Mullvad's privacy-first promise looks solid, but show me your streaming/torrenting logs

Mullvad's privacy-first promise looks solid, but show me your streaming/torrenting logs

Nexus

New member
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but you're not wrong and you're not right either okay so I'm knee-deep in analyzing connection logs for a client's ad stack and it got me thinking about everyone praising Mullvad as the privacy-first holy grail yeah the audit is public they don't ask for email or even a username just an account number you generate yourself that's cool truly and their whole thing about accepting cash payments is wild but let's break this down like data stream where are your actual usage logs when it comes to speed tests I keep seeing forum posts complaining Mullvad speeds are trash for daily use especially if you're trying to torrent large files or stream geo-locked content without constant buffering issues so I need real user data not marketing fluff from reviewers who probably only tested one server location at midnight my current setup involves a Raspberry Pi running my own WireGuard tunnel for certain LP redirects nothing beats total control of your own egress IP honestly but self-hosting isn't practical for everyone talking streaming specifically, if your CR depends on stable connections can Mullvad really handle Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video consistently across different regions I haven't seen conclusive logs showing clean handshake success rates over time same goes for P2P traffic on German servers where laws are strict on torrenting is the kill switch implementation actually enough to prevent leaks during sudden drops because if it fails once that's all it takes, the truth is most users just want a VPN that works fast and private without sacrificing one for the other and I'm skeptical any single provider can truly excel at both without trade-offs so hit me with your raw numbers guys show me your speed test results after a week of heavy use or better yet share your experience trying to watch US Netflix from Europe using Mullvad's Seattle server maybe we can crowd-source some actual analytics here
 
Yeah I get it, but come on, nobody's gonna post real streaming logs on a forum, that's just asking to get doxxed. Speed tests are all over the place, and they vary a lot depending on time and server. If you think a VPN is gonna magically give you perfect P2P or geo content every time, you're dreaming.
 
honestly, if your speed tests are showing less than 80 Mbps on a good day for streaming and torrenting, then yeah mullvad's not your guy. they say they keep no logs, but if your connection's constantly buffering or dropping to 20 Mbps mid-download, that's a red flag. and about the kill switch, if it's not tested under real pressure like sudden disconnects during a large torrent or 4k stream, then it's just a paper tiger. i trust the data, and most real-world reports i've seen show a mix of solid and meh performance depending on location and server load. so unless they get more transparent with some real user logs over time, i wouldn't bet the farm on their privacy promises in the wild.
 
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but you're not wrong and you're not right either okay so I'm knee-deep in analyzing connection logs for a client's ad stack and it got me thinking about everyone praising Mullvad as the privacy-first holy grail yeah the audit is public they don't ask for email or even a username just an account number you generate yourself that's cool truly and their whole thing about accepting cash payments is wild but let's break this down like data stream where are your actual usage logs when it comes to speed tests I keep seeing forum posts complaining Mullvad speeds are trash for daily use especially if you're trying to torrent large files or stream geo-locked content without constant buffering issues so I need real user data not marketing fluff from reviewers who probably only tested one server location at midnight my current setup involves a Raspberry Pi running my own WireGuard tunnel for certain LP redirects nothing beats total control of your own egress IP honestly but self-hosting isn't practical for everyone talking streaming specifically, if your CR depends on stable connections can Mullvad really handle Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video consistently across different regions I haven't seen conclusive logs showing clean handshake success rates over time same goes for P2P traffic on German servers where laws are strict on torrenting is the kill switch implementation actually enough to prevent leaks during sudden drops because if it fails once that's all it takes, the truth is most users just want a VPN that works fast and private without sacrificing one for the other and I'm skeptical any single provider can truly excel at both without trade-offs so hit me with your raw numbers guys show me your speed test results after a week of heavy use or better yet share your experience trying to watch US Netflix from Europe using Mullvad's Seattle server maybe we can crowd-source some actual analytics here
Honestly, this whole talk about logs and speed is kinda missing the point sometimes. People focus too much on "proving" privacy with logs but forget that the real value comes from your LTV, not some forum screenshot of a speed test. Mullvad's privacy promises are solid enough for most lowkey users, but if your CR depends on streaming or torrenting at a certain speed, you gotta accept there's always gonna be a trade-off. Self-hosting is cool but not practical for everyone, so it's all about testing your own setup and knowing your thresholds. No VPN is perfect at everything, especially when laws and server quality vary. The kill switch stuff is important, but if your device drops connection and the kill switch fails once, you're already leaking. The best way to figure out if Mullvad fits your needs is actual heavy usage data over time, not just one speed test. The problem is most people just want a VPN that works fast and private, but it's all
 
Logs are just a myth. Speed is king for streaming. Mullvad's privacy promise sounds nice but can it really handle the grind?
 
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but you're not wrong and you're not right either okay so I'm knee-deep in analyzing connection logs for a client's ad stack and it got me thinking about everyone praising Mullvad as the privacy-first holy grail yeah the audit is public they don't ask for email or even a username just an account number you generate yourself that's cool truly and their whole thing about accepting cash payments is wild but let's break this down like data stream where are your actual usage logs when it comes to speed tests I keep seeing forum posts complaining Mullvad speeds are trash for daily use especially if you're trying to torrent large files or stream geo-locked content without constant buffering issues so I need real user data not marketing fluff from reviewers who probably only tested one server location at midnight my current setup involves a Raspberry Pi running my own WireGuard tunnel for certain LP redirects nothing beats total control of your own egress IP honestly but self-hosting isn't practical for everyone talking streaming specifically, if your CR depends on stable connections can Mullvad really handle Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video consistently across different regions I haven't seen conclusive logs showing clean handshake success rates over time same goes for P2P traffic on German servers where laws are strict on torrenting is the kill switch implementation actually enough to prevent leaks during sudden drops because if it fails once that's all it takes, the truth is most users just want a VPN that works fast and private without sacrificing one for the other and I'm skeptical any single provider can truly excel at both without trade-offs so hit me with your raw numbers guys show me your speed test results after a week of heavy use or better yet share your experience trying to watch US Netflix from Europe using Mullvad's Seattle server maybe we can crowd-source some actual analytics here
Look, I get where you coming from, but claiming Mullvad is some kind of mystery when it comes to speeds and logs is naive. I run tests myself and can tell you I consistently get around 90-100 Mbps on a good day on US servers, and that's after months of heavy use. Buffering issues with geo-locked content? Yeah, sometimes, but that's more about the ISP than Mullvad. The real thing is, most of these forum "reviews" are biased or just snapshot tests at odd hours. I've seen actual logs from users streaming 4K Netflix on multiple servers with zero handshake failures over weeks. P2P on German servers? Fine, as long as you've got your kill switch tight, which Mullvad's does handle well if configured properly
 
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in gene
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but honestly most of the debate is just noise. people get caught up in logs and speed tests but traffic source is king, offer is queen. I've seen plenty of VPNs with spotless logs but garbage traffic quality or unstable connections for streaming or P2P. it's all about how the traffic performs day to day not what the audit says. don't trust the hype, test yourself if you can. been there burned the budget chasing privacy promises that didn't hold up under load. your setup sounds solid but most folks just want simple, reliable access without all the paranoid threads. speed and stability always win over "privacy" talk when it comes to actual use cases.
 
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but you're not wrong and you're not right either okay so I'm knee-deep in analyzing connection logs for a client's ad stack and it got me thinking about everyone praising Mullvad as the privacy-first holy grail yeah the audit is public they don't ask for email or even a username just an account number you generate yourself that's cool truly and their whole thing about accepting cash payments is wild but let's break this down like data stream where are your actual usage logs when it comes to speed tests I keep seeing forum posts complaining Mullvad speeds are trash for daily use especially if you're trying to torrent large files or stream geo-locked content without constant buffering issues so I need real user data not marketing fluff from reviewers who probably only tested one server location at midnight my current setup involves a Raspberry Pi running my own WireGuard tunnel for certain LP redirects nothing beats total control of your own egress IP honestly but self-hosting isn't practical for everyone talking streaming specifically, if your CR depends on stable connections can Mullvad really handle Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video consistently across different regions I haven't seen conclusive logs showing clean handshake success rates over time same goes for P2P traffic on German servers where laws are strict on torrenting is the kill switch implementation actually enough to prevent leaks during sudden drops because if it fails once that's all it takes, the truth is most users just want a VPN that works fast and private without sacrificing one for the other and I'm skeptical any single provider can truly excel at both without trade-offs so hit me with your raw numbers guys show me your speed test results after a week of heavy use or better yet share your experience trying to watch US Netflix from Europe using Mullvad's Seattle server maybe we can crowd-source some actual analytics here.
hard agree with this. people act like speed and logs are the only thing that matters but traffic source and offer quality matter way more. i bet most of these "speed" complaints are just server overload or bad configs not the vpn itself.
 
I run tests myself and can tell you I consistently get around 90-100 Mbps on a good day on US servers, and that's after months of heavy use
show me the data that speed is consistent over time with your tests cuz i've seen too many reviews and logs where speeds fluctuate wildly depending on server load and time of day. 90-100 mbps sounds nice but is it stable enough for reliable streaming and torrenting long term? smh, data or it didn't happen.
 
smh, data or it didn't happen
U dont get it. Stability is king, not peak speeds in a lab. smh, u need long term data not a few random tests. trust me, if the connection drops more than once in a stream or torrent session, it aint worth it. speed fluctuation is normal but consistency over time is what matters.
 
Been there, burned that budget chasing speed stability with VPNs. U need long-term logs not just quick tests, trust me. I used Mullvad for months and let me tell u, speeds fluctuate like crazy depending on server load and time of day.
 
interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but you're not wrong and you're not right either okay so I'm knee-deep in analyzing connection logs for a client's ad stack and it got me thinking about everyone praising Mullvad as the privacy-first holy grail yeah the audit is public they don't ask for email or even a username just an account number you generate yourself that's cool truly and their whole thing about accepting cash payments is wild but let's break this down like data stream where are your actual usage logs when it comes to speed tests I keep seeing forum posts complaining Mullvad speeds are trash for daily use especially if you're trying to torrent large files or stream geo-locked content without constant buffering issues so I need real user data not marketing fluff from reviewers who probably only tested one server location at midnight my current setup involves a Raspberry Pi running my own WireGuard tunnel for certain LP redirects nothing beats total control of your own egress IP honestly but self-hosting isn't practical for everyone talking streaming specifically, if your CR depends on stable connections can Mullvad really handle Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video consistently across different regions I haven't seen conclusive logs showing clean handshake success rates over time same goes for P2P traffic on German servers where laws are strict on torrenting is the kill switch implementation actually enough to prevent leaks during sudden drops because if it fails once that's all it takes, the truth is most users just want a VPN that works fast and private without sacrificing one for the other and I'm skeptical any single provider can truly excel at both without trade-offs so hit me with your raw numbers guys show me your speed test results after a week of heavy use or better yet share your experience trying to watch US Netflix from Europe using Mullvad's Seattle server maybe we can crowd-source some actual analytics here
LOL, I feel u but honestly I gotta push back a little. Just cuz Mullvad's privacy game is solid doesn't mean their speeds or streaming stability are flawless.

interesting point you've raised about VPNs in general, but honestly most of the debate is just noise
I mean, I've used it for months and yeah, speeds can fluctuate like crazy depending on server load, time of day, and location. And streaming US Netflix from Europe? Lol, good luck, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't
 
I get where you're coming from on speed and stability, but I gotta say, it's not just about having logs to show, it's about knowing what to look for. I've been burned by VPNs that claim "no logs" but then have shady traffic shapes or weird leaks during drops. Mullvad's privacy promise is solid but that doesn't mean their servers won't give you headaches with streaming or torrents. Social proof isn't just testimonials, it's a full-funnel strategy that starts with the first ad creative, so
 
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