Seven articles about what a VPN actually does and doesn't do for your privacy. No "military-grade anonymity" buzzwords. Honest about limits.
Short answer: no. Long answer: it depends what you mean by anonymous, and what threat you're defending against.
Read →The good ones, the bad ones, the actively dangerous ones (looking at you, P2P-bandwidth-borrowing apps).
Read →Policy vs architecture, audit vs claim, what a provider can vs does collect. The grown-up version of the marketing term.
Read →They solve different problems. Often confused. Sometimes used together. Here's what each actually does.
Read →A walkthrough of what your internet provider can log about you, with and without a VPN.
Read →The economic + technical reasons behind 500 MB, 2 GB, 10 GB caps on every "free" VPN that has them.
Read →IPs, cookies, fingerprinting, account correlation. What a VPN helps with and what it doesn't.
Read →Privacy is a spectrum, not a binary. A VPN moves you a few steps along the spectrum in specific directions: it hides your traffic destinations from your ISP, hides your IP from the sites you visit, and encrypts your data on untrusted networks. It doesn't make you anonymous, doesn't replace common-sense security, and doesn't fix tracking that happens through accounts you're logged into.
These articles are written to tell you exactly which steps it moves you along, and which it doesn't.
If you haven't read the fundamentals yet, start there.
Coming soon — leak types, MITM, public WiFi threats.
Coming soon — WireGuard, OpenVPN, the technical side.
Free, account-less, no card. The product matches the privacy position.
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