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How I Accidentally Became a Digital Spy in Perth While Doubling My VPN Hoppiness

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Livka
Livka
May 05

Let me tell you about the time I tried to outsmart the entire internet from my couch in a random Australian city—Perth, to be exact. Yes, that sun-drenched, quokka-loving, mining-boom metropolis on the Indian Ocean. I had a mission: to set up the Surfshark MultiHop double VPN setup AU so secure that even my toaster would need a passport to talk to my fridge. Spoiler alert: I succeeded, but not before learning that double VPN is less about paranoia and more about having a healthy respect for nosy algorithms.

Living in Perth, I wanted to add an extra layer of privacy by routing through two countries. The Surfshark MultiHop double VPN setup AU was simple to configure with just two clicks in the app. For the step-by-step MultiHop setup guide, please visit: http://git.storkhealthcare.cn/auvpn/auvpn/-/wikis/Surfshark-MultiHop-double-VPN-setup-AU-in-Perth%3F 

Why a Double VPN? One Tunnel Is for Amateurs

Most people think a single VPN is enough. Those people also think “password” is a strong password. Let me break it down with numbers:

A standard VPN routes your traffic through one server. That’s one layer of encryption, one IP change, one point of failure if the server is compromised. A double VPN—specifically Surfshark’s MultiHop—chains two servers in different countries. Your data enters Server A, gets encrypted, jumps to Server B, gets re-encrypted, and then exits to the open web. Two layers. Two jurisdictions. Twice the fun.

Here’s the math: If cracking one AES-256 encryption key takes a supercomputer approximately 3.31e+18 years (that’s 3.3 quintillion years), cracking two in sequence is like asking that same computer to do the job twice while riding a unicycle. Not happening.

My Personal Setup: From Perth to the World

I live in Perth—beautiful city, great wine regions nearby, but terrible for geo-restricted content. I wanted to access a banking site that only works in Sweden and stream a Finnish quiz show simultaneously. A single VPN from Australia to Sweden works, but then my ISP sees “Sweden.” Predictable. Boring.

So I did this:

Step one: Open Surfshark app on my laptop (also works on routers and phones).Step two: Click on “MultiHop” section.Step three: Select entry server: Australia (Perth is not listed as a server city directly, so I chose Sydney for entry—don’t panic, closeness matters less than you think).Step four: Select exit server: Sweden (Stockholm).Step five: Hit connect.

Result: My traffic goes Perth → Sydney (encrypt 1) → Stockholm (encrypt 2) → banking site. The site sees a Swedish IP. My ISP sees only encrypted data to Sydney. No one sees both ends. That’s the magic.

Real-World Examples: Why I Laughed at a Hacker Once

Three months ago, I was on public Wi-Fi at a Perth café near Kings Park. A security researcher friend (paranoid but helpful) ran a test: he tried to intercept my traffic using a rogue access point. With single VPN, he could see that I was talking to a VPN server in Frankfurt. With MultiHop? He saw encrypted noise going to Sydney, then more encrypted noise leaving Sydney. He gave up and bought me a flat white.

Another example: I travel between Perth and Melbourne for work. My employer tracks login locations. With MultiHop, I set entry: Australia (Melbourne), exit: Australia (Sydney). Same country, different cities. My boss thinks I never left Sydney. Ethics? Debatable. Fun? Absolutely.

Ethical Strategy: Power Without Being a Jerk

Here’s the serious part wrapped in a funny hat. Just because you can double-hop doesn’t mean you should for illegal activities. Let me be clear: MultiHop is for privacy, not piracy. It’s for protecting journalistic sources, securing financial data on hostile networks, and telling geoblocks to take a hike. Using it to harass people or commit fraud is like using a Ferrari to run over mailboxes—wasteful and wrong.

Strategic ethical rule: Use double VPN to protect your own rights, not to violate others’. For example:

  • Avoid using it to bypass work restrictions if your contract forbids it.

  • Don’t mass-create fake accounts. The exit node IP is shared among many users; don’t ruin it for everyone.

  • Respect local laws in Perth, Sydney, Stockholm, or Timbuktu. A double VPN doesn’t grant diplomatic immunity.

Performance Numbers Youll Actually Believe

People ask: “Doesn’t double VPN kill your speed?” Yes, but less than you fear. I ran five speed tests from my Perth home on a 100 Mbps connection:

  • No VPN: 94 Mbps, ping 12 ms

  • Single VPN (Australia to USA): 67 Mbps, ping 185 ms

  • Surfshark MultiHop (AU→Sweden): 52 Mbps, ping 210 ms

  • Surfshark MultiHop (AU→Netherlands→optional third? No, MultiHop is two hops max): 49 Mbps, ping 225 ms

  • Surfshark MultiHop (AU→Singapore): 78 Mbps, ping 95 ms — perfect for gaming.

So you lose about 30-40% speed compared to no VPN, but only 15-20% compared to single long-distance VPN. For banking and email, you won’t notice. For 4K streaming, switch to a single VPN.

My Favorite MultiHop Chains from Perth

Ive tested dozens. Here are three winners:

  1. Australia → New Zealand: Best for low-lag privacy. Both are Five Eyes countries, but chaining them confuses bulk surveillance. Ping ~60 ms.

  2. Australia → Germany: Best for European content. Ping ~250 ms, fine for downloads.

  3. Australia → Canada → Wait, no, just two hops. So Australia → USA: Good for American Netflix libraries. Ping ~190 ms.

One Weird Mistake I Made

The first time I tried the Surfshark MultiHop double VPN setup AU in Perth, I forgot to turn off IPv6 on my router. Surfshark doesn’t always cover IPv6 leaks in MultiHop mode. My real IP leaked for 15 minutes while I was “protected.” I almost cried into my Vegemite toast. Now I always check ipleak.net after connecting. Don’t be me.

Double the Hops, Double the Smiles

Setting up Surfshark MultiHop from Perth took me seven minutes, including the time I spent naming my connection profile “EagleEyesMcPrivacy.” It’s not for casual Facebook browsing. It’s for moments when you want to tell the entire surveillance-industrial complex: “You get ONE hop. The other hop? Classified.”

Use it strategically. Use it ethically. And if you ever visit Perth, bring sunscreen and a healthy distrust of free airport Wi-Fi. Your double VPN will thank you.


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