If you've shrugged off VPNs because you "have nothing to hide," you're not wrong — exactly. But that framing misses what a VPN is actually for. A VPN isn't a cloak. It's the same lock you already put on your front door, applied to the part of your life that lives on the internet.
What a VPN actually does
When you connect to a VPN, two things change about your traffic:
- It's encrypted between your device and the VPN server. Anyone watching the network between you and the server — your ISP, the coffee-shop owner, the airport Wi-Fi operator — sees an unreadable blob.
- The destination sees the VPN server's IP, not yours. Sites and apps can no longer correlate your home address with what you do.
That's it. It's not magic. It's a tunnel.
The honest case for using one
1. Public Wi-Fi is still a mess
Coffee shops, hotels, conferences, airports. Most of the sites you use are HTTPS by default now, which protects the contents — but the metadata (which sites you visit) is still visible to whoever runs the network. Plus, not every app is well-behaved.
2. ISPs sell your browsing history
This is legal in most countries, including the United States. Your ISP can — and most do — sell aggregated browsing data to ad networks and data brokers. A VPN moves the visibility point from your ISP to the VPN provider; pick one that doesn't keep logs, and you've actually reduced exposure.
3. You travel and the internet is broken there
Whether it's a government firewall, a school network, or an office that blocks "non-work" apps, a VPN is the simplest way to reach the parts of the internet you're used to.
4. Region-locked content
Catalogs differ. A VPN lets you connect from a country where the show you want is actually available. (Whether the service's terms allow this is up to you.)
What a VPN doesn't do
- It's not anonymity. If you log into your Google account, you're identified — VPN or no VPN.
- It doesn't replace antivirus. Malware doesn't care whether your traffic is encrypted.
- It doesn't fix bad password hygiene. Use a password manager. Use a passkey when offered.
A VPN moves one visibility boundary. It does that boundary well. Don't expect it to do everything.
How to pick one
The two questions that matter:
- What's their logging policy? "No logs" should be clearly written, ideally audited.
- Who pays the bills? Free VPNs that don't sell anything else are suspicious. We pay our bills with optional Premium subscriptions — not your data.
That's the whole story. If a VPN seems too complicated, it's not the right one.
