A VPN free trial?

Have been looking at trying out a VPN and wondering if any offer free trials? I have no real clue about what the main companies for a VPN are so looked through past bargains but companies listed there didn't seem to have a free trial on there websites

Comments

  • NordVPN have a 3 day trial as well as a 30 day money back guarantee.

    I signed up to the three year deal that they have at the moment, I think it was $99US

    • +1

      Will +1 nord.
      They are excellent.

      I got 2 years for $80 US I think.

      • +1

        IME not as fast as PIA though.

  • +1

    Windscribe has a free version, no idea if it's any good but I've been using the paid version the past 2 years and I have no complaints with it.

    • U getting good speed with the paid version?

      • +1

        Windscribe Free has become painfully slow for me.

        Speedify is crazy fast (but Australian server, so unfair comparison) but the free plan is limited to 1 GB.

      • Yeah I'm happy with the speeds. I'm on NBN 100/40 and just did a speedtest on the Los Angeles server getting 73.48Mbps/20.98Mbps http://www.speedtest.net/result/7375606513

  • I stumbled upon https://zpn.im the other day. They have a free account although I noticed my internet connection is slower when I am on it. But it is not slow to a stage where it is unusable. Cant complain. It is free anyway.

  • Not sure if they offer a free trial but I would suggest Private Internet Access. Have used them myself and was a big fan, plus there's this…

    "VPN provider Private Internet Access, which has a strict no-logging policy, has proven once again that it is unable to link online activities with a user's identity. The conclusion, which was revealed as part of a hacking trial in San Jose federal court, is the second time that the provider's claims have been successfully tested in public."

    https://torrentfreak.com/private-internet-access-no-logging-…

    • +1

      I have mentioned this before, and indeed the top comment in your linked article discusses it as well: Parallel construction.

      The best way to catch someone in the act is to let them think they're invisible. The same can be said of end-to-end encryption, or encryption in general. People use or download a proprietary application and assume it functions a certain way because they were told so. Even then, the vast majority of users wouldn't look for exploits in open source software, let alone read the code or understand it.

      Please note that I'm not advocating paranoia or making fanatical "claims". But there are people in certain countries where doing something we take for granted is regarded as criminal, and you wouldn't want to be giving these people false promises (e.g. with VPNs tested "impenetrable" in court by their own government's secret service). An inability to disprove proves nothing.

      • man I just want to play some games

  • +1

    PIA is what you want.

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