CryptoServers

Cryptoservers vs Shinjiru — which to pick?

A jurisdictionally-clearer alternative to Malaysia-anchored Shinjiru, with stronger transparency artefacts.

Looking for an alternative to Shinjiru? Shinjiru's 8-region footprint sounds great but Malaysia's data-retention law muddies the offshore claim. Cryptoservers is an offshore VPS and dedicated bare-metal host incorporated in Saint Kitts and Nevis, with hosting in Iceland, the Netherlands, Romania and Switzerland. We accept seven cryptocurrencies, ship 1 Tbps of DDoS absorption included on every plan, and provision a VPS in 41 seconds median from confirmed payment to SSH login.

Side by side

Shinjiru vs Cryptoservers — the spec table

Numbers and facts only. Where the competitor wins, the table says so.

Specification Shinjiru Cryptoservers
Datacenter regions 8 (incl. APAC, US, EU) 4 (Iceland, Netherlands, Romania, Switzerland)
Corporate jurisdiction Malaysia (data-retention obligations) Saint Kitts & Nevis (outside 14-Eyes)
Founded 1998 2024
Payment methods BTC, alts, fiat (cards) BTC, XMR, LTC, ETH, DASH, BCH, DOGE (crypto only)
KYC at signup Inconsistent None — payment-only signup
DDoS protection Basic + paid escalations 1 Tbps anycast, included on every plan
Provisioning median Hours, manual review on offshore plans 41 seconds
Entry VPS price Premium tier (~$20-30/mo) $16.99/month
Warrant canary No Weekly, PGP-signed
Public network details Limited Full ASN + peering matrix on /network/
Honest assessment

What Shinjiru does well — and where it falls short

Each competitor gets real credit for what they do well. The cons section reflects published facts and recurring customer feedback, not marketing FUD.

Strengths of Shinjiru

  • Over 25 years of operation (founded 1998) — one of the oldest "DMCA-ignored" brands in the market.
  • Eight datacenter regions including Asia-Pacific coverage — useful for latency-sensitive deployments in that region.
  • Multi-coin payment support including Bitcoin, alongside fiat options.
  • Established brand presence in Asian markets where most offshore hosts have weaker positioning.

Limitations of Shinjiru

  • Malaysian corporate jurisdiction has its own surveillance posture, including mandatory communications data retention under the Communications and Multimedia Act.
  • Pricing skews premium, especially on dedicated tiers — entry costs exceed most no-KYC peers.
  • Customer-support reports are mixed, with recurring complaints about slow ticket turnaround.
  • Marketing language sometimes overstates legal protections — "DMCA-ignored" framing exists but Malaysia is not a DMCA-protected jurisdiction in the same sense as Iceland or Saint Kitts.
  • No published warrant canary or formal transparency cadence.
Decision guide

Which one fits your use case?

Sometimes the competitor is the right answer. We say so when it is.

Pick Shinjiru if…

  • You need Asia-Pacific datacenter latency that Cryptoservers' European footprint doesn't cover.
  • Brand age and 25+ years of continuous operation are meaningful trust signals for your buyer profile.
  • You operate in markets where Shinjiru has stronger localised presence than European-focused alternatives.

Pick Cryptoservers if…

  • You want clearer jurisdictional protection — Saint Kitts & Nevis incorporation outside 14-Eyes, with hosting in Iceland, Switzerland, Romania and the Netherlands.
  • You want faster provisioning (41-second median) instead of hours-long deployment with manual review.
  • You want stronger transparency artefacts — weekly PGP-signed canary, public network/peering matrix, public status page.
  • You prefer crypto-only billing without a fiat payment processor in the chain.
FAQ

Shinjiru vs Cryptoservers — questions answered

Is Shinjiru a true offshore host?
Shinjiru markets itself as offshore and DMCA-ignored, and operationally many of its plans behave that way. The structural concern is jurisdictional: Malaysia is the corporate seat, and Malaysia's Communications and Multimedia Act includes mandatory data-retention obligations that don't apply to providers incorporated in Saint Kitts & Nevis or Iceland. The "DMCA-ignored" framing is partially accurate — US copyright notices have no force in Malaysia — but the legal regime that does apply is non-trivial. Read the jurisdiction independently of the marketing.
What is the best alternative to Shinjiru?
For privacy-first hosting with clearer jurisdictional protection, Cryptoservers is a direct alternative — Saint Kitts & Nevis incorporation outside 14-Eyes, hosting in Iceland, Switzerland, Romania and the Netherlands, 1 Tbps DDoS included, 41-second provisioning, seven crypto payment coins, and a publicly committed weekly canary. The trade-off is geography: Cryptoservers is European-focused, so for Asia-Pacific latency Shinjiru's 8-region footprint retains an advantage.
Does Shinjiru accept cryptocurrency?
Yes — Shinjiru accepts Bitcoin and a range of altcoins, alongside fiat methods (cards, bank transfer). The payment surface is broader than at strictly-crypto hosts. Cryptoservers is crypto-only with seven coins (BTC, XMR, LTC, ETH, DASH, BCH, DOGE) and no fiat rails — the design choice is to keep payment processors out of the trust chain. If fiat payment options matter to you, Shinjiru fits better; if you want crypto-only with full Monero support, Cryptoservers does.
How many datacenter locations does Shinjiru have?
Shinjiru operates from eight datacenter regions covering Asia-Pacific, the United States and Europe. The footprint is one of the broadest in the offshore segment. Cryptoservers operates four regions (Iceland, Netherlands, Romania, Switzerland), all in Europe. For buyers who specifically need Asia-Pacific latency or US-based hosting under an offshore brand, Shinjiru's wider footprint is genuinely useful. For European-anchored deployments, four well-chosen jurisdictions can outweigh eight that include riskier corporate domiciles.
Is Malaysia a safe jurisdiction for offshore hosting?
Malaysia is a complicated answer. It is outside the 14-Eyes signals-intelligence sphere, which is the main offshore criterion. However, it has its own surveillance regime: the Communications and Multimedia Act imposes data-retention obligations on telecommunications and hosting providers, and the Sedition Act and other laws restrict certain content categories. For workloads that would be illegal under Malaysian law, the offshore label provides no protection. For threat models focused on US/EU legal risk only, Malaysian incorporation is structurally distinct but not equivalent to a true offshore haven like Saint Kitts & Nevis.
Is Cryptoservers cheaper than Shinjiru?
On VPS, generally yes — Cryptoservers' Starter plan begins at $16.99/month with 1 Tbps DDoS included, modern AMD EPYC hardware and DDR4 ECC. Shinjiru's comparable VPS tiers tend to start higher and may charge separately for advanced DDoS protection. On dedicated bare-metal the comparison varies by spec; Shinjiru's long history means a wider plan ladder including some premium configurations Cryptoservers doesn't offer. For straightforward offshore VPS needs, Cryptoservers is the lower-cost option at comparable specs.
Does Shinjiru offer a warrant canary?
Shinjiru does not publish a formal warrant canary or fixed transparency cadence. Cryptoservers signs and publishes a warrant canary every week with a PGP key tied to the company, with the cadence and signing chain documented at /canary/. For threat models where canary-based attestation is part of the trust framework, the published weekly cadence is a meaningful difference from informal transparency claims.
How fast does Shinjiru provision a server?
Shinjiru's provisioning time on offshore plans is typically measured in hours, with manual review applied to certain account profiles or premium tiers. Cryptoservers reports a 41-second median from confirmed payment to SSH access on VPS plans, with weekly canary attestation of the figure. For operationally rapid workflows, the gap is meaningful; for production servers provisioned once and forgotten, the difference is less material — though it speaks to the underlying orchestration maturity.

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Pay in any of seven coins. Pick a jurisdiction. Get root in 41 seconds median.