file-sharing traffic allowed on all servers? If not, why?

    9. Which payment systems do you use and how are these linked to individual user accounts?

    10. What is the most secure VPN connection and encryption algorithm you would recommend to your users? Do you provide tools such as “kill switches” if a connection drops and DNS leak protection?

    11. Do you use your own DNS servers? (if not, which servers do you use?)

    12. Do you have physical control over your VPN servers and network or are they outsourced and hosted by a third party (if so, which ones)? Where are your servers located?

    tigerVPN

    1. Since hundreds of people share the same IP, our accounting data (start time – end time, & generated Traffic) does not allow any further breakdown. We save those records for 3 days (in line with our 3 day money back guarantee) and only keep the traffic per month value until the next billing cycle starts.

    2. Tiger At Work is a Limited Liability Company with operation in Slovakia.

    3. We don’t use any tools for monitoring or mitigation.

    4. We use Freshdesk as Support Software, however no data is stored in that 3rd party app as it’s a read only tool for us. E.g. when a customer submits a ticket via our App we reply and he gets that message within the app. The only thing stored in the “cloud” is the conversation itself. We aim to keep all data inhouse, which is what we did for hardware, software and infrastructure.

    5. We’ve never received a DMCA takedown notice, however, our architecture won’t allow us to single out a customer. We hope that our premium product does not attract too many “issues” and we hope that our customers keep within the safe range.

    6. This has never happened, so let’s not paint the devil on the wall.

    7. As we can’t single out our customers, we can’t notify or warn them.

    8. We usually allow torrents, but not in Amsterdam and the US.

    9. We are one of the few PCI complaint merchants, so we can handle all payment data for credit card transactions ourselves on our own servers. Meaning that we don’t use tools like Chargify or other POS systems. We only save a token which is a system to system key and it does not link any card data to our customers. A similar token system is used with PayPal, but here the payment is processed with them. We also allow Bitcoin transactions, that’s the ultimate secure payment source, we also roll out prepaid cards which you will be able to buy in shops and internet cafes in cash soon.

    10. Our Apps are set per default in OpenVPN mode, which is the algorithm we approve and recommend. Our Win + Mac + Android apps are equipped with kill switch functionality, however we need to fine tune them a bit over the next couple of weeks.

    11. Yes we use our own DNS servers

    12. We are in full control of our equipment, hardware and upstream. We operate 55 locations in 40 countries from Australia to Emirates, HongKong to Denver, London to Serbia. We have a lot of locations covered.

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