VPN for Travel - Privacy risks vs speed, got a flight in 12 hours

VPN for Travel - Privacy risks vs speed, got a flight in 12 hours

Void

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so i posted about cpa payout rates a while back, totally different beast. anyway hitting Tokyo in 12 hours and my usual vpn (won't name, affiliate offer) is acting up on international servers. tried connecting to a US server from here as a test, got a weird dns leak on ipleak.net. not huge but enough to make me question the privacy side when im using airport wifi abroad. main goal is streaming hulu/peacock obviously, but now i'm paranoid about logs if the connection flaky. anyone actually stress tested a vpn for travel lately? not just speed but the privacy part. need a quick rec, fwiw my benchmarks are da, dr, and if it can hold 4k for a solid hour w/o buffering. conv rates on these vpn offers suck but whatever i just need it to work.
 
Spot on. I remember one time rn I was traveling and switched to a VPN that leaked DNS info like crazy. Ended up having to scramble to fix it before hopping on a flight. Privacy risks during travel are no joke, especially with flaky connections
 
been doing this 3 years and man that DNS leak is exactly what i worry about when traveling, like even if speed's good the privacy is trash if leaks happen. imho better to test all your servers before you leave and maybe run some kill switches or DNS blocking rules to block leaks on the fly. trust me, if your VPN isn't airtight when you need it most, you might as well not use it at all
 
yep exactly, DNS leaks are a nightmare rn I've seen it happen myself when traveling. Always do a quick leak test on every server I plan to use, especially abroad. Gonna be real, if privacy's a concern, I'd maybe look into a VPN with a kill switch
 
Last month i was flying to Bali and had similar issues with my VPN acting up on international servers. I ended up doing a quick DNS leak test on each one before settling in. Do you have a favorite leak test tool rn, or just rely on ipleak.net?
 
Been doing this 3 years and honestly, that's kinda the reality sometimes. If your VPN's leaks and logs are exposed just when you need it most, it's almost like not using one at all. Better to have a backup plan or use a VPN that's proven leak-proof in testing (like running a quick ipleak.net or dnsleaktest.com before connecting).
 
I dunno, I've used VPNs that pass leak tests but still mess up on actual streams or drop connections at the worst time. Sometimes the real test is just seeing if it holds up under real-world conditions, not
 
I get what you're saying but honestly, some VPNs can pass leak tests and still have issues during heavy streaming or on flaky networks. I think it's worth doing a speed test on the actual streams and maybe trying a backup VPN if possible, just in case. Wouldn't rely 100% on leak tests alone.
 
Always test with actual streaming and on unstable networks before trusting it fully. leaks or speed don't matter if it drops mid-stream or logs you. better safe than sorry
 
60% of leaks are on initial connection tho, so even if it streams fine, the risk is still there. ever actually tested if the VPN logs during a real session? highkey, that's what matters more than just leaks on test sites.
 
are you thinking of a VPN that balances speed and privacy, or just the fastest option? If speed's key, try NordVPN, they have optimized servers for quick connections even on the go.
 
Haha, flying soon and already stressing about privacy? Fwiw, if you need speed, try a VPN with quick servers like Nord or Surfshark. Just make sure it's on before you land or you might miss your in-flight entertainment.
 
Haha, I'd say that's not always the case. I tried Nord on a trip and it slowed me down more than I expected, especially in crowded airports. Sometimes the free Wi-Fi or network congestion messes with VPN speed more than the provider. I'd say test a few out beforehand if possible, don't just rely on the "fastest" or "best" rated
 
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