How 'private' is your virtual private network?
Virtual private network (Virtual Private Network - VPN) is becoming more and more popular in recent years. Also, choosing one of the tools is becoming more and more difficult. But the most basic feature of them is the name. Along with 'private' and 'virtual' networks, what do they really mean?
Virtual private networks send data, encrypted packets, to a middleman before decoding and sending to the destination. This helps information from the source is not accessed by unwanted objects, sensitive data will not be stolen.
VPN also has the ability to hide the IP address, ie the actual location of the user. You can choose another place, wherever the VPN service you use provides. So it is also possible to bypass censorship, geographic boundaries, and hidden real IP addresses. Nothing you do on the network is interfered with because the information from the source is encrypted.
In so many VPN software, what is the best VPN software? Most of these software have similar security capabilities because they encrypt the data before sending it. Paid services often have faster connection speeds, more IP location options to choose from, which also means unlocking content from more geographical areas.
See more:
- VPN theory - What is a virtual private network?
- 10 common mistakes of VPN and how to fix it
- How to secure your VPN more secure?
- 11 best VPN software
You should read it
- Things you need to know about Private IP addresses
- VPN theory - What is a virtual private network?
- How to use Idea VPN fake IP on Windows
- Learn about Virtual Private Network - VPN and Tunneling
- Using Tor, I2P or safer VPN?
- Learn 192.168.0.100 IP address for local network
- Ten tips to protect the client virtual private network
- Useful virtual private networks on Google Chrome
- Firefox 3.1 Beta 2 launches private browsing mode
- What is Virtual Private Server (VPS)?
- Quick fix 800 error when connecting VPN on Windows 10
- China banned VPN services to build the Great Wall