Pornhub Launches VPNhub, Its Own Virtual Private Network App (venturebeat.com)
"Adult entertainment" giant Pornhub is entering the busy virtual private network (VPN) space with the launch of its very own VPN service. From a report: Dubbed VPNhub, the new service is available for free via native apps on Android, iOS, MacOS, and Windows, though there is a premium subscription available that gets rid of the ads and promises faster speeds. In the U.S., this will cost between $12 and $14 per month, depending on the platform. VPNhub promises unlimited bandwidth, even on the free service, which is key given that Pornhub's core selling point is bandwidth-intensive video, while it offers around 1,000 servers across 15 countries. And it promises that it logs no user data.
Finally an app I can get behind.
When you trust a porn site more to keep their word than all tech giants...
Their privacy policy links to another website, probably a parent company, haven't researched it, but...
emphasis mine
Then from the faq of vpnhub:
Obviously, I do not know how the app works.
I'll take a swing tho.
I'd image the profiles are cloned or partially distributed in some fashion to all the available VPN servers, or those servers connect to a US-based server, as they are a US-based company, to validate logins, which falls under US laws.
Meh, sounds nice, but I'll pass. Thanks.
I get where this is coming from, the business demand and so forth. I get it.
What I don't get is why it even has to be a thing. It's not hard to have reasonable privacy laws and given how important our communications are these days, have those same laws apply to the internet and so forth. That we don't is a biting indictment of our political process.
Remember that Digital Economy Act?
So much for age checks.
The porn must flow......
I read at +2. If your post doesn't reach that level I will not see or respond to it.
A free unlimited VPN is still a welcome offer. You could theoretically use it to connect to another VPN, so that the first VPN can't see where you're connecting to and the second VPN can't see where you're connecting from. Unfortunately offering it in the form of an app makes this difficult if not impossible.
Usually the apps still use standard protocols under the hood. Probably wouldn't be hard to figure out.
Website Just Down For Me? Find out
This is how you know it's probably garbage and shouldn't be trusted, simply from reading the headline and summary: It's a service and an app.
Someone could offer a good VPN service.
Someone could offer a superior OpenVPN implementation.
Nobody will ever do both. The only reason someone would offer a nonstandard service that requires their own app, is if they're up to something fishy.
I am a VPN user at work. I work remotely and use a VPN tunnel to get on the "local" network. I understand that browsing from work, through the tunnel, would tell the remote websites that my work NAT IP is the originator. But what if the government wants records of who, exactly is connecting to a site. They know the originator is the VPN provider, in my case work, wouldn't it be a simple operation to subpoena their connection records to know that my tunnel (and internal IP) initiated the connection to XYZ.com?
I know that a VPN tunnel encrypts my communications as does a website that encrypts via HTTP. That protects me from someone sniffing what I am doing. What I don't understand is how people feel using a VPN service makes them anonymous when I don't believe the actual connection records that tie you to a site are as private as they may think.
Please feel free to enlighten me if I am confused.
Thanks
If I ever run for public office and they find out I supported a porn vendor, there goes my political career.
Unfortunately, "guilt by association" is a reality in my country.
https://thatoneprivacysite.net...
There's too many better options.
How stupid are people in general anymore if a porn site actually thinks people are going to trust them to run a VPN service on the up-and-up?
If you can't trust the promises of pornographers, what can you trust?
At one point I thought VPNs would cost a lot of money to start up and run, but there are so many and the prices are so cheap. I think I paid something like $15 for 3 years of VPN service?
Having servers in all these regions can't be cheap. Having staff to look after them can't be cheap, and having to purchase the bandwidth can't be cheap. So how do they stay profitable?
Price it at $9.99/month and they'll get more takers.
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== WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
A free unlimited VPN is still a welcome offer.
Maybe you should check out Kaspersky Secure Connection. It's not free, but then, free services typically make you the product rather than the customer.
https://usa.kaspersky.com/secu...
USD $4.99/month
I'd trust a foreign provider long before a US-based one because of US TLAs, plus a foreign government has far less ability to affect you as an individual than one's own government.
Strat
Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
Some people need a VPN just to access the Google Play Store, and are some of the folks who are in most need of a VPN service. If they can only get it from the Play Store links, they're out of luck.
your thin skin doesn't make me a troll