Man, fighting "all or nothing" thinking is a lifelong endeavor.
There are several reasons to have a VPN, and the VPN logging connections is a detriment to some of those.
Reasons include:
* Evading geo-blocking to appear from one country or another
* Evading profiling by websites by laundering your public IP address with others
* Evading privacy invasion by ISPs that most definitely use data for ad/tracking purposes and definitely have logs for law enforcement
* Doing things that could attract interest from law enforcement
The last bullet is the only one affected by logging at the VPN. In this case, the question is which entity do you want to have your traffic? Someone with a reputation for privacy to uphold, or ATT?
Could be that they got raided and are now under gag-order as FBI installed their own equipment. Or, they used to be no-log but now they aren't, on their own accord. We'll never know.
Sure, but then VPN might be just as problematic unless it's a one that's not provided by a known VPN company. My point is that VPN is just a way to proxy your traffic to somewhere else and hide the content (but not its existence!) from your ISP. Anything else shouldn't ever be taken for granted.
There are several reasons to have a VPN, and the VPN logging connections is a detriment to some of those.
Reasons include:
* Evading geo-blocking to appear from one country or another
* Evading profiling by websites by laundering your public IP address with others
* Evading privacy invasion by ISPs that most definitely use data for ad/tracking purposes and definitely have logs for law enforcement
* Doing things that could attract interest from law enforcement
The last bullet is the only one affected by logging at the VPN. In this case, the question is which entity do you want to have your traffic? Someone with a reputation for privacy to uphold, or ATT?