Possibly linux to Privacy@lemmy.mlEnglish • edit-27 months agoWhy I no longer use a VPN (most of the time) and nor should you - YouTubeyoutu.beexternal-linkmessage-square69fedilinkarrow-up19arrow-down1141file-text
arrow-up1-132arrow-down1external-linkWhy I no longer use a VPN (most of the time) and nor should you - YouTubeyoutu.bePossibly linux to Privacy@lemmy.mlEnglish • edit-27 months agomessage-square69fedilinkfile-text
minus-squarePossibly linuxOPlinkfedilinkEnglish-4•7 months agoWith a VPN you are just shifting the attack surface
minus-square@noodlejetski@lemm.eelinkfedilink5•7 months agofrom the ISP likely to analyze my traffic to a VPN provider who didn’t provide any data after being raided by the police because they didn’t store any
minus-squarePossibly linuxOPlinkfedilinkEnglish-3•7 months agoI would still not trust them as you have no control over what happens server side.
minus-squareLemongrablinkfedilink0•7 months agoThat is just as true of your ISP, who when raided by the police will happily send it all over in a jiffy.
minus-squarePossibly linuxOPlinkfedilinkEnglish1•7 months agoExactly, its not a matter of trust. You can’t verify VPN providers more than you can verify ISPs. The best option is to use https and encrypted DNS.
With a VPN you are just shifting the attack surface
from the ISP likely to analyze my traffic to a VPN provider who didn’t provide any data after being raided by the police because they didn’t store any
I would still not trust them as you have no control over what happens server side.
That is just as true of your ISP, who when raided by the police will happily send it all over in a jiffy.
Exactly, its not a matter of trust. You can’t verify VPN providers more than you can verify ISPs.
The best option is to use https and encrypted DNS.