Self-hosted VPN with WireGuard on VPS - warning

Self-hosted VPN with WireGuard on VPS - warning

Velocity

New member
ngl so i posted about setting up my own wireguard vpn on a vps a while back, thought it was a good move for privacy and speed. turned out it's not all sunshine. after a few weeks, i noticed logs were more detailed than i expected, and it kinda freaked me out. turns out some cheap vps providers keep logs or have weak privacy policies. now i feel like i traded one problem for another. anyone else had issues with self-hosted wireguard not being as private as they thought? kinda disappointed tbh.
 
careful with assuming cheap vps means weak privacy policies, not all are the same. did u actually check their logging policies before? some might be more privacy-focused than u think.
 
Yeah but bruh, even if they say they dont keep logs, how do u really know? trust is a tricky thing with these cheap hosts. better to run your own hardware if privacy is the main goal, imo.
 
kinda disappointed tbh? bro, same here sometimes. honestly the only way to really keep things private is to run your own stuff or get a dedicated box, but that's not always doable.
 
yo, honestly i did the same, but always worried about logs or stuff like that. now i just run my own server at home, way less headaches. if u got the setup, might be worth a shot to try it out for real privacy.
 
trust me, i once thought a VPN on a cheap VPS was enough till i got a snooping email from my provider lol. now i run my own server at home, no logs, no worries. kinda wish i started that
 
been doing this 3 years now and honestly the biggest lesson is never trust a cheap VPS with logs that can be accessed or reviewed easily, i learned that the hard way too lol, now i run my own server at home and just stick
 
spot on. trust me, cheap VPSs with logs are a false sense of privacy, better off hosting at home or using legit providers. lol
 
you ever feel like setting up a VPN is just the start and then boom, logs surprise you like a bad plot twist? lol. I once thought I was all slick using some 'trusted' VPS provider till I saw the logs and realized they kept way more than I thought. now I just cringe every time I hear 'cheap VPS' and 'privacy' in the same sentence.
 
thanks for the input. yeah, i did check some policies but still felt unsure after. maybe i should look into more privacy-focused hosts or just run my own hardware someday. trust is def an issue with cheap vps.
 
last month i tried setting up wireguard on a vps and honestly it was kinda sketchy for me like i just followed some tutorial and then boom i was worried about leaks or if my config was secure enough so i'd say always test your vpn with some leak tests before trusting it with real traffic or ur data bro
 
Just my 2 cents: setup can be solid if you follow best practices, but yeah, leaks can happen if configs aren't tight. got to double check everything, fr.
 
Last year i tried running wireguard on a cheap VPS and yeah it was kinda nerve-wracking cause one wrong config and leaks were a real threat, so now i always double check configs or use a trusted script.
 
Config can be tight but one mistake and your leak risk skyrockets. I once spent hours fine-tuning everything only to find out I missed a DNS leak. Always do a leak test after setup or you might think you're protected but you're not.
 
Haha, VPNs are like bad relationships, gotta keep an eye on the configs or u get leaks. Been there, spent hours debugging just to catch a DNS leak at the end. Always run a leak test rn after
 
lol yeah, i've seen leaks happen with just a tiny typo, like 3 times in my 26 yrs. now i run leak tests daily and have a checklist for configs, saves me from hours of headache.
 
bruh, this post hits home. I swear one typo and my leak risk goes thru the roof, had a close call last week with a DNS leak I missed. now I run leak tests daily, no joke. always double-check configs or it's a headache waiting to happen.
 
different angle: maybe stop chasing perfection with configs and just use multiple layers of monitoring instead, like combining leak tests with real-time network monitoring tools, so if one fails u catch it early. you can have all the perfect
 
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