Versions:

  • 1.96.3
  • 1.96.2
  • 1.94.2
  • 1.94.1
  • 1.92.5
  • 1.92.3
  • 1.92.1
  • 1.90.9
  • 1.90.8
  • 1.90.6
  • 1.90.4
  • 1.90.3
  • 1.90.1
  • 1.88.4
  • 1.88.3
  • 1.88.1
  • 1.86.2
  • 1.84.2
  • 1.84.0
  • 1.82.5
  • 1.82.0
  • 1.80.2
  • 1.80.0
  • 1.78.1
  • 1.78.0
  • 1.76.6
  • 1.76.1
  • 1.76.0
  • 1.74.0
  • 1.72.0
  • 1.70.0
  • 1.68.2
  • 1.68.1
  • 1.68.0
  • 1.66.4
  • 1.66.3
  • 1.66.0
  • 1.64.2
  • 1.64.0
  • 1.62.1
  • 1.62.0
  • 1.60.1
  • 1.60.0
  • 1.58.2
  • 1.56.1
  • 1.56.0
  • 1.54.1
  • 1.54.0
  • 1.52.1
  • 1.50.1
  • 1.50.0
  • 1.48.2
  • 1.48.1
  • 1.48.0
  • 1.46.1
  • 1.46.0
  • 1.44.0
  • 1.42.0
  • 1.40.1
  • 1.40.0
  • 1.38.4
  • 1.38.3
  • 1.38.2
  • 1.38.1
  • 1.36.2
  • 1.36.1
  • 1.36.0
  • 1.34.2
  • 1.34.1
  • 1.32.3
  • 1.32.2
  • 1.32.1
  • 1.32.0
  • 1.30.2
  • 1.30.1
  • 1.30.0
  • 1.28.0
  • 1.26.2
  • 1.26.1
  • 1.26.0
  • 1.24.2
  • 1.24.1
  • 1.22.2
  • 1.22.1
  • 1.22.0
  • 1.20.4
  • 1.20.2
  • 1.20.1
  • 1.20.0
  • 1.18.2
  • 1.18.0
  • 1.16.2
  • 1.16.1
  • 1.16.0
  • 1.14.4
  • 1.14.3
  • 1.14.0
  • 1.12.3
  • 1.12.1
  • 1.12.0
  • 1.10.2
  • 1.10.1
  • 1.10.0
  • 1.8.7
  • 1.8.5
  • 1.8.4
  • 1.8.3
  • 1.8.0
  • 1.6.0
  • 1.4.6
  • 1.4.5
  • 1.4.4
  • 1.4.3
  • 1.4.0
  • 1.0.4.0
  • 1.0.3
  • 0.99.0.0
  • 0.98.0.0

Tailscale 1.96.3, released by Tailscale Inc. as the 118th consecutive update of the project, is a mesh virtual private network built on the lightweight WireGuard protocol; its core purpose is to knit together computers, servers, containers, and IoT devices into a single secure layer-3 network that operates without traditional gateway proxies or manual port forwarding. Once installed, each node receives a stable IPv4 address from the 100.64.0.0/10 carrier-grade range and negotiates end-to-end encrypted tunnels through NATs, firewalls, and captive portals by leveraging centrally coordinated key exchange while keeping all data paths direct whenever possible. Typical use cases include engineers remotely accessing development labs, families bridging home NAS appliances and media servers across ISPs, small businesses replacing site-to-site hardware with ephemeral cloud instances, and DevOps teams wiring Kubernetes clusters, CI runners, and edge devices into one logical subnet for effortless SSH, RDP, VNC, HTTP, or database traffic. The client integrates with system authentication providers such as Microsoft Entra ID, Google Workspace, Okta, and GitHub, allowing administrators to enforce least-privilege ACL tags, device posture checks, and exit-node routing policies from a web console. Because the tunnel presents itself as a standard network interface, legacy applications require no reconfiguration, and mobile endpoints can roam between Wi-Fi, 5G, and Ethernet without dropping connections. Tailscale is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always supplying the latest version and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.

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