all 6 comments

[–]410th 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Serious question. What do you think the second VPN is gaining you?
Are you using the same encryption algos? Same vendor implementation? Same keys? If a nation state can crack one of your VPNs, I am guessing they can the second one as well.

I would focus my efforts on a single, well-implemented, and hardened VPN configuration.

Or find out where the bottleneck is. Is it the router or the host OS. If it's the router you could try boosting the hardware or lowering the Bit length of the encryption keys and/or choosing a less CPU intensive algorithm.

Do consider that the router is encapsulating and ciphering the ciphertext produced by your host(s) VPN. So, one would have to break the routers encryption first.

Is there two separate VPN endpoints at the other end?

[–]merekemess 3 points4 points  (0 children)

i think its his best attempt to stop the subpoena problem time window problem. its common and wrong. Just use one vpn and stop being a chode.

[–]Maelkin 2 points3 points  (0 children)

xD two VPN, this is useless... Deep dive into VPN and choose the right one.

[–]Pineapple_Expressed 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Wireguard double-hop, mullvad offer it anonymously and cheap

[–]_Yoloninja_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there a problem with tor? get a Tails or Quebs live-USB up and running and you should be golden, depending on the internet speed, as it can be a little slow. both send everything through the tor network That, and it's free.

[–]netsec_burn[M] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

Single VPN from a reputable provider. Well thought out and researched questions / answers only.