- Has Algo been audited?
- Why aren't you using Tor?
- Why aren't you using Racoon, LibreSwan, or OpenSwan?
- Why aren't you using a memory-safe or verified IKE daemon?
- Why aren't you using OpenVPN?
- Why aren't you using Alpine Linux, OpenBSD, or HardenedBSD?
- Where did the name "Algo" come from?
No. This project is under active development. We're happy to accept and fix issues as they are identified. Use Algo at your own risk. If you find a security issue of any severity, please contact us on Slack.
The goal of this project is not to provide anonymity, but to ensure confidentiality of network traffic while traveling. Tor introduces new risks that are unsuitable for Algo's intended users. Namely, with Algo, users are in control over the gateway routing their traffic. With Tor, users are at the mercy of actively malicious exit nodes.
Racoon does not support IKEv2. Racoon2 supports IKEv2 but is not actively maintained. When we looked, the documentation for strongSwan was better than the corresponding documentation for LibreSwan or OpenSwan. strongSwan also has the benefit of a from-scratch rewrite to support IKEv2. I consider such rewrites a positive step when supporting a major new protocol version.
I would, but I don't know of any suitable ones. If you're in the position to fund the development of such a project, contact us. We would be interested in leading such an effort. At the very least, I plan to make modifications to strongSwan and the environment it's deployed in that prevent or significantly complicate exploitation of any latent issues.
OpenVPN does not have out-of-the-box client support on any major desktop or mobile operating system. This introduces user experience issues and requires the user to update and maintain the software themselves. OpenVPN depends on the security of TLS, both the protocol and its implementations, and we simply trust the server less due to past security incidents.
Alpine Linux is not supported out-of-the-box by any major cloud provider. We are interested in supporting Free-, Open-, and HardenedBSD. Follow along or contribute to our BSD support in this issue.
Algo is short for "Al Gore", the Vice President of Networks everywhere for inventing the Internet.