brandonkick
Well-Known Member
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So I am looking into putting in a VPN solution and perhaps an "upgrade" in terms of my "router".
So right now, I have an Xfinity eMTA gateway and Ubiquiti UniFi AP. I really want to put a VPN in front of my entire network. I'd like the privacy feature most of all for many reason.
So my ideas are something (in terms of VPN) that:
Can be in front of every device on my network, essentially the VPN runs "at the router level" and every device hooked to my router is behind the VPN be it hard wired, wireless, computer, laptop, tablet, cell phone, PS4.... ect whatever.
I want a VPN service that will not majorly hamper my current bandwidth. My current connection, when not running a VPN, is hitting around 70Mbps or so down and 5-6 Mbps down. It used to be almost triple that both up and down but I fought with Comcast to get my bill down and the result was these decreases in speed. I'm going to want any VPN I run to not really hamper my current speeds. I can't afford much slow down due to VPN.
I want something that is really private. Not all VPNs are. Some do not allow methods of payment that are really private. Some keep activity logs. I really do want one that has no way of mapping back to me, so to speak.
I'm thinking, after doing some research, that I might be best off building a router out of a PC. Something like a core i3 optiplex with a good pair of intel NICs. Not sure how I'd rope the Ubiquiti in there though but I think it just operates off the router PC much like it does my Xfinity gateway now? Probably run pfsense as an OS.
Thoughts, opinions, ideas from people who have gone this route or done some of these things?
The main reason for this is that I don't care for Xfinity to be able to throttle me based upon what I'm doing. So if they get butthurt at Netflix, I don't need to worry about my speed with Netflix to go to crap. IMO, Xfinity has no right to tell me what to do with my bandwidth or slow me down if I use a site / service they can't strongarm. And if I'm going to be really private, might as well really pick a service that is actually private and also try to avoid my speeds going to crap.
So right now, I have an Xfinity eMTA gateway and Ubiquiti UniFi AP. I really want to put a VPN in front of my entire network. I'd like the privacy feature most of all for many reason.
So my ideas are something (in terms of VPN) that:
Can be in front of every device on my network, essentially the VPN runs "at the router level" and every device hooked to my router is behind the VPN be it hard wired, wireless, computer, laptop, tablet, cell phone, PS4.... ect whatever.
I want a VPN service that will not majorly hamper my current bandwidth. My current connection, when not running a VPN, is hitting around 70Mbps or so down and 5-6 Mbps down. It used to be almost triple that both up and down but I fought with Comcast to get my bill down and the result was these decreases in speed. I'm going to want any VPN I run to not really hamper my current speeds. I can't afford much slow down due to VPN.
I want something that is really private. Not all VPNs are. Some do not allow methods of payment that are really private. Some keep activity logs. I really do want one that has no way of mapping back to me, so to speak.
I'm thinking, after doing some research, that I might be best off building a router out of a PC. Something like a core i3 optiplex with a good pair of intel NICs. Not sure how I'd rope the Ubiquiti in there though but I think it just operates off the router PC much like it does my Xfinity gateway now? Probably run pfsense as an OS.
Thoughts, opinions, ideas from people who have gone this route or done some of these things?
The main reason for this is that I don't care for Xfinity to be able to throttle me based upon what I'm doing. So if they get butthurt at Netflix, I don't need to worry about my speed with Netflix to go to crap. IMO, Xfinity has no right to tell me what to do with my bandwidth or slow me down if I use a site / service they can't strongarm. And if I'm going to be really private, might as well really pick a service that is actually private and also try to avoid my speeds going to crap.