A VPN for journalists, researchers, and people at risk
If your sources or your safety depend on what your network looks like, a VPN is one layer of a serious operational-security stack.
What journalists & activists actually run into
Network-level surveillance is widespread
In many countries the people running the network — ISPs, state-controlled telecoms, university or office IT — keep durable logs of which sites every endpoint visits. Without a tunnel, every site you read is part of your file.
Source-protection requires plausible deniability
If your traffic pattern can be correlated with that of a known contact, you have a source-protection problem regardless of whether the contents are encrypted.
Border-region networks are often hostile
Networks in conflict zones, border regions, and several authoritarian states actively block or downgrade modern security protocols. A VPN with obfuscation gets you through.
What changes when you turn it on
No magic — just one encrypted hop, picked-country IP, and a strict no-logs policy.
One encrypted hop between you and the open internet
Local network observers see only one destination — our server — for everything you do. Sites you reach, in turn, see our server's IP, not yours.
Obfuscation defeats simple protocol-blocking
Premium FREE VPN FAST users get traffic obfuscation, which makes VPN traffic look like ordinary HTTPS. Useful where standard VPNs are blocked by deep packet inspection.
A no-logs policy that we publish about
We do not record the sites you visit. We publish a transparency report so you can verify what data has been requested and produced. See /transparency/ for the current figures.
