I still use Mullvad on my phone, first off, so whenever I'm connected to my router at home (that is, almost every time my phone is connected to any network), I'm in effect using the same setup as I described above. Also, I'm now running an AdGuard Home server on my main machine, while also connecting the same machine directly to the tunnel created by the Wireguard client running on my router, which is to say, Proton VPN. I do this through a Wireguard connection with the router's internal IP address as the endpoint (and localhost for the DNS, for obvious reasons), and a Wireguard server with VPN cascading enabled on the router. My AdGuard Home server is set up to use the virtual IP address for DNS lookups already provided by the Proton VPN config. I should be clear that, for this particular application, this is a huge advantage in favor of Proton as opposed to Mullvad; that is, Mullvad's Wireguard configs use, by default, the external IP address of whichever DNS server it intends to use for DNS lookups, and at least to my knowledge, does not make DNS available on any address in the internal space. I'm referring specifically to Proton and Mullvad configs intended to be used on routers, respectively, when I say that. There is at least one method I've been able to figure out, of getting around this in the case of the latter, but I'm not gonna go there because I'm not trying to promote Proton's competition here, if only because said method is significantly slower than my current setup, if only because Mullvad is in my experience significantly slower than Proton. Seriously. I'm not associated with either Proton or Mullvad in any capacity, so I don't benefit from either saying that or not saying it. I was successful in setting up exactly what I'd described when I first made this post, and my current setup using only Proton is way faster. Period. I feel totally comfortable saying that what I'm running currently is AT LEAST secure enough for most normal applications, especially if used with a Secure Core config. I didn't make this post with the intention of eventually updating it long after it'd already been buried, to the effect of personally recommending Proton over Mullvad based on the results of my experiment no one asked for, but that's basically what's happening. Just so we're clear: I do NOT have anything personal against Mullvad. It's just that Proton lends itself so much more easily to my—in all honesty, deliberately, overly complicated—setup, and it's so much faster that there's really no comparison.
Thank you.
If you are worried about traffic correlation analysis, then yes 2 VPNs will help.
I am trying to obfuscate my traffic fingerprint as much as possible, yes.
The outer VPN is the one where you have increased traffic due to 2 VPNs.
So, does it (roughly) just double the amount of traffic by adding the second one, or…?
Edit:
I'm not sure why I was downvoted. Advanced traffic analysis techniques already exist. I can only imagine that as soon as methods sufficient to fingerprint innocuous use of the clearnet at significant scale become feasible, that is exactly what will happen. I see nothing inherently irrational about having a threat model that makes some reasonable attempt to account for that.
This kind of thing has started making me feel very sad about my decision to never become a father recently.
Lol…
I mean, fair enough; also, your use case is entirely unlike that of someone who just uses NixOS normally, I would imagine. It's really not like using NixOS requires a deep understanding of the language itself, or at least that's never been my experience with it, and I've been daily driving it for well over a year at this point. As long as I know enough to keep maintaining the same /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
I have now indefinitely, that's as deep of an "understanding" of the language as I will ever need, personally. I'm well aware that there are a lot of things I could be doing if I knew how to, and frankly, I'll probably never learn how to do those things because I'll probably never have to. NixOS is by far the single easiest distro I've ever used, if only because everything's always reproducible and because nothing ever breaks.
Not quite yet, but yeah, probably gonna be "big time" soon if I had to guess. Reddit is inaccessible through a VPN (while logged out) now, so it's basically dead at this point.
@StephenTallentyre
@lemmy.today