I use Proton. But I continue to run into more and more websites and services that detect my VPN and refuse my connection, or just run literally 40 captchas in a row until I just give up.
I use Proton because it has a “suite” of products under a single subscription, but that benefit is losing it’s allure as some of their products are pretty shitty from a user experience perspective, their customer support is atrocious, and they don’t seem to pay any attention to what their users actually want.
Does anyone track known VPN servers? Is there a specific provider that causes less problems? Does anyone test different VPNs for detection?
Thinking about cancelling my subscription and moving to Mullvad.
Then we agree that’s the only advantage. So your original reply is wrong. A cloud VM running self hosted VPN protects you exactly as much as a commercial VPN with regard to the website you’re connecting to.
No. You’re wrong once again. If you fire up a VPS and you’re assigned an IP, that’s still your IP, even if it’s running on a remote server. It belongs to you and only you. It is a personal identifier.
So just make a snapshot, and every time you want a new IP, create a new VM from the snapshot. Or if there’s an option in your cloud provider, just request a new IP.
Whenever you connect to a VPN, you use the same IP address the whole session. You have to reconnect to a different node whenever you want a new IP.
But I feel like you’re just being contrarian here. Your objections aren’t rooted in any sort of actual concern over privacy, and I don’t think you really understand the systems you’re using. In other words, you’re just being paranoid.
If you want true privacy, use Tor.
When you connect to a Proton or Mullvad server, you’re sharing that IP with thousands of other people. We’ve already been over this. It’s privacy through obscurity.
Okay so it sounds like you don’t understand how VPNs work and aren’t willing to learn, and because of that you aren’t capable of engaging in good faith, so I’ll let you be on your way.