![]() Go to That One Privacy Site for comparison shopping. Running a service like that, by definition, can’t be free as in free beer. You might choose another service, but speed and reliability in a VPN is going to cost a few bucks a month. ![]() ![]() It’s compatible with seemingly everything. It has never stopped working or kicked me off. I switched to Mullvad and it’s one of the best electronic choices I’ve ever made. It was slower than using no VPN the free servers were almost always overloaded. It’s limited to how many devices it can be used on, it sometimes thought I was torrenting (I wasn’t) and would force me to disconnect/reconnect. I had the free version of ProtonVPN for two years before finally switching to a paid subscription. This is one factor that helps them win the trust argument, along with their reputation.Ĭontrast that with Nord who we have all heard of, are #1/#2 on most publishers websites, were the most recently hacked in 2018 (when it eventually got out in 2019 it was very poorly handled), promote aggressive affiliate marketing tactics - misleading popups (false offers with countdown clocks) and clickbait (some publishers advertise their VPN for “Free” - but you have pay for it), even now they are advertising it as free, which switches to free trial, which is not free - you have to pay for it (and then if you are not happy ask for your money back.) and whilst we are at it don’t include VAT on their UK £ prices (which by law they should), and no one seems to know who owns them… apart from that their actual VPN is not bad…įor speed and reliability? Not a free VPN. You have probably have not heard of them because they are one of the very few VPNs that do not have an affiliate scheme so publishers don't push them or rank them very high (if they even mention them). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |