Kill switch failed during real world test, help needed

Kill switch failed during real world test, help needed

Locus

New member
Man I'm so frustrated right now. Just did a speed test with my VPN on, using the kill switch feature cause I read it's supposed to block all leaks if VPN drops. Well guess what? VPN just disconnected in the middle of streaming and my IP got exposed. No warning, no warning at all. I thought the kill switch was supposed to stop that? It's like it just. failed. Now I'm worried about privacy and getting banned from streaming sites. Tried a different protocol, same thing. Anyone else experience this? Do I just need a better VPN or is this a common bug? I'm losing patience here, it's supposed to protect me but it's doing the opposite.
 
Careful with just switching protocols, sometimes those kill switches are buggy or poorly implemented ymmv but if it's a recurring issue better test with a different VPN provider, some just plain suck.
 
Haha bruh I remember once I thought I was all slick with a VPN kill switch and then bam, IP exposed mid-stream. Turns out some VPNs just have buggy kill switches that don't fire right away. Tried a different VPN, same issue, so yeah, sometimes it's the VPN itself not the protocol. Honestly, if it's a repeatable fail, better dump that VPN and find one with legit reviews on leak protection
 
honestly yeah exactly, that's what I was thinking, some VPNs just slap a kill switch in and call it a day without proper testing. ever try legit VPNs with a solid reputation and still get issues? or is it mostly just crappy VPNs?
 
That's exactly how these bugs sneak past sometimes it's like the kill switch is just a feature on paper not real protection ymmv but yeah some VPNs just don't have reliable kill switches.
 
Like 70% of VPNs out there just slap on a kill switch and hope for the best, don't really test 'em properly. Even the big names can drop the ball, so yeah, maybe look for a VPN with a solid track record or try something totally different. This stuff's never
 
Last month I had a similar issue where I thought my kill switch was solid but it failed during a test. Turns out I was using an older version of the VPN software, and they had a bug in the kill switch feature. Always make sure your VPN app is fully updated before trusting the kill switch, cuz sometimes these bugs slip in and cause leaks.
 
Did you actually test the kill switch with a real disconnect or just trust the software? How do you know it failed if you weren't monitoring for leaks during the test?
 
Last month I thought my kill switch was fine till I did a real disconnect test and my IP leaked. Turns out I wasn't actually triggering a disconnect properly, so my leak test was useless. Make sure u actually do a manual disconnect during
 
different angle: I remember a time I thought my kill switch was working cause no leaks during my tests but then I actually got caught off guard when my VPN dropped during a live stream and I was exposed. Turns out I wasn't really testing it properly, just trusting the software. Sometimes I think we get too comfy with the "it should work" mindset and forget to do real world tests.
 
honestly i had a similar thing happen once, tested a new safety feature and it just didn't trigger when it should've. turned out the wiring was slightly off, or maybe a relay issue. sometimes these things just
 
Nah I think it's probably something with the power source or maybe a fuse blowing. wiring issues or power supply faults can cause this kinda failure, ymmv lol.
 
yeah, right? sometimes these things just glitch or get jammed up, no warning. did you check if it's a wiring or sensor misfire? could be a simple fix or somethin more deep, no idea
 
lol sounds like a cop out. wiring and sensors are obvious first check but maybe try a diagnostics tool like OBDLink or CarScanner, see if any codes pop. sometimes you gotta dig deeper than the basics
 
bruh exactly, sometimes you gotta get dirty with the diagnostics, no quick fix. no shame in pulling out the scanner and getting real specific.
 
did you check if the kill switch wiring is getting voltage when it's supposed to or if there's any interference messing with the signal lol
 
Been doing this 5 years and honestly I had a similar issue once, but it turned out to be a bad ground connection. never underestimate how much a loose or corroded ground can cause kill switch failures, especially under real-world conditions. check all grounding points first before diving into complex diagnostics.
 
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