Every part of your comment is wrong or false. Air, O, Proton. There's 3 that are "mainstream".
There's multitudes of smaller providers that allow it.
Mullvad removed it because of CP and extremist content being hosted behind mullvad. It had nothing to do with torrenting as they had no problem with it for the many years.
Many countries don't even acknowledge DMCA. Some have their own that have higher criteria for enforcement like the NL, others just don't care. Hosted many things out of Vietnam, Kosovo, Hungary, etc.
This is what I use, the 36 month pricing is just so cheap. Probably run 50-80TB of traffic through it a month for years without any problem.
Really like the dynamic wire guard configs that allows you to bounce between servers in a small geographic area. Perfect for keeping private tracker admins happy
Lol my home hosted seedbox would break that 10TB limit at least x5 over in a month. Absolutely ridiculously low limit for calling something "unlimited".
I'm glad Air doesn't care how many TB I'm uploading a month.
Using Jellyfin is a punishment in itself.
You obviously didn't read the article.
Must be an old screenshot because there's now half a page of Gemini AI garbage at the very top now.
Highly recommend using the uBlacklist extensions to filter out the garbage, spam, copycat, useless sites that somehow seem to always beat out legitimate sources in SEO.
What they don't advertise is how many of those "new" subscribers are actually from their "emerging" markets such as India, where a subscription price is peanuts. Also, im fairly certain these numbers are intentionally skewed to paint a better picture as they lump in all the "free" accounts people get with their other subscriptions.
I get Paramount+ free with Walmart+. I get Hulu/Netflix/AppleTV with Tmobile Mobile. I get Max with ATT Fiber.
I'm sure that these streaming companies have more new subscribers when they literally give it away and simultaneously strangling their existing consumers. It's more of a question of how long is it sustainable for them to raise prices every time they're not going to have a record quarter.
This is what I do, but with Unbound dns on opnsense with dns forwarding to my business cloudflare account which gives me additional filtering options.
Allows me to properly do dns caching and filtering in Unbound and then leverage cloudflare to do additional security threat filtering on top.
Then it's just a matter of setting up a firewall rule to redirect any port 53 to the local Unbound dns and blocking all 853 traffic to ensure all iot devices aren't using their own hard-coded dns.
I can easily say that the amount of my friends and family that have become interested in my Emby setup has expontentially consistently increased every round that these streaming providers have increased their rates.
The experience of launching 7 different streaming apps to find something, content constantly vanishing or moving platforms, and just an overall poor user experience coupled with doubling/tripling of each platforms costs....
Like others have stated. Navidrome. It's the only open sources backend I've found to properly handle my ~14TB music library without having performance issues.