VPNs Are Awesome And You Should Be Using One
We all know Internet Service Providers can see the sites we visit, log them, sell them, or slow us down when we use a site they don't like. All of this is the focus of net neutrality which may or may not be a good thing for the internet. I'll avoid my strong urge to blast my politically educated opinion on net neutrality in this post. If you want my opinion, please get in touch with me and no I will not answer the question in the comment section. However, even if the government's hands can not stay out of the internet, there is one thing you can do to help keep your browsing habits private.
Enter the VPN.
VPN stands for Virtual Private Network. It is virtual since the computer acts like it is on another network when on your normal connection. The private part is where this matters to you. The VPN has end-to-end encryption so while you are connected to the VPN the data is jumbled and unreadable to any onlooker. There onlookers may be your internet service provider, a criminal, or the coffee shop offering free WiFi. The snooper can see you sent data to another address and that the same sent data back. They can not view what the data is or the site you are requesting.
The reason your internet service provider can slow down the speed at which you access Netflix is because they know you are connecting to, sending, and receiving data from Netflix. Even when we access sites using HTTPS/SSL (the green lock in the address bar) the provider can still log what site we view. This could be due to the domain name being used in the SSL certificate.
The more likely reason is because unless you tell your router to use a different Domain Name System (DNS) sever you use your internet service provider's by default. What this mean is that when you type in jrswab.com
to head to my site, your ISP will first look in their database of domain names to find the correct IP address to connect you too. They are doing the routing for you and if they wanted could give you 'YouTube' when you ask for 'BitChute'.
In that case it is best to change to the OpenNIC DNS servers. They are foss (free and open source), respect your privacy, and will not censor you like your internet service provider can and may. Once you have the IP addresses for OpenNIC all you need to do is search [your router model] + change DNS Servers
. Keep in mind that if you unplug your router to move it or reset the router you may have to go back and change the DNS again.
Upon connecting to a VPN you create a tunnel of sorts to the VPN provider. When you ask for a site like opennic.org
the request in sent through this tunnel to the provider. Once it gets to the VPN provider, the server retrieves the site you asked for and sends back the information. This is a simplification of the process just to get how a virtual private network operates. If you changed your DNS there is a tiny chance that your ISP or the cyber criminal can see what you are doing or even connecting to.
What to look for in a VPN
I will start off this section by saying I trust none of the free VPN services. Nothing that is not F.O.S.S in nature can be truly free. No organization can maintain the servers needed to run a virtual private network for free without making the money in some way. If there is a free and open-source VPN out there, please let me know, I would love to check it out.
No Logging
This is should be your first feature to look for when choosing a VPN. Logging is when the company saves everything your account does through their VPN. This is a huge no. We are looking to get away from that kind of practice not kick the can further down the road. If the provider keeps logs they can build profiles and sell the information to the highest bidder or hand it over to some rouge government looking to spy on everyone.
Multiple Gateways
The more servers to connect to in more countries the better. This will give you more choices when looking to browse the web and let you choose a server with less users for better speeds. Let's say there is content that is region locked to a country you want to view. All you need to do is to connect to the VPN server in that country. Then the site thinks you are there. This is also useful if you are traveling and need access to a site that the country you are in blocks.
Unlimited Bandwidth
Bandwidth is the amount of speed behind your connection. The higher the bandwidth the better for browsing the internet. The last thing we want is to connect to a VPN and see our speeds get cut to a trickle. When we pay for 25, 50, or 100 mb/s we expect to get at least close to those speeds. This is important to all of us and is often not a feature on the free VPNs. If the bandwidth is limited, you risk having a much slower internet experience. High bandwidth is easy to get used too and hard to go back from.
The VPN I Use
The provider I use in 'Private Internet Access`. I have yet to find a better priced VPN provider that offers everything PIA does. They received a subpoena from governments in the past and had nothing to give them. I used this provider before the news came out and hearing about the event pleased me greatly. Just because a provider says they don't keep logs does not mean they are telling the truth. This event showed everyone that PIA is trustworthy on some level. At least for now.
Thanks for reading!
If you have any questions please ask and I will do my best to get you the answer.
Yep, I am using PIA as well for four years now...
However, I am also looking into another provider: https://cryptostorm.is/#
Don't let the enemy into your personal life w/o making it (much more) diffcult for them.
I'll check out cryptostorm. And yes we need to make it as hard as we can!
@jrswab I have always used Private Internet Access. This is the first year I have actually paid for it with BitCoin. I usually just go and buy a target gift card with cash and use that to pay for it. I know it's probably a little overkill but I would prefer to make it much harder for anyone to figure out that the traffic is coming from me.
I found a website a while back that does a comparison of most of the VPNs out there and rates them on a lot of different things. PIA rates well except that it's based in the US and under US Jurisdiction.
Thanks again for another great post!
Thanks for the comment! Yes it is based in the US and many site knock them far that. It is smart to buy it the way you have in the past or with bitcoin. The less chance a company has to build an ad profile on you the better!
I agree, jr. I also use vpn. I am wondering how it compares to Virtual Shield that everyone raves about lately. I guess VS also blocks snoopers from accessing your camera and microphone. Do you know if vpn does this? Thanks for encouraging folks to free ourselves from online surveillance. Every way we retain our freedom is a powerful action to not consent to the violation of our right to privacy. Upped and resteemed!
It looks like the 'Virtual Shield' is just a VPN and does not seem to be doing anything extra special. I don't see anything about snoopers access blocking. Any VPN may block on external snooper sniffing your data but it can't prevent malware from 'phoning' home with camera and microphone data.
Hmmmm, William Mount claimed on his youtube channel that VS blocks camera/mic access. I have always liked PIA and it doesn't slow down my laptop, phone or tablet.
If it does it is either an effect of the VPN and then all will at the same level or I am just not seeing it on their website. I'll keep digging and see if I find anything different.
Ok, ditto, will let you know if I find more info on this. Certainly would be a great feature.
Indeed! Thanks for engaging!
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Minor point of note: Generally youtube is accessed via SSL, and so substituting another domain would require that the other domain's SSL certificate be signed by someone in your certificate chain, otherwise there'd be indicators that you're not connecting to a trusted site.
Does PIA support Netflix? The VPN's I've tried are explicitly blocked by Netflix...