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    Comparison of 300 VPN's Shows Safety and Privacy Not Always Delivered

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    • SpintendoS Offline
      Spintendo
      last edited by


      Users of VPNs Might Be Placing Their Data At Risk
      by Lauren Silverman of NPR
      August 17, 2017

      Some VPNs promise anonymous browsing for free, some with additional fees, all while claiming not to share data. But this is not always the case, according to one of the first major academic reviews of VPN providers. Researchers from across the globe tested nearly 300 free VPN apps on Google Play and found that those services don't always deliver on their promises.

      "If you're not careful with choosing your VPN service provider, the medicine might be worse than the illness," says Nick Feamster, a computer science professor at Princeton University. He says tens of millions of people have downloaded VPNs — and many don't realize they're not as secure as they claim. What researchers found in their academic review was that nearly 40 percent of the VPN's injected malware or malvertising on user's hardware. And nearly 20 percent of the apps didn't even encrypt a user's traffic.

      In one example of this, the Center for Democracy & Technology filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission this month alleging the VPN Hotspot Shield collects data and intercepts traffic. If true, that would be a direct violation of claims by the company's policy to "never log or store user data." When choosing a VPN, safety comparison charts such as this one comparing 183 VPN's can be helpful. Note: you must sort the columns to place VPN's with green boxes (the best) towards the top and the middle and worst columns (yellow and red) towards the bottom. The most important columns appear to be PRIVACY Jurisdiction, PRIVACY Logging, and TECHNICAL Security. You must sort each column separately - which is slightly annoying.

      It's been said that the "safest" option currently available is to set up your own VPN server and connect only to that. For anyone willing to perform their own setup, Ars Technica has provided this guide on how to do so.


      The speed of light from Earth to the Moon in real time (c = 3×10^8 m/s)

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      • Rubber0R Offline
        Rubber0
        last edited by

        It is a bad idea to use public VPNs. If you have some skills it's better to setup your own. You can get a VDS/cloud hosting to install any simple VPN script you can find in the net for free. Control and customization are the main advantages. And the price of the hosting is a bit lower than the price of a good VPN.

        gzlong, За дурной галавой нагам неспакой

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