Summit
New member
Alright, strap in, cuz I just did some real world tests on this kill switch thing everyone's hyped about. Spoiler: it's mostly smoke and mirrors, but here's the brutal truth. I took my VPN, a decent one not some cheapo, and started streaming, torrenting, switching networks like a paranoid squirrel. Then I yanked the ethernet cable mid-stream, intentionally, because hey, I wanna see if the kill switch actually works when it counts. And guess what? The results were predictably messy. Some VPNs, in theory, are supposed to cut the connection instantly. Reality? Well, some barely blinked. One famous provider's kill switch took a full two seconds to activate and my entire stream flickered for a brief second before disappearing. Two seconds. Not exactly a stealth move if you ask me. Others claimed to be 'deadly reliable,' but when I force disconnect via system settings, their apps sometimes didn't even bother shutting down my internet, just kept leaking like a broken faucet. The moral here? The numbers don't lie, but your dashboard might. If you depend on a kill switch for privacy, especially in high-stakes situations like avoiding censorship or evading some snooping government agency - you need to test your VPN's kill switch in the wild. Not just in the comfort of your testing lab. Live fire, chaos mode, everything. Because if it leaks even for a second, your privacy goes poof. And yes, I know some will say 'well, it's a software tool,' but that's just an excuse for sloppy implementation. The right VPNs, the ones that actually care about privacy, will be rock solid, no leaks, no excuses. Until then, keep testing, because trusting blindly is a rookie move.