Real-time WebRTC leak detection in your browser, plus a guided DNS leak check. Runs entirely client-side.
First, baseline: what does the public internet see as your IP?
WebRTC can leak real IPs even when a VPN is active. We probe the browser's WebRTC API and surface any IPs it volunteers.
DNS leak detection requires a server-side component (one that watches which resolver queries it). Since this page is fully client-side, we point you at the dedicated services:
Run their Standard test. Listed resolvers should NOT match your real ISP if a VPN is active.
Shows what DNS server your browser is using right now. Compare against your VPN provider's expected resolver.
Heads up: opening these sites exposes your real IP to them (same as any site). They have their own privacy policies.
| Step 1 (Public IP) | Step 2 (WebRTC) | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| VPN-looking IP | Only local IPs (192.168.x.x, 10.x.x.x) or none | β Healthy |
| VPN-looking IP | A public IP different from Step 1 | β WebRTC leak |
| Your real ISP IP | Anything | β VPN not active or routing |
| β | Probe blocked (no candidates) | β Browser is locked down |
ClownVPN's kill switch + DNS push prevent both classes of leak for tunneled traffic. WebRTC leaks need a browser-level fix (see FAQ above).
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