IFF VPN Village 2020: Difference between revisions

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= VPN Village Description =
= VPN Village Description =
[[File:VPN_Village_2020.png|right|200px]]IFF’s virtual VPN Village took place this Fall. The Village, a combination of private and public events, was hosted with ARTICLE 19’s Team Digital, and with the support of the following partners: The Calyx Institute, TunnelBear, and NordVPN, and various other allies.
[[File:VPN_Village_2020.png|right|400px]]IFF’s virtual VPN Village took place this Fall. The Village, a combination of private and public events, was hosted with ARTICLE 19’s Team Digital, and with the support of the following partners: The Calyx Institute, TunnelBear, and NordVPN, and various other allies.


VPNs (Virtual Private Network) are becoming the go-to tools for users looking to protect themselves from surveillance or to circumvent censorship. They are an essential tool for human rights defenders and journalists. However, it is often hard to choose a reliable and trustworthy VPN from the large market that includes expensive and shady providers. The VPN Village will cultivated conversations for those who are researching, distributing, or using VPNs. Workshops and trainings were  centered on addressing the impact of VPNs on the Internet Freedom community, both the good and bad. The Village made space for civil society, developers, activists, and VPN companies to come together to discuss:
VPNs (Virtual Private Network) are becoming the go-to tools for users looking to protect themselves from surveillance or to circumvent censorship. They are an essential tool for human rights defenders and journalists. However, it is often hard to choose a reliable and trustworthy VPN from the large market that includes expensive and shady providers. The VPN Village will cultivated conversations for those who are researching, distributing, or using VPNs. Workshops and trainings were  centered on addressing the impact of VPNs on the Internet Freedom community, both the good and bad. The Village made space for civil society, developers, activists, and VPN companies to come together to discuss:

Revision as of 18:53, 22 September 2020

VPN Village Description

VPN Village 2020.png

IFF’s virtual VPN Village took place this Fall. The Village, a combination of private and public events, was hosted with ARTICLE 19’s Team Digital, and with the support of the following partners: The Calyx Institute, TunnelBear, and NordVPN, and various other allies.

VPNs (Virtual Private Network) are becoming the go-to tools for users looking to protect themselves from surveillance or to circumvent censorship. They are an essential tool for human rights defenders and journalists. However, it is often hard to choose a reliable and trustworthy VPN from the large market that includes expensive and shady providers. The VPN Village will cultivated conversations for those who are researching, distributing, or using VPNs. Workshops and trainings were centered on addressing the impact of VPNs on the Internet Freedom community, both the good and bad. The Village made space for civil society, developers, activists, and VPN companies to come together to discuss:

  • The use of VPNs as part of a censorship-resilient community
  • Strengths, vulnerabilities and flaws inherent in VPNs, and understanding how they impact vulnerable or marginalized populations
  • Best practices and standards in the promotion and use of VPNs
  • Industry standards among enterprise and community-ran VPN instances

Notes from Workshops & Events

How to VPN Notes

Presenter: Elijiah Waxwing, Senior Technologist at The Calyx Institute

This introductory workshop was designed for folks that wanted to understand what a VPN is, how it works, and how it differs from other tools like Tor. Participants learned what a VPN does and does not do, best use cases, and how they can pick a VPN provider that is both trustworthy and serves their needs. See Notes


VPN Glitter Meetup Notes

Our digital rights community provided feedback on what issues or questions they have when using VPNs in their respective regions. The goal of the meetup was to provide the community with a place to map out challenges and brainstorm on possible next steps that we can do collectively as a community.