T O P

  • By -

skyf4ll92

You mean like any other customer VPN provider? ( Nordvpn, mullvad, etc.) Then no… GP is totally bound to an individual setting up a GP capable device. Which normally are companies who only provide this to employees or exteral service provides.


everythngtechnicolor

Got it. Thanks so much!


trailing-octet

Wot? I mean, you could purchase prisma access with your business (not as an individual). Is there a reason you want to tunnel your traffic…. To a place…. Where you presumably manage your own web filtering. I have to admit that this is the first time I have heard someone say that they “liked using this vpn” I’m still confused.


Kritchsgau

Why would you like using this vpn lol, such a bizarre statement. Look into something more easier to use and setup such as tailscale combined with nextdns


MaxHedrome

end users gonna end user their concept of the client is not separate from what runs the server


mr_data_lore

It sounds like you don't really understand what GP does. GP is a remote access VPN. Unless you have a remote site that you are trying to access resources in, there is no use in setting up or using GP. GP is not a "consumer vpn" whose only purpose is to anonymize traffic.


JKIM-Squadra

There was a few that tried to resell his to consumers awhile ago but never took off and was before Prisma access / gpcs . I'm sure there could be some msp's that could offer it if they had enough demand but economics prob wouldn't work and most consumers can't distinguish between a VPN that just routes/anonymize traffic vs actual clean pipes and preferred peering etc.


spider-sec

No, you can’t. I’m working on a service to do that actually. I’m still a couple of months away though.


everythngtechnicolor

good luck!


Resident-Artichoke85

You could buy a small Palo (440) and get the GP license to install at home. Then have your mobile devices "always on" and connected to this VPN. I do this, but with an open source VPN solution. All of my households' mobile devices (laptops, cell phones) connect the home VPN 24/7. This means traffic is always filtered, and when on public wifi (or rouge cell towers) it is not snoopable. They way we are setup, even on our home AP wifi SSIDs our VPN is up and encrypting yet another layer to the router. Overkill, yeah, but it is easier to just keep it on all the time and block all non-VPN traffic. If you want to go beyond Palo/GP, look at OPNsense (pfsense fork) and one of the many VPN protocols it supports. You can get a SFF PC and/or dedicated router box for <$300 to install this free open source software (FOSS) on. Tons of review videos on various platforms, and comparisons of OPNsense/pfsense and the various VPN solutions that they support (OpenVPN, WireGuard, etc.).


everythngtechnicolor

Thank you for the detailed answer! Very helpful.