> Any third party will behave this way. This is the behavior of businesses that need to increase their effectiveness.
It's really not the "third parties" to blame here for the most part. You can make a viable business from selling a VPN service in exchange for money with a contractual requirement that you be respecting privacy in particular ways, so that you can actually get in trouble for not doing it.
But when Shady VPN Corp. starts offering the "same" service for "free" under a different contract because they're logging everything and selling your data, and then all the customers go over there because who doesn't like a free lunch, whose fault is that really?
I hope that, by now, with all the research coming out about that, that people would have stopped using free VPNs by now. it's more than likely a big hustle to do something shady
> it's more than likely a big hustle to do something shady
Of course it is. But it's also the case that doing the opposite of whatever idiots do isn't necessarily smart.
It's like the thing where people say don't use Google because "if you're not the customer you're the product" but then the same people are pushing Microsoft products that not only charge you money but then still do the same thing as Google or worse.
If you're not paying them then you can guess how they're making money, but just because you are paying them doesn't mean they're not doing the same thing. You still have to read the fine print.
Quick summary — top vpn companies use the same trackers as most other when you visit the provider’s website to sign up or download. Says nothing about the actual operation of the VPN itself.
I block the website trackers anyway, so clearly I don’t approve of them. But TBF this has nothing to do with your experience as a customer.
so, in total: a regular business