- Each device? This means setting up many peers on each of your devices
- Router/central server? That's a single point of failure, and often a performance bottleneck if you're on LAN. If that's a router, the router may be compromised and eavesdrop on your connections, which you probably didn't secure as hard because it's on a VPN.
Not to mention DDNS can create significant downtime.
Tailscale fails over basically instantly, and is E2EE, unlike the hub setup.
A lot of people are behind CGNAT or behind a non-configurable router, which is an abomination.
> Secure your router
A typical router cannot be secured against physical access, unlike your servers which can have disk encryption.
> Your router is a SPOF regardless
Tailscale will keep your connection over a downstream switch, for example. It will not go through the router if it doesn't have to. If you use it for other usecases like kdeconnect synchronizing clipboard between phone and laptop, that will also stay up independent of your home router.
- Each device? This means setting up many peers on each of your devices
- Router/central server? That's a single point of failure, and often a performance bottleneck if you're on LAN. If that's a router, the router may be compromised and eavesdrop on your connections, which you probably didn't secure as hard because it's on a VPN.
Not to mention DDNS can create significant downtime.
Tailscale fails over basically instantly, and is E2EE, unlike the hub setup.