Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by c16 3049 days ago
Have you ever considered it would be easier for the government to pay the VPN providers a large sum to hand over the data, avoid a big public lawsuit, and silently mine all the data without having to break the encryption?
1 comments

The ISP an the VPN providers are already mandated by law to hand over my data at any goverment request, but a VPN provider is not required to store data for 6-24 months. That is not what I'm afraid of.

I just trust my VPN provider more than my ISP. The data policy of my VPN is much better: they cannot legally sell my data,whereas my ISP make no such promises.

Don't get me wrong - I pay for a VPN subscription too for when I'm travelling/public wifi, but it's much easier to quietly hand VPN providers a nice sum of money for them to just hand over the keys. Everyone leaves happy.

Based on that, I believe if you want an extra level of security for every day use, then go for a big VPN co. If you're doing highly sensitive style stuff, then there's probably better software and services out there. It's all about your threat model I suppose.

I am using mullvad.net, which I would consider large enough.

They operate in a jurisdiction where I can actually hold them liable and where I know which of their claims are leally binding.