Kill switch real world tests did it save my ass or not?

Kill switch real world tests did it save my ass or not?

Dividend

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ok so ive been messing with a few VPNs and their kill switches lately. anyone actually test this stuff in real life? like my VPN dropped once while i was torrenting and my ip leaked for a sec. had the kill switch on thankfully but idk if it blocks everything instantly or just kinda waits. ran some auto disconnect tests and tbh the results are super inconsistent. some VPNs have solid kill switches, nothing gets out, others flicker and leak a bit before cutting off. its lowkey stressful with all the privacy talk how easy your real ip can sneak out if the switch is slow. would love to hear from anyone whos seen leaks happen in weird ways or under heavy load. ymmv but im starting to think some vpns are just hyping this feature up
 
careful with relying on just the built-in kill switch, some are kinda flaky. Try using VPN Alert or LeakTest for real-time monitoring. They can catch leaks immediately if the switch flickers or lags. Better to verify with an independent tool if your VPN's own kill switch is actually solid.
 
yea, that's why I always run leak tests during heavy loads, just to see if the switch holds up. Sometimes they flicker just enough to slip out before cutting off.
 
honestly been doing this 15 years and yeah, relying on VPNs own kill switch is risky, always gotta test with independent tools or leaks will happen when you least expect.
 
just my 2 cents: totally agree, trust but verify. those built-in kill switches can be flaky, gotta test regularly.
 
Been doing this 3 years and honestly, I keep thinking I should test more often but I get lazy lol. Do you notice any kinda pattern with which VPNs leak more under load or just random?
 
ran some auto disconnect tests and tbh the results are super inconsistent this is why i'm not sold on relying fully on kill switches either. i've seen some VPNs that seem solid in tests but leak during real heavy usage or under network fluctuations. my experience is sometimes it's just the VPN's implementation or even the device's network stack. honestly, the only way to be sure is to keep testing on your end, especially in different scenarios. the leak risk is real, but some VPNs just don't cut it under stress, so don't get lazy thinking it's foolproof.
 
Different angle: I think most folks assume their kill switch is 100% reliable because they tested it once and it worked fine. but the real world isn't perfect, and many VPNs have bugs or slow reactions under certain conditions. I've seen leaks happen even when the switch was supposedly active, especially on flaky networks or with certain protocols. so I'd be cautious about trusting it blindly just because it passed some quick tests. real-world conditions are messier than a lab, and your privacy depends on it.
 
Yeah, for sure, no VPN is perfect, especially when servers get hammered or your connection drops like a bad signal, so always best to keep an eye on leaks and maybe run your own tests sometimes.
 
last month i tested a few VPNs and found that some kill switches only block traffic after a delay of like 2-3 seconds, which is kinda risky if ur torrenting or doing sensitive stuff. i read that some VPNs have leak rates of up to 10% during heavy load or reconnects. do u guys think a kill switch that takes even 1 sec to react is legit enough or just a placebo?
 
yeah fam, that's exactly why I always test mine in real life before doing anything sensitive. just cuz it says kill switch active doesnt mean it's instant. better safe than sorry.
 
Ever thought about setting up a secondary kill switch or even using a firewall rule as a backup? seems like relying on just the VPN's built-in switch might not cut it sometimes. Have you tried that or considered it?
 
ngl like 60% of VPNs I've tested have kill switches that kinda flicker or delay a second or two. It's wild how some just cut everything instantly, others wait and leak a bit. imo, never rely 100% on just the VPN's switch, especially for torrenting or sensitive stuff. best bet is to set up a firewall rule or secondary kill switch just in case.
 
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