Murus is advertised as buy once for life, and all updates and upgrades will be free. LS has a neat Network Monitor with a world map for visualizing network connections Murus has a neat Simulator to test whether you rule does what you intended it to do, which is especially useful in creation of complex configurations, and for me, the Simulator is more important than the said Network Monitor. Vallum is cheaper ($15 vs $45 for single license), and it allows for more complex rule creation then LS (but Murus dev please take note how LS lists common ports - 21 FTP, 80 HTTP, etc., for easier rule creation for not so technical users). My reference to the Little Snitch in the previous review of Vallum 2 is now obsolete, as the LS 4 is now quite user friendly, but I would still recommend Vallum over the established name and richer looking product that is Little Snitch. I would imagine that the new multiuser, group management, logging capabilities are not that important to a typical user, from my perspective of the label "typical," but all these power-features make Vallum very interesting to corporate entities and advanced users. And, well, it has certainly been polished since the previous major release, and at the same time it has become both more intuitive and even more powerful and nuanced. Due to the new architecture, the old Vallum 2 rules are not imported and this presented me with the opportunity to experience the upgraded rule-creation process. So, Vallum 3 is out with the new core and logic, AFW (Application Firewall for macOS) kernel-based socket filter. Buy once for life, all updates and upgrades will be free. ![]() It respects your privacy, it does not phone home or leak any kind of data on the network.It's powerful: create complex setups with jails, mixed rules, temporary rules, at both application- and network-level.One click to install, one click to uninstall ![]()
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