HCHTech
Well-Known Member
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- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
Does anyone have a pre-written piece on the pros and cons of using a personal VPN? It's one topic I've been avoiding, but I'm getting more and more questions from customers, so I'm in the process of putting something together.
I've always put personal VPNs in the 'tin foil hat' category, and don't use one myself. Of course, I'm not from a country that blocks content, so I have that luxury, I guess. I won't recommend something I don't use myself and believe in, so I may be in an ethical corner here.
So generically:
Pros:
What did I misunderstand or forget?
I've always put personal VPNs in the 'tin foil hat' category, and don't use one myself. Of course, I'm not from a country that blocks content, so I have that luxury, I guess. I won't recommend something I don't use myself and believe in, so I may be in an ethical corner here.
So generically:
Pros:
- Your traffic is encrypted
- Your ISP can't see what you're doing*
- Websites can't determine your location, so ad-targeting won't work as they want
- Your IP address isn't exposed to the websites you visit
- *It will slow down your connection
- If the VPN drops, your computer will default back to non-encrypted connection, and all of the "Pros" go away until you re-establish the VPN connection
- The VPN vendor knows at least something about you, and could be compelled to turn that information over to law-enforcement or governments
- Complicated - most users will not understand the details and won't be able to troubleshoot it if it stops working (further, most users will not even know if it stops working, I'd wager)
- Common services can and do block or punish VPN connections - Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, etc.
What did I misunderstand or forget?