My standard connection is 350Mbps
When I turn on secureline even with a VERY close location and P2P I get MAX 3Mbps…this is unacceptable for something that costs this amount of money!
What can I do to speed this up!
My standard connection is 350Mbps
When I turn on secureline even with a VERY close location and P2P I get MAX 3Mbps…this is unacceptable for something that costs this amount of money!
What can I do to speed this up!
Worldwide, many people are working/learning/communicating from home (Covid-19) right now.
This will most probably lead to much higher server loads than usual and slow down connections.
I am still suffering this issue
As secureline has no settings to change how can I speed this up
this morning I am getting 1.5Mbps instead of 350 without secureline running
i am in London…my proxy is london and if I cannot get this to improve I am cancelling my subscription
I can barely even post on here!..I had to turn Secureline off
Contact support: https://support.avast.com/contact
I had the same issue with Avast VPN. I have tried your VPN twice in the last few years, on two different computers, one with Win 7 & 4GB memory,
the other on Win 10, with 8GB memory. Each time the speed of everything went down by a huge noticeable percentage, like 90% slower. Each time the speed reminded me of the 1990’s with 56K dial-up. So, twice I uninstalled and cancelled, and Support could not help. This is a problem with the Avast VPN, and has nothing to do with the speed of the Internet Provider, and it happens at all times, even when local loads on a network ought to be at a minimum both at the country were one is, and the country one wishes to browse in.
Surely, around 5pm to 7pm local time, a lot of people come home from work and checks their e-mail, and one can experience a locally observable slowdown. But, when it’s 11pm in the US, and 5am in the UK, then loads have decreased in the US, and have not yet increased in the UK. BY this logic, the VPN speed ought to speed up, but that’s not observed. That’s why I have asked Avast numerous times to re-engineer their VPN, but it seems “they don’t want to”.
One could imagine a VPN that is able to measure it’s own achieved speed, and would provide usable answers as to what the cause may be, or even would reconfigure itself to the best available status. But that’s not what Avast VPN can do. We are all dancing in the dark.