@didek @post a huge part of Fi—especially originally—is connecting to public Wi-Fi networks to offload data from the carrier itself. Even so, when away from Wi-Fi, your traffic is going through T-Mobile, Sprint, US Cellular, or roaming partner towers and networks. It makes some sense to just say, screw it: nobody in the middle gets to know what my traffic is.
Your traffic is encrypted, what's the difference between letting your ISP know the domains you connect too Vs letting the VPN provider have the same information?
@post @cassidyjames @didek Exactly the difference you've stated: you're trusting different people.
Who you trust matters just as much as – if not more than – how much you trust.
@wizzwizz4 @cassidyjames @didek
This is my understanding too, and I was curious to know why OP said he is happy that more people encrypt more traffic through a VPN service.
If there isn't something I'm missing, I think that sentence could mislead people into thinking a VPN provider is better for privacy and security.
@post @wizzwizz4 @didek a well-documented, audited private VPN with open source client code that is offered as a bonus from a reputable company that also has a LOT of industry goodwill to lose if they mess it up *is* likely better for security and privacy than not using a VPN or using a shady free service from some company you have never heard of or with no track record.
@post @wizzwizz4 @didek given that carriers constantly come under fire for selling, leaking, or otherwise snooping on your data as it passes through their pipes, I would much rather use a VPN. I also appreciate websites not getting a unique IP address for me to further target and geolocate me without my permission.
@cassidyjames @wizzwizz4 @didek
I'm sorry but this has nothing to do with VPN vs ISP, you just seem to have a bias or fell for some marketing campaign with the aim of selling a useless service.
The mention of an open source client was particularly unrelated and it seems thrown there like a buzzword.
If you really need to hide the domains (example.com) you are connecting to from your ISP, use Tor.
@Zach777 @cassidyjames @wizzwizz4 @didek
I'm not saying they are useless, but this particular sentence puzzled me:
> I’m genuinely happy to see traffic encrypted through a VPN becoming more the default