Are apps such as Saily safe?
from Dop@lemmy.zip to privacy@lemmy.ml on 07 Mar 15:13
https://lemmy.zip/post/60330014

Hi,

I need to leave my country for a couple days, but my cellphone plan doesn’t cover data oversea and I don’t like to rely on WiFi. A relative suggested that I try Saily, which is an esim provider that you can load with whatever you need in the country you’re visiting but I’m again reluctant to use an app when I don’t know how trustworthy it is.

Has anyone ever faced the same issue? Should I simply let go of my internet connexion and enjoy a couple days off the the internet?

Cheers and thanks for your help

#privacy

threaded - newest

Zak@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 16:14 next collapse

I used Jetpac last time I needed an esim for travel. I did not install their app, but activated the esim manually with the facilities built in to the OS.

iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 17:56 collapse

Can you get a physical esim from any provider and install any esims from any other provider in it? How can you go about this?

SuperZorro@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Mar 19:50 collapse

Esims aren’t physical. Normally it’s just a qr code you scan on your phone to install it. Moving them between phones aren’t always possible.

iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world on 09 Mar 02:39 collapse

Sorry I asked incorrectly…I thought Jetpac provided programmable sims, so I was asking. There seems to be some sort of hybrid SIMs, which behave like an eSIM and can download the whole eSIM data onto them, and then go around using them on a physical SIM tray. I’ve just heard of this and I"m not exactly sure how reliable those are.

SuperZorro@discuss.tchncs.de on 07 Mar 19:44 next collapse

Recently in asia I used abestesim.com

It was a lot cheaper than anything else I could find, and worked perfectly.

voxel@feddit.uk on 07 Mar 20:06 next collapse

Saily is by Nord Security, also the company behind NordVPN

RheumatoidArthritis@mander.xyz on 07 Mar 21:06 next collapse

There are so many esim providers with websites, use one of these instead. Search “(destination country) esim” in your favourite search engine. You will be presented with a QR code at the end, scan it with your phone (while still in your country or within WiFi range) and you’re done.

koncertejo@lemmy.ml on 07 Mar 21:08 next collapse

I used it the last time I travelled, it worked just fine, and I assumed it did the regular amount of data harvesting my daily phone and internet service providers do.

Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone on 07 Mar 22:37 next collapse

I used saily when I went to PNG for work it wasn’t working where I was so I contacted them, they said oh it doesn’t work where I am.

Despite the website clearly stating it does. So fuck saily

Hiro8811@lemmy.world on 10 Mar 22:59 collapse

Yeah it gets too much shilled by youtubers so I don’t trust it.

Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone on 10 Mar 23:31 collapse

Yeah almost anything a youtuber sells i tend to avoid.

I did buy a survival book though but I feel artwork books are different to subscription services etc

GhostlyPixel@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 23:49 collapse

I have used Airalo when traveling around Europe, I think they have plans for everywhere, and I have always been happy. I’m not sure about safety, but I always use my home PC as a tailscale exit node when I travel abroad so at least the traffic is encrypted until it gets to there.