This was posted 5 years 5 months 4 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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VPNSecure: Lifetime Subscription US $12 (AU $16.52) @ StackSocial

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BFSAVE40
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Description
Internet threats are a real thing - and surfing the web on a public connection can result in your personal data falling into the wrong hands. While most VPNs will help you surf undetected, some still maintain logs on your browsing movements, defeating the purpose of getting one in the first place! VPNSecure proudly assures that ZERO logs are recorded, so you can browse online with absolute peace of mind. And, with the Smart DNS component, you can even bypass those annoying geographical restrictions that block Hulu, and more abroad. Get VPNSecure, and you'll get a cross-platform VPN service you can trust.

Allows you to bypass geolocation blocks on your favorite streaming networks
Encrypts your traffic so hackers can't access your data
Hides your location & IP address
Supports torrents
Allows you to connect five devices simultaneously
Grants you the ability to choose Data Cipher
Uses Stealth VPN to render your VPN traffic unrecognizable
Delivers unlimited bandwidth
Does not keep any logs of your activity
Includes servers in 46+ countries & counting
Protects against DNS leak fixes, kill switches & more
Strict No Logging Policy!

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$10 credit for the referrer and referee.

This is part of Black Friday / Cyber Monday deals for 2018

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closed Comments

  • +2

    I'd rather just self-encrypt everything via PGP and SHA-256 than use this shit.

    VPNSecure was directly identified in an academic paper for leaking IPv6 and DNS requests, which leaves its users exposed to “mass surveillance and malicious agents.” The same paper also noted that VPNSecure has a number of egress points in residential ISPs. This suggests that users are unknowingly being used as endpoints in a P2P-like bandwidth network – i.e. user bandwidth is being stolen (although the paper could not confirm this). - from Restore Privacy's VPN Warning List

    • Not trying to argue with the paper's findings, but egress from residential ISPs is actually a desirable feature for some people, as they're more reliable at evading geoblocking. In fact, residential egress sometimes has a higher price tag at certain providers, believe it or not.

      • is actually a desirable feature for some people

        Yeah, and absolutely wrong for the people whose internet service and hardware are being used as an exit node. It's wrong, it's scummy and it's eventually going to cause tons of problems for some unsuspecting users down the line.

        • Most (reputable) providers would sign up for residential connections themselves in order to provide this service. It's of course wrong if they were using their users' connections without consent, but simply seeing residential egress on their service is not proof that this is happening.

  • They're quite slow too.

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