Condobloke
Well-Known Member
Your Free VPN App Might Be Spying on You
Some VPNs are actually malware in disguise.
VPNs may actually be spyware
hm, if you want my money then I can trust you?I would absolutely never trust a VPN that didn't charge me money.
hm, if you want my money then I can trust you?
Problem is something else, you never know whether some VPN wasn't set up by an agency or a bad actor, they can ask for payment but this doesn't change anything.
Yeah, companies whose only purpose is to profit from providing a VPN are unlikely to ruin their reputation.if you're running a business where you're selling a specific service, you're less likely to screw over the people who use your software.
The term "zero-knowledge" always reminds me of one the first 'VPN'-like public services; I found their technical concept ultra cool. It was called https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_Knowledge_Systems.
It is peculiar the terminology itself disappeared for over a decade, to resurface mainly with focus to crypto currencies.
Tor users may be tracked if one is not careful but if it does its study this can be prevented so I prefer control over "it likely won't happen".
disclaimer: It's actually been some years since I used tor. My major usage actually dates back to the widespread advent of the .onion network. It was part of tor, but major usage was to surf regular web anonymously.Then, there's using Tor to access the regular internet. That's extremely risky.
And Mullvad VPNI think a good example of zero knowledge would be something like Proton, or even Mega.io.
Amen.And Mullvad VPN
That said, I'm not convinced it is risky these days of TLS/https-everywhere - don't forget the traffic itself is encrypted, i.e. it leaves the exit node encrypted.
And Mullvad VPN