بنابراین من فکر می کنم من می روم به دریافت VPN اما من مطمئن هستم که چه نوع اطلاعاتی به آنها را داشته و همچنین آنها می توانند با این اطلاعات پس از آن انجام. آن را به استفاده از VPN امن چگونه است و من می توانم به آنها اعتماد?
~ ~ ویرایش: جایزه سوال-من می دانم تونن تغییر آدرس آی پی من اما من ادرس اصلی نباید آدرس واقعی من? آدرس آی پی من می گوید من در یک ایالت دیگر ~ ~ با تشکر از شما، می خوام کل حل
[deleted]
Reputation matters. There is a certain VPN (probably the best known) that was coerced by authorities to hand over info. They did not; because they claimed they couldn’t. Nothing was logged. This is something to look out for, specifically, when evaluating VPNs.
The other is speed/reliability. Once again, the largest VPN is quite reliable.
Side note: Do not use “free” VPN apps. Remember, in this case, you’re the commodity, not your privacy.
[deleted]
You’re trusting your VPN as much as you’d trust your home ISP, except that: Your home ISP knows your physical/postal address and real name and payment info; you might be able to hide all that from a VPN service.
A downside of VPN is that you know what laws and jurisdiction apply to your ISP, but you may not be familiar with those for your VPN. An ISP in Europe may be more regulated than a VPN in Thailand.
Another advantage of VPN: if someone wants to sue you or DMCA you, they may have to work through two or three jurisdictions (your location, VPN company’s location, VPN server’s location) to trace and sue you.
Think of a VPN provider like your actual Internet Service Provider. It just so happens a VPN encrypts the Internet Service it provides.
The only people who have access to that encryption is your devices and your VPN provider. Most providers ride-or-die on their reputations so they can’t afford to do evil things with the encryption or access to it. In fact, many VPNs are based in countries where they are not required to keep logs about their user’s which pretty much eliminates your encrypted data falling into the hands of anyone you might have an issue with.
That said, there are many fake, malicious, state-sponsored, and honeypot VPN providers out there running. Assuming you sign up with one of these services they could literally see everything you do while connected to their service. At that point, the only defense you have would be browser encryption (HTTPS) and password strength. Somewhat useless if you have someone trying to really come after you.
You can find out a lot of information about VPNs using with a tool I created at https://www.vpn.com. It compares 900 different VPNs providers. Hope that helps.