actually, there are other reasons for using an encrypted tunnel besides bit torrent. How about secure banking? or perhaps secure purchasing? mayhap even more secure email access. And yes, if there is a torrent I want to get (and it is perfectly legal too), I don't want my ISP pulling bandwidth throttling or bitching at me for supposedly downloading copyrighted materials when they aren't (yes, I have had this actually happen). -eric On Oct 4, 2016, at 5:03 PM, Michael Butash wrote: > Well, I think we're talking about two different kinds of vpn: > > 1) VPN for Remote Access. Connecting to home, work, or some other form of remote access to a given network. I don't think that's what we're discussing here, but if desired, openvpn as a server would be just fine. I do that here on my wrt router for remote access to my network, and use zerotier as a SDN solution for networking between given hosts on any network as another more convenient alternative. > > 2) VPN for Hiding Yourself. This is what I think we're mostly talking here, which is using a VPN client to connect to a remote network, using recommended services like PIA for making yourself appear to be leaving another country to keep scavenger laywers at bay. This uses usually either a Socks/HTTP Proxy connection, or a full openvpn-based connection. > > If you or anyone you know likes to bittorrent pretty much anything anymore, do yourself a favor and use a (#2) VPN. If you just want to remotely access your home/work resources, #1 is what you want. > > -mb > > > On 10/03/2016 09:17 PM, Stephen M wrote: >> I agree with toddc. If your starting to learn about VPN networking it's best to try a free option. I had Zentyal installed on an old desktop that is collecting dust at the moment. But I had OpenVPN working in home and it worked fine. Sure I remoted into my home server once in a while but I was able to learn how to setup a VPN. I was looking at tigerVPN a few years but and I've also looked into sshuttle. I don't see a need for a big or pay fee VPN unless I'm doing something massive. For learning purposes do something small and in house before you go public. >> >> On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 5:18 PM, Stephen Partington wrote: >> I was really interested in tigerVPN and their lifetime deal they had recently on android central. >> >> On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 2:28 PM, Todd Cole wrote: >> >> If you are just looking for a vpn to your home there are many free vpn and or firewall router vpns or even a Raspberry PI >> makes a great home VPN server $35.00 or a old desktop would also work >> also a lot of routers already include a Built in vpn of some kind > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss