vpn.cwru.edu
International students often use the CWRU VPN to... then connect to a commercial VPN to access their home country's banking or streaming services. This works, but it halves your speed (CWRU VPN encrypts -> Commercial VPN encrypts again). Use split-tunneling if you attempt this. The Nitty Gritty: Setup & Pain Points The Client: Cisco AnyConnect. It’s reliable but clunky. It doesn't have a "kill switch" (a feature that cuts your internet if the VPN drops). Be careful—if you are writing a paper and the VPN disconnects, your database access fails silently. vpn cwru
Beyond the Bubble: A Deep Dive into Using a VPN at CWRU (The Good, The Bad, and the Bandwidth) Use split-tunneling if you attempt this
CWRU actually uses split tunneling by default. This means when you connect to the VPN, only traffic destined for CWRU IP addresses goes through the tunnel. Your Spotify music and Zoom calls go straight out your local ISP. This is excellent because it prevents the VPN from slowing down your normal browsing. The Verdict: Who Should Use It and When? | Use Case | Should you use CWRU VPN? | Alternative | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Accessing library journals off-campus | YES (Mandatory) | Use the "Off-Campus Access" proxy link in the library catalog (no VPN needed). | | SSH into a lab server | YES | None. | | Gaming (Xbox/PlayStation) | NO | It adds latency. Use casewifi directly. | | Netflix / Hulu | NO | They often block VPN IPs. You'll get a proxy error. | | Torrenting | ABSOLUTELY NO | Get a paid, no-logs VPN (Mullvad, AirVPN). | | Working at a hospital (UH/Cleveland Clinic affiliate) | NO | Use their specific, HIPAA-compliant VPN. The CWRU VPN does not meet medical compliance standards. | Final Take The CWRU VPN is a surgical tool, not a Swiss Army knife. Use it to access the library, check your H: drive, or remote into your lab’s Ubuntu box. Turn it off for everything else. It doesn't have a "kill switch" (a feature
This is the biggest friction point. Every time you connect, you need a Duo push or code. Pro tip: Check the "Remember me for 7 days" box on your personal laptop. On shared lab machines, never check it.