The Star Malaysia - Star2

Stay safe and anonymous with VPN

- By TILL SIMON NAGEL

WITH a VPN (virtual private network) app for your smartphone, you can get secure and anonymous Internet access, and even use online services that are blocked in your country. And the best bit? Many VPN apps are free.

Once you have installed a VPN, your phone will no longer connect directly with your Internet destinatio­n, explains Miriam Ruhenstrot­h from the website Mobilsiche­r.de.

Instead, an encrypted connection, also known as a tunnel, is establishe­d on a server of the VPN provider.

From there, data traffic is directed to the destinatio­n and back to your device via the tunnel.

Above all, this is useful when you don’t know how secure a network connection is – for example, if you’re using an open WiFi network in a cafe or at an airport.

Without a VPN, it’s possible that third parties could intercept sensi- tive data you enter on a webpage. An encrypted tunnel means that no one can read your data traffic.

Besides security, VPN apps offer another advantage – they allow you to connect to servers around the world. “So you could pretend that the network traffic is coming from the United States,” says Dusan Zivadinovi­c from c’t magazine.

That means you can exponentia­lly increase your access to video streaming services.

However, there are drawbacks. Not all apps will work inside a tunnel. Some services from Google and some online shops don’t work well within an active VPN app, Ruhenstrot­h says. Messaging apps can also have problems connecting with their network.

Another problem is that video streaming services are playing a constant cat-and-mouse game to block the VPN vendors from accessing their content.

Connection speed can also be an issue. With many providers, the connection is slow because it has to detour via the VPN server, Zivadinovi­c says.

Many VPN vendors advertise anonymity as a benefit, but even within a VPN, it’s impossible to achieve it completely, Ruhenstrot­h says. Individual browsers or devices can still be identified in many cases. And logging into something like an e-mail portal will also do away with your anonymity.

And then there’s the question of trustworth­iness. Anyone who directs their traffic through the servers of a VPN provider must rely on it not being read by them. Of course, all vendors promise this.

“The normal consumer definitely cannot prove this,” Zivadinovi­c says, so the user should never take promises of security at 100% face value. Ruhenstrot­h warns that “there are many, many shady VPN services”.

So how can you recognise a trustworth­y provider? “A good indicator is a look at the business model,” Ruhenstrot­h says.

If there’s only a free option and no transparen­t descriptio­n of the business and usage conditions, she advises staying away. A good starting point is a free basic offer and a paid version that provides more functional­ity.

The location of the VPN provider is also a factor. Data protection conditions and cooperatio­n with authoritie­s differ greatly between Europe, the United States and many Asian countries. In the end, Ruhenstrot­h says, “you have to rely on trust a bit”. — dpa

 ?? — dpa ?? Once you have installed a VPN, your phone will no longer connect directly to the websites you visit.
— dpa Once you have installed a VPN, your phone will no longer connect directly to the websites you visit.

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