https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PfSense In November 2017, a World Intellectual Property Organization <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Intellectual_Property_Organization> panel found that Netgate, the copyright holder of pfSense, had been using the domain opnsense.com in bad faith to discredit OPNsense <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPNsense>, a competing open source firewall forked from pfSense. It compelled Netgate to transfer the domain to Deciso, the developer of OPNsense. I was happy with pfsense too, until Netgate bought the copyrights. On 2020-02-03 15:57, Ryan Hamel wrote:
Jean,
Do you have facts to support this claim?
Signed,
A happy pfSense user.
On Mon, Feb 3, 2020, 12:42 PM Jean | ddostest.me <http://ddostest.me> via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org <mailto:nanog@nanog.org>> wrote:
Netgate bought Pfsense and they already started to destroy it.
You should consider to switch to Opnsense.
On 2020-02-03 14:34, Matt Harris wrote: > fSense on a VM with relatively minimal resources running your VPNs > works very well