The reference to the VPN at Internet-Box 2 refers to the configuration at the link below!
[https://www.swisscom.ch/de/privatkunden/hilfe/loesung/vpn-server.tab-internet-box-2.html](https://www.swisscom.ch/de/privatkunden/hilfe/ solution/vpn-server.tab-internet-box-2.html)
Installationen, Netzwerk, Internet, Computertechnik, OS Windows, Apple und Linux.
- Solutionselected by JoelV
As mentioned, you can connect to your internal network from outside through the IB2 VPN server. That is also what Swisscom advertises. There is no VPN client functionality. But I didn’t know that Swisscom had claimed that anywhere.
As far as I know the VPN providers you mentioned, you have to install or configure client software for each PC. To tunnel entire networks you would have to use a special router. With a little patience and skill, you can also achieve this with OpenWRT and Co.
Have you tried turning it off and on again?
If you really want to surf the Internet anonymously, you’re on the wrong track with the half-silent external VPN providers you mentioned that are not transparent to the customer, then you should take a closer look at the “TOR Browser Bundle” and If necessary, install it on your PC for confidential queries.
As a result, you will receive a specially “hardened” and secured Firefox browser that anonymizes your original IP using the “Onion” principle via at least 3 constantly changing international relay nodes. It then costs around 70 percent of normal Internet performance, but that is of course absolutely secondary for this specific need.
The TOR network used is the most widely used tool in the world to disguise the sender, which is also used as the “means of choice” by investigative journalists, for example, in order to avoid having the newspaper’s home IP on a web server that tracks visitors , to stand out.
Hobby-Nerd ohne wirtschaftliche Abhängigkeiten zur Swisscom
Netflix and geoblocking is a separate topic in itself and has absolutely nothing to do with the possibility of having your own VPN server on your own router.
I recommend you do more intensive Google research. In practice, this is a chase between working circumvention measures and new blockages.
Hobby-Nerd ohne wirtschaftliche Abhängigkeiten zur Swisscom
Hide.me is not possible because this is not a private server but a company that offers VPN and is therefore also known to Netflix.
I have the problem with Amazon and it’s really complicated, my Swisscom TV-Box can’t do Amazon… my TV can do Amazon but since it’s queried in the GEO I can hardly see anything from the German store, for example.
But what is possible is the following, an additional router (can also be a Raspberry Pi) that is connected to the Swisscom router via network cable. Then you need your own server in the respective country, e.g. Germany. At hetzner.de there are cloud servers for 4 euros to test, that’s enough. On the Hetzner server you install a VPN server [https://wiki.hetzner.de/index.php/IPSec-NAT](https:// wiki.hetzner.de/index.php/IPSec-NAT “https://wiki.hetzner.de/index.php/IPSec-NAT”) that is also the instructions for the client, which means something on the Raspberry PI with Raspbian https://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads/raspbian/ can be installed.
The tunnel between Hetzner and the Raspberry PI is then set up as normal via the Swisscom network. If the network is up, NAT continues. Your Raspberry PI now needs to be converted into a router so that everything that arrives via WLAN, for example, goes out directly via the VPN tunnel. [https://lorenzod8n.wordpress.com/2008/03/16/very-simple-nat-set-up-on-debian/](https://lorenzod8n.wordpress.com/2008/03/16/very -simple-nat-set-up-on-debian/)
Alternatively, OpenVPN should also work instead of IPsec. [https://www.kuketz-blog.de/pivpn-raspberry-pi-mit-openvpn-raspberry-pi-teil3/](https://www.kuketz-blog.de/pivpn-raspberry-pi-mit -openvpn-raspberry-pi-part3/ “https://www.kuketz-blog.de/pivpn-raspberry-pi-mit-openvpn-raspberry-pi-teil3/”)
Now you connect the TV display network via WLAN on the Raspberry Pi router and you can watch Amazon films in the German store using the TV Amazon Prime app. The cost is 60 CHF if you don’t have a Raspberry. + Monthly server costs from 4 euros + Amazon Prime membership approx. 70 euros / year. The practical thing is that you can now easily change the Netflik store via the Raspberry Pi if you have other servers abroad. You can get servers everywhere thanks to Amazon or ServerRack or smaller local providers.